All posts by Josh Gold-Smith

Oilers’ Cave in medically induced coma after suffering brain bleed

Edmonton Oilers farmhand Colby Cave underwent emergency surgery Tuesday to remove a colloid cyst that was causing pressure on his brain, the team announced.

Cave remains in a medically induced coma at Toronto's Sunnybrook Hospital.

The 25-year-old's condition is not related to the coronavirus, his agent, Jason Davidson, told Sportsnet's Mark Spector.

Cave played 11 games for the Oilers before the season was postponed. He's spent the majority of this campaign with the AHL's Bakersfield Condors.

The forward, who's been with the Oilers for parts of the last two seasons, played in the Boston Bruins organization for five years to begin his career.

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Orr pens letter to ‘true heroes’ at Massachusetts hospital

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Bobby Orr is expressing his gratitude toward healthcare professionals in Boston battling the coronavirus pandemic.

The hockey legend wrote a letter thanking workers at Massachusetts General Hospital. Here's the full note, which the hospital published Monday:

This message is for everybody currently on the front lines at Mass General, doing what you all do so well. Thank you to the physicians, nurses, technicians, custodians, administrators, supply handlers - everyone there who is contributing in these unprecedented times. The battle against COVID-19 could never be managed without your tireless dedication, and please know that the people you serve understand your commitment, and we do not take it for granted.

This pandemic has yet against demonstrated what everyone at Mass General is made of as you go about your daily routines. You are not only saving lives at your wonderful facilities - you are also protecting so many more people beyond your hospital walls as a function of your best efforts. It strikes me that the word 'hero' is often used to describe athletes in our society, but in my eyes, YOU are the true heroes that I personally look up to and your are constantly on my mind. This virus is no game, so we need real-life heroes to step up and bring it under control. Thankfully, that is exactly what you are doing.

Undoubtedly, the days and weeks ahead will test us all in many ways. But none will be tested more than those of you who continue to manage, treat and research the virus day after day after day. Given your efforts and expertise, I have great confidence in the eventual outcome of this pandemic, in no small measure because of the excellence I have personally witnessed at Mass General.

To all of you, please ... keep on fighting the good fight, and thank you so much for all you do.

With great respect,

Bobby Orr

The 72-year-old, who's widely considered the best NHL defenseman of all time, is the latest hockey figure to show support for healthcare workers. Several others, including Boston Bruins general manager Don Sweeney, shared messages thanking them on National Doctors' Day last week.

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Maple Leafs sign KHL forward Alexander Barabanov

The Toronto Maple Leafs have inked KHLer Alexander Barabanov to a one-year, entry-level contract for the 2020-21 season, the club announced Tuesday.

Barabanov's deal is worth $925,000, according to TSN's Pierre LeBrun. That's the exact amount Toronto paid Ilya Mikheyev when it signed him out of the same league last May.

The Maple Leafs and Arizona Coyotes were reportedly the favorites to land Barabanov.

The 25-year-old spent seven years in the KHL with SKA St. Petersburg, helping the team win the Gagarin Cup in 2015 and 2017. He produced a career-high 17 goals and 46 points across 58 games in 2018-19, but Barabanov managed only 11 goals and 20 points over 43 contests this season.

He's represented Russia multiple times on the international stage, winning gold with the Olympic team in 2018, capturing bronze at the 2014 World Junior Hockey Championship, and playing at the World Championship on three occasions, winning bronze twice.

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Trotz admits overcoaching Islanders

New York Islanders head coach Barry Trotz has some regrets about how he handled his club before the NHL paused the season.

"Twenty-twenty hindsight is always a great thing, but I would do a few things different," he told Newsday's Andrew Gross. "Maybe practiced, at different times, more, just because the group needed it.

"Sometimes, I felt like we overcoached," Trotz added. "That's because we're so passionate about getting better. When I say you overcoach, you get away from what you do really well."

The Islanders were one of the NHL's best teams early in the season, going a franchise-record 17 straight games without a regulation loss from mid-October to late November. However, they cooled off down the stretch.

New York won only two of its final 13 games before the postponement, falling out of a playoff position. The club currently sits one point behind the Carolina Hurricanes and Columbus Blue Jackets for the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference, albeit with two games in hand on Columbus.

Despite that slide, Trotz still believes the team would have made the postseason, or will, if and when play resumes.

"I wasn't worried we weren’t going to make the playoffs because we were trending, mentally, in the right way," he said. "Our mental mindset was going in the right direction."

Trotz is in his second campaign with the Islanders after helping the Washington Capitals win the Stanley Cup in 2018. He led New York into the postseason in 2018-19. That year, the Islanders swept the Pittsburgh Penguins in the opening round before getting swept by the Hurricanes in Round 2.

