Tag Archives: Hockey

Tulsky braces for ‘complicated offseason’ in 1st test as Canes GM

Eric Tulsky knows he's in for a tough challenge to kick off his first season as general manager of the Carolina Hurricanes.

"This is a complicated offseason, I think we all know that," he said Wednesday during his introductory press conference, per The Hockey News' Ryan Henkel. "There's a lot of free agents, and we're gonna have to work to be creative on solutions to keep the team moving forward."

According to CapFriendly, the Hurricanes have around $24 million in projected cap space, but Martin Necas and Seth Jarvis are pending restricted free agents, while Jake Guentzel, Jordan Martinook, Teuvo Teravainen, Brett Pesce, and Brady Skjei can all become unrestricted free agents on July 1.

The Hurricanes' previous general manager, Don Waddell, flocked to the Columbus Blue Jackets in May. Carolina promoted Tulsky from his role as assistant, tabbing him to solve its summer dilemma.

"We have a lot of truly outstanding players and people and we probably aren't gonna be able to keep all of them and that's gonna hurt," Tulsky said. "It's gonna hurt us on the ice and it's gonna hurt us in the locker room.

"At the same time, that does open up opportunity for some of the players we have to step into bigger roles on the ice and in the locker room."

Tulsky first joined the Hurricanes in 2014 after the organization was impressed by his analytics chops as a blogger. He also holds a bachelor's degree in chemistry and physics from Harvard and a doctorate in chemistry from Cal.

Despite his untraditional background, Tulsky doesn't think his promotion will spur "a huge shift" for the team philisophically.

"We didn't hire ChatGPT to be the GM," he said. "There are things that an NHL career brings, certain experiences that people who played in the league have that are an advantage to them.

"There are experiences outside of playing in the league that can be an advantage, too. ... So it's not like a hockey career is a prerequisite for doing this job."

The Hurricanes were eliminated by the New York Rangers in the second round of the postseason. Carolina has been one of the league's premier regular-season teams for the past four campaigns and has made the playoffs for six straight years, but it hasn't seen the Stanley Cup Final in that stretch.

"Nobody is satisfied with that," Tulsky said. "Nobody goes into the business dreaming of having a lot of regular-season points and winning a round or two. So the goal is to find ways to keep getting better. And the good news for us is we are well positioned to keep taking steps."

Tulsky has seemingly been busy during his brief time at the helm. Carolina is reportedly shopping Guentzel's rights and testing the market for Necas while working on a long-term deal for defenseman Jaccob Slavin. Tulsky also signed blue-liner Jalen Chatfield to a three-year, $9-million deal earlier in June when he still had the interim tag.

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Blake admits erring on Dubois: He ‘wasn’t a great fit’

Kings general manager Rob Blake acknowledged he deserves some of the blame for Pierre-Luc Dubois' disappointing tenure in Los Angeles after shipping the center out Wednesday.

"I don't think I did a good enough job integrating him in the right roles on the team here this year," the GM told reporters after trading Dubois to the Washington Capitals for goaltender Darcy Kuemper. "I think it wasn't a great fit in that aspect for us, and we'll take responsibility for that."

Blake didn't elaborate, simply noting he and the club could've done more.

"I put it on us," he said. "We've got to work better as a group within this organization to make that fit."

The GM also revealed that trade discussions started picking up earlier this month.

"I think the attention, probably from the (scouting) combine in Buffalo where teams start to talk ... kind of took place from there," he said.

Last June, Blake landed Dubois in a sign-and-trade from the Winnipeg Jets for forwards Gabriel Vilardi, Alex Iafallo, and Rasmus Kupari, along with a second-round pick in this year's draft. The Jets inked him to an eight-year, $68-million contract before sending him to L.A. because the Kings would've only been able to give him seven years.

Dubois was coming off a campaign with Winnipeg in which he tied his career high of 27 goals and established new personal bests in assists (36) and points (63). However, he failed to match those numbers in his first and only season with the Kings.

The pivot, who'll turn 26 on Monday, collected only 16 goals and 24 assists, though he did play all 82 games for the first time since 2018-19. Dubois also authored favorable underlying numbers with a 53.88 expected goals for percentage and a 53.66 scoring chances for percentage, per Natural Stat Trick.

However, his average ice time of 15:42 was the second-lowest of his seven-year career.

Dubois spent his first three seasons and five games of his fourth with the Columbus Blue Jackets, who drafted him third overall in 2016. The Blue Jackets dealt him and a third-round selection to the Jets for Patrick Laine and Jack Roslovic in January 2021.

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June 19 2024 – Frank Corrado

One down, many more to go for the Canucks front office! The signing of Filip Hronek officially starts the Canucks off season so Matt and Blake take a look at what’s next for the team, and whether there’s more to come for the current crop of free agents.


Frank Corrado joins the guys to give his overall scouting report on Hronek and what more can be expected from him over the next 8 years. Plus, he looks at the pros and cons of a Jake Guentzel signing and whether trading for his rights is worth it, and he outlines what kind of wingers would ultimately work with Elias Pettersson. All that, plus the latest on a C’s no-hitter, Lions and Whitecaps injuries, and Canada Soccer getting set to face Lionel Messi! Presented by Applewood Auto Group.


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Trade grades: Analyzing Markstrom deal, Dubois stunner

With the Stanley Cup on another two-day hiatus, the NHL had itself a mini trade deadline on Wednesday when a pair of blockbuster trades set the hockey world ablaze out of nowhere.

First, the New Jersey Devils and Calgary Flames finally agreed on a deal involving Jacob Markstrom. Then, the Los Angeles Kings and Washington Capitals swung a stunner that sent Pierre-Luc Dubois to D.C.

