How Henrique trade makes Ducks a dark-horse Stanley Cup contender

The Anaheim Ducks may be flying under the radar right now, but come playoff time, they'll be a team absolutely nobody wants to face. If they can get there, that is.

At this point, the Ducks sit three points back of a playoff spot after stumbling out of the gate with an 11-11-5 record. It's largely because their top two centers, and arguably their two best players - Ryan Getzlaf and Ryan Kesler - have played just six combined games due to injury.

Furthermore, defensemen Hampus Lindholm, Cam Fowler, and Sami Vatanen have missed a combined 35 contests due to various ailments. The latter, of course, was traded to the New Jersey Devils on Thursday in exchange for center Adam Henrique in order to help replenish Anaheim's lost depth up the middle.

While there's a strong argument to be made that Vatanen is the better player with a higher ceiling, Henrique makes a healthy Ducks roster one of the deepest in the entire NHL - and perhaps the best Anaheim roster since the days when Scott Niedermayer and Chris Pronger roamed the blue line.

Here's a look at a projected healthy Ducks lineup, with asterisks attached to the players sidelined due to injury in the team's most recent game:

LW C RW
Nick Ritchie Ryan Getzlaf* Corey Perry
Andrew Cogliano Ryan Kesler* Jakob Silfverberg*
Ondrej Kase Adam Henrique Rickard Rakell*
Joseph Blandisi Antoine Vermette Patrick Eaves**

**Eaves has Guillain-Barre Syndrome and there is no timetable for his return.

LD RD
Hampus Lindholm Josh Manson
Cam Fowler Brandon Montour
Francois Beauchemin Kevin Bieksa
G
John Gibson
Ryan Miller

On paper, the Ducks have all the ingredients of a team that would be favored to win the Stanley Cup. They're strong down the middle, have scoring depth, feature a blend of mobility and physicality on the blue line, and employ a goaltender who's capable of stealing a series. Without the Henrique-for-Vatanen deal, however, they wouldn't check off all of these boxes.

Henrique - who already has a goal and an assist in two games with the Ducks - now provides the same element that Nick Bonino gave the Penguins over the last two years: a third-line center who's good enough to exploit soft matchups.

That's because Getzlaf will always draw opponents' top checking lines and D pairings, while Kesler will always play against top lines, which leaves Henrique - previously a top-two center - with the easiest matchups of his career. With Rickard Rakell (or Corey Perry) likely playing alongside him to offer balance, it could be one of the league's most productive third units.

(Photo courtesy: Getty Images)

The trade-off is that Anaheim must now rely more heavily on Brandon Montour to fill Vatanen's shoes. But in many ways, Montour is a younger, better version of Vatanen. While he's not the biggest defender, he's a puck-moving, right-handed-shooting offensive blue-liner who can quarterback a power play.

Montour already has 14 points in 26 games - good for third on the Ducks - while Vatanen has gotten off to a slow start with just four points in 17 contests. It's possible Montour could flourish even further with an increased role.

Given the hole the Ducks have dug themselves, it's unlikely they'll finish as one of the top seeds in the Western Conference this season. Instead, they'll most likely have to make the playoffs as a wild-card team - something that would give them an underdog mentality that could catapult them all the way to the Stanley Cup title.

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Oilers owner Daryl Katz bought the most expensive house in L.A. history

Edmonton Oilers owner Daryl Katz purchased the most expensive house sold in the history of Los Angeles real estate, according to TMZ Sports.

The billionaire reportedly spent $120 million on the 20,000 square foot, six-acre Malibu estate. Katz had previously been leasing the house for $750,000 per month.

Here's a look at the unreal mansion:

The aerial view of the property.

Nothing like doing laps in a 168-foot swimming pool (the longest in California) to get your day started.

A pretty decent view to wake up to.

The only TV in the world where you can actually see Connor McDavid's facial hair, probably.

There's a good chance this room smells of rich mahogany.

(Photos courtesy Kurt Rappaport, via TMZ Sports)

Largely due to his success in the pharmacy business, Katz has a net worth of $2.9 billion, per Forbes, so forking out $120 million for a home all of a sudden doesn't seem so crazy.

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Poll: With Price back and healthy, are the Canadiens a playoff team?

With five wins in seven days, the Montreal Canadiens are the hottest team in the NHL. And a big reason for that has been the return of all-world netminder Carey Price.

While we give the fans in the La Belle Province a minute to contain their excitement, here's an opportunity to weigh in on one of the bigger burning questions currently being debated in hockey circles

Now that Price is back and fully healthy, are the Canadiens a playoff threat?

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Oilers claim Davidson off waivers from Canadiens

Brandon Davidson is headed back to Edmonton.

The veteran defenseman was claimed off waivers by the Oilers on Sunday, the team announced Sunday.

Davidson was waived by the Montreal Canadiens after they were unsuccessful in finding a trade for the blue-liner.

The 26-year-old spent the first three years of his NHL career in Edmonton prior to a February trade that sent him to the Canadiens for forward David Desharnais.

Davidson has picked up one assist in 13 appearances this season.

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KHL’s Red Star fire coach Mike Keenan

Mike Keenan is suddenly in need of a job.

The legendary NHL bench boss, who has spent the past four seasons in the KHL, was dismissed by the Kunlun Red Star late Saturday.

The Red Star have won 11 of 37 games this season.

Keenan originally held both titles as general manager and head coach, but was relieved of his GM duties Tuesday. Keenan will remain with the team in an advisory role.

It was Keenan's first year with the Beijing-based team. He spent the past three campaigns with the KHL's Magnitogorsk Metallurg, with whom he won the league championship in 2014.

Keenan last coached in the NHL in 2009 with the Calgary Flames. The 1985 Jack Adams winner ranks ninth all-time with 672 NHL victories.

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Oilers nearly blow 5-goal lead, escape with nail-biting victory over Flames

The Edmonton Oilers were on cruise control in their Saturday night game versus the rival Calgary Flames, holding a 6-1 lead in the third period. Then, things got interesting.

The Flames countered with four unanswered goals in the third period, closing the gap to 6-5. The near-comeback was highlighted by Sam Bennett's second goal of the game, in which he was able to walk in alone after defenseman Kris Russell blew a tire. Yes, the same Kris Russell who infamously scored on his own net to cost the Oilers Thursday's contest against the Maple Leafs.

However, in a bit of irony, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins was credited for Edmonton's game-sealing seventh goal, which Flames defenseman T.J. Brodie put into his own net.

A blown victory for the Oilers would have capped a disastrous week, in what has been a nightmare of a season.

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Zetterberg calls 10-1 loss to Habs an embarrassment to organization

It was a defeat that will go down as one of the worst in Detroit Red Wings history.

The club was picked apart by the Montreal Canadiens in a 10-1 drumming, a game that had captain Henrik Zetterberg in disgust.

"You basically embarrassed everyone that played with a winged wheel tonight, and we’ve got to live with that," Zetterberg said, according to Helene St. James of the Detroit Free Press.

"I’ve played professional hockey for 20 years, I don’t think I’ve ever been a part of anything like what happened here tonight," he added.

The 10 goals were the most allowed by the Red Wings in a game since March 30, 2011, when they lost 10-3 to the St. Louis Blues, according to St. James.

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