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Burke: Canucks wanted Kadri, Gardiner, two 1st-rounders for Luongo

Brian Burke seems to enjoy opening up about his would-be trades that never came to fruition.

One week after saying his Anaheim Ducks made a better offer than the San Jose Sharks did for Joe Thornton in 2005, the former NHL general manager discussed another deal he didn't make, this time toward the end of his Toronto Maple Leafs tenure.

Toronto fired Burke on Jan. 9, 2013.

The Vancouver Canucks ended up shipping Roberto Luongo back to the Florida Panthers in March 2014 in a package deal that netted them Jacob Markstrom, their current No. 1 goalie.

During the lockout-shortened 2012-13 season, Jake Gardiner was in his second NHL campaign after registering 30 points across 75 games in his rookie year. Nazem Kadri was in the midst of his first full season with the Maple Leafs and went on to post 44 points in 48 games before playing another six largely productive years with the club.

As for the two first-round picks, it's unclear at which drafts they would have applied, but Toronto selected Frederik Gauthier 21st overall in 2013. The team chose William Nylander eighth overall the following year and Mitch Marner with the No. 4 pick in 2015.

Burke began guiding the Leafs in November 2008. He spent three seasons with the Ducks prior to that, winning the Stanley Cup in 2006-07. He also served as the Canucks GM from 1998 to 2004.

The longtime executive spent five seasons as president of hockey operations for the Calgary Flames from 2013 to 2018 before joining Sportsnet as a studio analyst.

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Lamoriello ‘extremely optimistic’ NHL season will resume

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New York Islanders president of hockey operations Lou Lamoriello strongly believes the postponed NHL campaign will start up again in one form or another.

"I'm extremely optimistic that we will play at some time as far as this season," Lamoriello told Newsday's Andrew Gross on Thursday. "Whether it's in June, whether it's in July, whether it's in August, I'm not thinking about that. I'm just thinking, in my mind, knowing that we will play and using this time to get ready for that.

"But, prior to that, the most important thing is everyone staying safe and everyone doing the things in the best interest of their families because we're in a different world today."

The league postponed play March 12 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. On Tuesday, the NHL reportedly extended its self-quarantine directive for players until April 15.

Teams have reportedly been asked to provide available arena dates in August, and deputy commissioner Bill Daly subsequently said the league would try to fit games into that month if it had to do so.

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Subban would ‘love to see’ 31-team playoff

P.K. Subban is in favor of having every team compete in a league-wide postseason when the NHL returns from its hiatus.

"It was kind of floated around. I remember around the pause time when everything kind of shut down, I saw a few things on social media and I like that," the New Jersey Devils defenseman said while appearing on ESPN's "First Take" on Thursday.

"For my team specifically, we were pushing to make the playoffs down the stretch, so I would like to see our team have an opportunity to compete for the Stanley Cup, but obviously as days go by ... if (the resumption of the season) did happen, I would love to see a 31-team playoff and give those pesky Devils an opportunity (to bring) the Stanley Cup back home to New Jersey, so I'd love to see that."

It remains to be seen how the league will conclude the campaign. Whether it resumes at all, how many teams would be involved in the playoffs, or whether the rest of the regular season would be scrapped are all questions that understandably remain unanswered.

Some stars, like Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin, have said they'd be open to going straight into the playoffs upon a resumption of the season. However, Florida Panthers forward Aleksander Barkov believes his club deserves a chance to try to qualify for the postseason, as the team sat three points behind the third-place Toronto Maple Leafs in the Atlantic Division with a game in hand when the league halted operations on March 12.

The 31-team playoff is one of many radical ideas being suggested during the pause. At least one team has reportedly submitted a proposal that included a tournament for lottery teams to compete for the first overall pick.

Subban's squad had the third-worst record (28-29-12) in the Eastern Conference when the NHL postponed the season.

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WATCH: Classic 🏒: Mario torches Rangers in ’93 at MSG

Two days after the NHL featured The Great One, Super Mario gets his turn.

On Wednesday, the league is revisiting the Pittsburgh Penguins' blowout win over the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden on April 9, 1993. It was a truly memorable night for Mario Lemieux, who scored five of the Penguins' 10 goals and helped the club set an NHL record with its 16th straight victory.

Watch the live YouTube stream below:

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Leafs sign Filip Kral, Kristians Rubins to entry-level deals

The Toronto Maple Leafs inked defensemen Filip Kral and Kristians Rubins to entry-level contracts, the club announced Wednesday.

Kral, who signed a three-year pact, racked up 49 points in 53 games with the WHL's Spokane Chiefs this season. The Maple Leafs selected the 20-year-old in the fifth round of the 2018 draft.

