Category Archives: Hockey News

Report: Sharks, Kings among teams inquiring about Hanzal

A pair of Pacific Division foes see the value of Martin Hanzal.

The NHL trade deadline is set for March 1 and with the Arizona Coyotes sitting 16 points back of a playoff berth as of Friday, the "for sale" sign is up in the desert.

That means moving out pending unrestricted free agents - a group headlined by Hanzal.

The teams inquiring about the veteran center include the Los Angeles Kings and San Jose Sharks, Elliotte Friedman told Bob Stauffer of Oilers Now.

Friedman added that the St. Louis Blues have also expressed interest.

Hanzal made his NHL debut with the Coyotes in 2007 and has been a reliable pivot over the years, used on both the power play and penalty kill. He has tallied 15 points in 34 games this season after scoring a career-high 41 points a year ago.

According to Friedman, Coyotes general manager John Chayka is believed to be seeking a young player, preferably a center, in return for Hanzal.

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Burmistrov finally arrives in Arizona

Alex Burmistrov is finally in Arizona Coyotes gear.

After being scooped off waivers from the Winnipeg Jets on Jan. 2, Burmistrov finally took to the ice with the Coyotes on Friday morning.

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Trouble brewing in Blues’ crease

Spring has come early in St. Louis.

Ugly goaltending usually waits until the postseason to rear its head in Missouri, but given the shaky play of Jake Allen, we haven't needed to wait that long.

Blues bench boss Ken Hitchcock needed just 25 minutes Thursday before giving Allen the hook after allowing three goals on 15 shots in the Blues' eventual 5-1 loss to the Los Angeles Kings.

It marked the third time in five outings where Allen finished the game on the bench, a stretch that's seen him surrender nine goals on just 40 shots.

After a strong start to the year, things have gotten worse for Allen with each flip of the calendar:

Month GP Record SV% GAA
October 7 4-1-2 .923 1.83
November 11 7-2-1 .903 2.78
December 11 5-6-0 .892 3.14
January 4 1-2-0 .870 3.66

Backup Carter Hutton hasn't done any better in relief, owning an .894 save percentage in 16 appearances. But if the Blues are to do anything this year, their success can't hinge on Hutton alone.

This year marks 50 years in the NHL for St. Louis. It also currently looks like a safe bet that it'll soon be 50 years without a Stanley Cup.

After advancing beyond the second round of the playoffs last year for the first time since 2001, the Blues are now at risk of missing the playoffs for the first time since 2011.

St. Louis sits third in the Central, but just a single point above the final wild-card slot. Four teams are within three points or fewer of the Blues in the wild-card race, with Colorado and Arizona the only teams far out of the mix in the West.

For the Blues to keep their playoff hopes alive - as well as what little flicker remains of their Stanley Cup aspirations - their goaltending needs to be fixed sooner rather than later.

It's a delicate balance for the Blues, who have about $1.3 million in cap space. That's not a lot of room for pre-deadline creativity to fix their crease concerns, while the shaky confidence of a 26-year-old Allen still hangs in the balance.

St. Louis Reunion

Interestingly enough, among the top pending free agents and potential trade-deadline targets who could be moved are three individuals who have all manned the crease in St. Louis in the past:

Goalie (Team) Record SV% GAA Cap Hit Age
Ryan Miller (VAN) 12-10-3 .914 2.64 $6M 36
Ben Bishop (TB) 10-10-2 .908 2.75 $5.95M 30
Brian Elliott (CGY) 8-10-1 .889 2.95 $2.5M 31

Salary cap aside, things become further complicated by two of the above netminders currently residing on teams competing for playoff positions in the West. The Flames own the top wild-card seed, while the Canucks are one point out of a playoff spot.

Given his more affordable deal, could the Blues reconsider Elliott? St. Louis dealt the veteran goaltender to Calgary in an draft-day deal last summer, but he's struggled in his first season in Alberta.

Calgary sits in a playoff position largely to the credit of Chad Johnson, who was brought in as the intended backup to Elliott. But Johnson has rolled with the top job, owning a winning record of 15-9-1 and a sparkling save percentage of .923 on the season.

In acquiring Elliott, the Flames sent two picks to St. Louis, with one conditional on Elliott re-signing in Calgary. That doesn't look to be in the cards, but could a virtual reversal of this deal - sending a pick back to Calgary for Elliott - be enough to save the season in St. Louis?