Below, we analyze how each team fared in their swaps.

Trade No. 1: New Jersey receives Markstrom for defenseman Kevin Bahl and a 2025 first-round pick. The pick is top-10 protected, and Calgary will retain 31.25% of Markstrom's salary for the final two seasons of his current contract.

Flames' perspective

Icon Sportswire / Icon Sportswire / Getty

General manager Craig Conroy didn't have much leverage in this one. Markstrom had full control with a no-trade clause, and the relationship between the goalie and front office was clearly strained after months of uncertainty around the former's future.

The Flames and Devils negotiated a Markstrom deal at this year's deadline, but it reportedly fell apart over salary retention. Calgary now has $1.875 million allotted to Markstrom through 2026. Because the cap rising significantly, though, that's not a huge strain, especially considering the Flames' new duo in the crease - Dan Vladar and restricted free agent Dustin Wolf - will likely cost less than Markstrom's old cap hit alone. The team also still has two first-rounders in each of the next three drafts.

Conroy had Bahl on his radar. Many were skeptical of the executive's desire to bring in Yegor Sharangovich from the Devils in the Tyler Toffoli trade, but he went on to bag a career-high 31 goals for Calgary this season. Perhaps there's enough evidence to trust his player evaluation.

Bahl, a 6-foot-6, left-shot defender, notched 11 points this season and posted strong defensive metrics in sheltered minutes for the Devils. He's owed $1.05 million in 2024-25 before he hits restricted free agency, and he should give Calgary some reliable blue-line depth. Bahl's only 23, so it's a worthwhile gamble to see if he can develop into a top-four fixture while his price tag is low. After dealing Chris Tanev and Noah Hanifin in-season, the Flames needed help on the back end, and Bahl will be able to provide important minutes immediately.

The Flames reportedly shopped Markstrom to several teams but ultimately sent him to the perceived frontrunners. To reel in a first-round pick and a roster-ready player for an openly available, 34-year-old goalie with control over his destination is tidy business.

Grade: B+

Devils' perspective

Derek Leung / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Devils general manager Tom Fitzgerald let the entire hockey world know he'd be going big-game hunting for a new goalie this summer - and he jumped the market to get his guy. Several teams on the precipice of contention need reinforcements between the pipes, and limited options are available. New Jersey suddenly feels like a strong pick to make the playoffs again next season after finishing 2023-24 as one of the league's biggest disappointments.

The Devils were done in by injuries this past campaign, sure, but they fell out of the wild-card race largely because their .885 team save percentage owned ranked 30th in the league. Markstrom posted a .907 clip over four seasons in Calgary and was individually brilliant in 2023-24 despite a mediocre win-loss record. He finished third among all netminders with 28.93 goals saved above expected and ninth in standing points above replacement at 8.1. Even if he's less dominant next season, any performance close to that level should launch the Devils into the Eastern Conference playoff picture.

Alongside Jake Allen - who they acquired in March, the Devils now have a reliable, experienced tandem in goal for a combined $6.05 million. And their newly hired bench boss, Sheldon Keefe, has more talent to work with on his blue line than he ever had during his run in Toronto to help insulate his netminders.

The Flames did well to secure some future assets, but the Devils are the slight winners by being aggressive in triggering a move that vastly improved their championship chances in a blink.

Grade: A

Trade No. 2: Los Angeles receives goaltender Darcy Kuemper for Dubois in a one-for-one switch.

Kings' perspective:

Gregory Shamus / Getty Images Sport / Getty

There were rumors of the Kings buying Dubois out this offseason, but they instead decided to ship him out before his no-trade clause kicked in on July 1. The optics of this deal from L.A.'s side are undeniably ugly, as they landed Dubois from the Winnipeg Jets last offseason in a sign-and-trade that included an eight-year, $68-million contract for the enigmatic center. That move can now be boiled down to Alex Iafallo, Gabe Vilardi, Rasmus Kupari, and a second-round pick for Kuemper. Ouch.

Although the Kings were strong-armed by a strict timeline to make a decision on Dubois' future, landing only Kuemper is underwhelming. Los Angeles has needed help in goal for several years, but Kuemper is 34, posted an .890 save percentage en route to losing his starting gig to Charlie Lindgren this season, and is owed $5.25 million through 2027. He's more of a hopeful stopgap than a long-term solution in the crease.

If there's a silver lining in the Kings admitting the Dubois experiment was a failure, it's that Los Angeles suddenly has over $23 million of cap space to play with this summer. The shock factor of Wednesday's trade is unlikely to wear off until further improvements are made and, until then, we're going to be harsh about this one.

Grade: D

Capitals' perspective:

Leila Devlin / Getty Images Sport / Getty

The Capitals are taking a big risk by bringing in Dubois, who's now failed to click in Columbus, Winnipeg, and Los Angeles. With veteran Nicklas Backstrom on long-term injured reserve, Dubois is now Washington's second-highest paid player behind Alex Ovechkin and will jump to the top of the club's depth chart at center. There will be nowhere for him to hide in taking on a bigger role, and expectations to produce are going to be enormous.

Washington is banking on the promise Dubois has shown in three separate 60-point seasons. The soon-to-be 26-year-old is a strong playmaker when engaged, and can be difficult to defend when using his size effectively. The tools have always been there, but the Caps need to find a way to consistently get the best out of him. Otherwise, they've just taken on one of the league's most cumbersome contracts.

The Capitals would grade out much worse if they gave up more to acquire Dubois, but shedding Kuemper's contract and handing the reins to Lindgren is a positive. Washington took the bigger risk in this trade, but there's more potential for upside if Dubois can find his groove.

Grade: B-

(Statistics courtesy: Evolving-Hockey, CapFriendly)

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