Rubins, who agreed to a two-year deal, spent this season with the AHL's Toronto Marlies after splitting 2018-19 between them and the ECHL's Newfoundland Growlers. The 22-year-old joined the Leafs organization when he signed with the Growlers in August 2018.

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10 NHL players who broke out this season

The NHL campaign remains paused, but more than a few players can still take some solace in the fact they made significant strides this season.

From those who unexpectedly burst onto the scene, to productive youngsters who took their game to the next level, here's a collection of players who broke out in 2019-20.

Dominik Kubalik

Few outside Kubalik's homeland or NHL market had heard of the Czech-born forward at the start of the season, but the 24-year-old rookie - whom the Los Angeles Kings drafted in the seventh round in 2013 before trading him to Chicago for a fifth-rounder in January 2019 - exploded for 30 goals in 68 games. His team boasts some elite playmakers, but Kubalik didn't play with Patrick Kane at even strength often and did much of his damage in a supporting role.

David Pastrnak

Maddie Meyer / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Yes, Pastrnak was arguably already a star, having authored 30-goal efforts in each of the previous three campaigns. However, he rose to absolute superstardom in 2019-20, pouring in 48 goals and 95 points in 70 games. At the time of the postponement, Kubalik's 23-year-old countryman was tied for the league lead in goals, ranked third among all NHL skaters in points, and was on pace for 56 markers and 111 points over an 82-game span.

Mika Zibanejad

Bruce Bennett / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Like Pastrnak, Zibanejad was coming off a 30-goal season of his own, but he became unstoppable as 2019-20 progressed. The New York Rangers center missed 13 games with an injury early on, but dominated upon returning. He piled up 41 goals and 75 points in 57 games - including a five-goal night in early March - and collected a mind-blowing 23 goals over the final 22 games, besting his 74-point output from 2018-19 in 25 fewer contests.

J.T. Miller

Jeff Vinnick / National Hockey League / Getty

Miller was a solid depth player for the Rangers and the Tampa Bay Lightning, but his production skyrocketed after the latter club traded him to the Vancouver Canucks in June. Playing alongside Elias Pettersson certainly factored into that, but nevertheless, Miller more than clicked with his new team, establishing career highs with 27 goals and 72 points in 69 games.

Kevin Fiala

Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / Getty

Only Zibanejad was hotter than Fiala down the stretch. The Minnesota Wild winger went on an absolute tear, pouring in 14 goals and 26 points over the final 18 games prior to the pause. Fiala ultimately tied his career high of 23 markers and surpassed his previous best of 25 assists by six in 16 fewer contests, producing 54 points in 64 games.

Tony DeAngelo

Bruce Bennett / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Jacob Trouba was the big addition on the Rangers' blue line entering 2019-20, but DeAngelo nearly doubled Trouba's point total and posted surprisingly stellar offensive numbers in his third season with New York. DeAngelo tied for third among all NHL rearguards with 15 goals and ranked fourth in the league at his position with 53 points in 68 games, surpassing his previous career-bests by far.

Elvis Merzlikins

Kirk Irwin / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Merzlikins was the Columbus Blue Jackets' goalie of the future, but he became the goalie of the present following an injury to starter Joonas Korpisalo in late December. After taking over as the starter, Merzlikins went 13-5-4 with a .935 save percentage with five shutouts in 23 games. He also led all NHL netminders in goals saved above average during that span.

Tristan Jarry

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Jarry began this season as the Pittsburgh Penguins' backup goalie, but he snatched the No. 1 job from Matt Murray and held onto it for a while after outplaying the two-time Stanley Cup champion. Jarry faltered right before the pause and effectively lost the starting gig, allowing 18 goals combined in four straight losses. However, he excelled beforehand, posting a .931 save percentage in 29 appearances prior to the four-game slide.

Bryan Rust

Harry How / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Rust was another Penguins player who enjoyed a breakout season. The 27-year-old forward had never registered more than 18 goals or 38 points in one campaign. However, he needed only 55 games to squash those career highs in 2019-20, piling up 27 markers and 56 points. He had some help from Evgeni Malkin, but it was an impressive campaign nonetheless.

Travis Konecny

Len Redkoles / National Hockey League / Getty

The Philadelphia Flyers were one of the NHL's best teams before the postponement, and Konecny played a significant role in that resurgence. The 23-year-old needed 15 fewer games to match his career-high 24-goal output, and bested his previous high of 49 points - achieved in 82 contests - with 61 in only 66 games. He was on pace for 73 points, which would have been a 24-point improvement over his 2018-19 production.

Honorable mentions: Igor Shesterkin, Jakub Vrana

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