The trade deadline is set for March 1, so only time will tell.

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Laine surprises young Jets fan after receiving birthday invite

Winnipeg Jets rookie forward Patrik Laine made a young fan's birthday wish come true this week.

On Dec. 25, the uncle of 8-year-old Lucas Bydak tweeted out a letter the boy wrote to Laine wishing him a Merry Christmas and inviting him to his birthday party. "Worth a shot," the uncle said.

Laine wasn't able to make it to the birthday party, so he did the next best thing and personally delivered several gifts to Lucas the following week.

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Rick Nash set for return after 8-game absence

The New York Rangers will insert power winger Rick Nash back into the lineup for Friday night's clash with the Toronto Maple Leafs, the team announced.

He's missed the last eight games with a groin injury.

Dealing with minor injuries throughout, Nash has missed more than a quarter of the schedule, but it's been a reasonably successful bounce-back season for the three-time 40-goal scorer. He's scored at a top 20 per-game rate league wide with 13 goals in 30 games.

Nash is expected to skate on a line with Jimmy Vesey and Oscar Lindberg.

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Avalanche trade McLeod to Predators for Girard

The Colorado Avalanche are beginning to sell.

The Avalanche announced Friday that the team has dealt forward Cody McLeod to the Nashville Predators in exchange for forward Felix Girard.

McLeod has appeared in 28 games with the Avalanche this season, scoring one goal. He has one year remaining on his contract, owning a $1.33 million cap hit.

Girard has spent the season with Milwaukee, the Predators' AHL affiliate. The 22-year-old has appeared in 35 games, tallying three goals and five assists. The Predators selected Girard 95th overall in 2013.

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Squad Up Daily NHL Fantasy Dose: Go with the old man and the C against the Isles

Follow theScore's fantasy feed on Twitter (@theScoreFantasy) for the latest news, features and more. And download Squad Up, theScore's free-to-win-money sports game.

Here is a look at the Squad Up daily NHL fantasy picture for Friday, Jan. 13:

Dynamic Duos

  • C Vincent Trocheck (71K) and RW Jaromir Jagr (59K), Panthers (vs. Islanders): Trocheck has picked up his scoring pace with four points over his last four games, and should be a good bet to continue that rate against an Islanders team that has allowed better than three goals per game on the road. Jagr has been quiet in January, but has recorded 15 of his 25 points at home so far this season.
  • C Mark Scheifele (67K) and RW Nikolaj Ehlers (54K), Jets (at Coyotes): Hot-shot rookie Patrik Laine is out for this one, placing the scoring burden on the rest of the Jets' forwards. Scheifele already has four goals through five January games, and is in good position to add to that total against a porous Arizona defense. Ehlers has been sensational this month (5 GP, 4 G, 3 A) and comes at a huge bargain.
  • C Derek Stepan (60K) and LW Chris Kreider (56K), Rangers (vs. Maple Leafs): The Rangers and their league-best 3.4 goals per game should make it a long night for the Maple Leafs' wonky defense. Stepan is averaging just under a point per game at Madison Square Garden in 2016-17, while Kreider has 19 points in 18 home games and has scored seven times over his last seven contests.

Goalie Breakdown

  • TARGET - Cam Ward (92K), Hurricanes (vs. Sabres): Oddsmakers have made Ward a sizable favorite in this one, with the Hurricanes enjoying home-ice advantage against a Sabres team playing the second game of a back-to-back set. The only danger here is that Buffalo falls asleep on offense, which could conceivably limit Ward's saves. From a win perspective, however, he's the surest play of the night.
  • BARGAIN - Connor Hellebuyck (81K), Jets (at Coyotes): Hellebuyck is the cheapest goaltender on the Squad Up slate, which makes him the top value play among netminders. The Coyotes possess one of the league's most anemic offenses, and rank in the top-10 in minor penalties, further squelching their offensive potential. If you want to load up on big-name forwards, slot Hellebuyck into your goalie slot with confidence.
  • FADE - Mike Smith (114K), Coyotes (vs. Jets): It would be easy enough to simply say "see above," but that seems kind of lazy, so I'll explain the Smith pick like this: Arizona doesn't score enough goals. Arizona takes too many penalties. Arizona's defense isn't great. And if those three facts don't dissuade you from selecting Smith, consider a fourth: He's the most expensive goalie on the slate. Stay far away.
  • CONTRARIAN - Andrei Vasilevskiy (105K), Lightning (vs. Blue Jackets): Vasilevskiy's high price tag and recent struggles, combined with a matchup against a Columbus team that is still elite in the eye of daily fantasy players, should depress ownership numbers. But this matchup isn't as daunting as it seems, with the Blue Jackets coming back to Earth of late. Vasilevskiy is high-risk, but worth a look.

Bargain Plays

  • C Mathieu Perreault (47K), Jets (at Coyotes): Perreault is a terrific value play in Arizona, skating on the first line with Bryan Little and Blake Wheeler while also slotting into the first power-play unit. The veteran forward played more than 21 minutes against Montreal on Wednesday and recorded a goal; he's a great bet to return value against a Coyotes penalty kill that ranks 28th in the NHL (76.3 percent).
  • RW T.J. Oshie (47K), Capitals (vs. Blackhawks): Oshie is in the same situation as Perreault, but finds himself in a better situation against the visiting Blackhawks as he skates alongside Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom. Oshie is red-hot right now with eight points in his last six games, but hasn't seen a corresponding price bump. Continue to ride him until the hot streak subsides.
  • D Jason Demers (25K), Panthers (vs. Islanders): If you would rather not buy low at goaltender or forward, you can easily do so on the back end by selecting Demers. While he isn't a power-play fixture, he does average better than one shot, one blocked shot and one hit in just over 20 minutes per contest. He also has eight goals and nine assists, with a good shot at increasing that point total against visiting New York.

Top Fades

  • C Ryan O'Reilly (70K), Sabres (at Hurricanes): O'Reilly has 16 points in the Sabres' 12 wins and just eight - including a lone goal - in their 19 defeats. With Carolina heavily favored, he'll be in tough to produce. He has yet to score in the second game of a back-to-back this season, and may be looking at an ice time reduction after playing no less than 22 minutes in each of his last three games. Don't spend up for him Friday.
  • RW Patrick Kane (80K), Blackhawks (at Capitals): Kane's elevated price tag is warranted given his recent hot streak (eight points over his last four games), but tread lightly here. He has just 15 points in 19 road games this season, and faces a Washington team allowing the second-fewest goals per game at home (1.82). With the highest salary among non-goaltenders, Kane is a hard fade.
  • LW Jonathan Drouin (59K), Lightning (vs. Blue Jackets): Drouin is far from the only Tampa Bay player to struggle against Columbus, but his numbers - zero points and a minus-4 rating in two games - certainly don't instill confidence for Friday's third meeting of the season. With G Sergei Bobrovsky back in the fold, the Blue Jackets are in good position to halt Drouin's recent hot spell (five points in his past five games).

Contrarian Options

  • C Jonathan Marchessault (60K), Panthers (vs. Islanders): Don't expect to see Marchessault widely owned, with plenty of other viable center options on the slate. Yet, despite having recorded just two points in five January games, he remains a pivotal part of the Panthers' offense - and with the struggling Islanders coming to down, he's in great shape to end his recent offensive slump and return nice value.
  • LW Jeff Skinner (62K), Hurricanes (vs. Sabres): Skinner is coming off a three-point effort against the Blue Jackets, but is priced aggressively considering he had recorded just three points in 10 games prior. Still, he has a matchup with what should be a tired Buffalo team, and is averaging nearly a point per game at home on the season. He's a little riskier than other left wingers, but has a nice ceiling.
  • D Dustin Byfuglien (59K), Jets (at Coyotes): There are plenty of salary-friendly options on the blue-line Friday, which should leave Byfuglien with low ownership numbers. But the bruising defenseman has one of the highest floors of anyone at his position, having recorded three or more shots on goal in 15 of his last 18 games while playing more than 24 minutes 15 times over that stretch. He's a terrific 50-50 play.

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Silfverberg, Fowler not making expansion decision simple for Ducks

If the Anaheim Ducks' expansion draft strategy was to let the situation play itself out, the situation has since been muddled.

As they're configured right now, Anaheim's one of a handful of teams that must seriously consider exposing a greater percentage of its total roster in order to preserve four defenders. Because veteran Kevin Bieksa is protected with a no-movement agreement, either Hampus Lindholm, Sami Vatanen, or Cam Fowler will be exposed should they choose the opposite.

With Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, and Ryan Kesler safeguarded from selection, and an emerging star in Rickard Rakell locked into an incredibly cost-effective long-term deal, Jakob Silfverberg has been the trendy, if not obvious, choice in mock drafts.

It goes without saying, Silfverberg would be a major coup for the Vegas Golden Knights. But here's the thing: he's playing far too well right now to cough up for free.

Silfverberg scored his 13th goal and earned his 29th point in Thursday's 4-1 win over the Avalanche. He leads the team in shots, lands comfortably on the right side of the possession war, and will blow by his career-best totals shortly after the All-Star break.

This is a player the Ducks have to keep. But at what cost? An All-Star?

Similarly, Fowler is having a career season.

He ranks third among defenders league wide with nine goals, and logs a team-high 24:43 minutes a night. He's been indispensable for Anaheim, and remains relatively cheap for one more season. And he'll ride shotgun with Kesler to Los Angeles for the All-Star Game at the end of the month.

At this point, trading Sami Vatanen - himself another talented defender recently signed to a reasonable long-term contract - for a top-six forward or high-end prospect might be the most advantageous option in terms of preserving assets.

Regardless, Bob Murray will soon swallow a bitter pill.

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Hall glad to be done with ‘stressful’ stretch vs. Oilers

He may not have closure, and surely still feels the sting, but Taylor Hall's never been more prepared to turn the page.

In the visitors locker room inside the shiny new arena in Edmonton, and after facing the Oilers - the club that drafted him first overall almost seven years ago - for the second time in five nights, Hall was able to breathe a massive sigh of relief.

"On a personal level I'm glad to have these games out of the way," Hall said in his scrum. "Not in a sense that I was dreading them, but it's a lot to take. All and all, I had a fun night (with) the ovation. And I think even got booed a little bit by the end; I think you could say I'm a former player now after you get booed.

"These last six or seven days have been kinda stressful, just not knowing what to expect and having you play your former team. But we got two points out of the two games. (It) should have been a lot more."

Hall has been markedly transparent since he was dealt to New Jersey for his exact opposite: lead-footed stabilizing defender Adam Larsson. He hasn't tried to hide the fact he was hurt by the move, and that it's affected him throughout his first three months as a Devil.

Part of it was being discredited as a player, as well as his love for the city, his teammates, and the desire to see it through with the Oilers. But feelings of apprehension, and not knowing what to expect in the lead-up to his return, factored in as well.

"I said it was a weird night the first (time) playing. Tonight was just a whole different level," Hall said. "Even though I have never played in this building before, hearing that from the fans and seeing the video, it was all kind of surreal.

"It's a night I will remember for a long time. I was very very grateful for the applause, and the way people have treated me since I've been here has been awesome."

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Hall glad to be done with ‘stressful’ stretch vs. Oilers

He may not have closure, and surely still feels the sting, but Taylor Hall's never been more prepared to turn the page.

In the visitors locker room inside the shiny new arena in Edmonton, and after facing the Oilers - the club that drafted him first overall almost seven years ago - for the second time in five nights, Hall was able to breathe a massive sigh of relief.

"On a personal level I'm glad to have these games out of the way," Hall said in his scrum. "Not in a sense that I was dreading them, but it's a lot to take. All and all, I had a fun night (with) the ovation. And I think even got booed a little bit by the end; I think you could say I'm a former player now after you get booed.

"These last six or seven days have been kinda stressful, just not knowing what to expect and having you play your former team. But we got two points out of the two games. (It) should have been a lot more."

Hall has been markedly transparent since he was dealt to New Jersey for his exact opposite: lead-footed stabilizing defender Adam Larsson. He hasn't tried to hide the fact he was hurt by the move, and that it's affected him throughout his first three months as a Devil.

Part of it was being discredited as a player, as well as his love for the city, his teammates, and the desire to see it through with the Oilers. But feelings of apprehension, and not knowing what to expect in the lead-up to his return, factored in as well.

"I said it was a weird night the first (time) playing. Tonight was just a whole different level," Hall said. "Even though I have never played in this building before, hearing that from the fans and seeing the video, it was all kind of surreal.

"It's a night I will remember for a long time. I was very very grateful for the applause, and the way people have treated me since I've been here has been awesome."

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