Tag Archives: Hockey

Report: Drouin won’t return to Lightning

Jonathan Drouin has a standing offer to return to the Tampa Bay Lightning organization, but that reportedly isn't going to happen.

“That ship has sailed," a source close to the situation told TSN's Frank Seravalli, mere hours after Lightning general manager Steve Yzerman said "the door is open" for Drouin to return, but that the onus is on the player.

Servalli's source stressed Drouin's return is not a possibility, and Yzerman's offer is reportedly believed to only include the Syracuse Crunch, the club's AHL affiliate.

Even if the the offer included a chance to return to the Lightning before the playoffs, Servalli reports Drouin isn't believed to be interested.

The 20-year-old forward was suspended indefinitely without pay by the Lightning for failing to report to a game with the Crunch last month.

Yzerman elected not to trade Drouin, despite garnering plenty of interest from around the league, saying it "made no sense" to deal him for a rental player that he couldn't or wouldn't want to re-sign.

Drouin has been skating in the Montreal area with his former midget team while awaiting a deal. He could still be traded before the end of the season, but any team acquiring him wouldn't be able to use him in the playoffs.

The 2013 third overall pick could also be dealt at the draft, which takes place in Buffalo on June 24 and 25.

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Penguins’ Hornqvist scores hat trick on Sock Penguin Night

It was a hat trick for Patric.

What made the feat even more memorable was that it came on Sock Penguin Night in Pittsburgh, as Penguins winger Patric Hornqvist found the back of the net against the Arizona Coyotes off feeds from Sidney Crosby, Chris Kunitz, and Evgeni Malkin, sending both hats and plenty of stuffed "sock penguins" over the glass in celebration.

The third goal gave the Penguins a 4-0 lead midway through the second period.

With the first hat trick of his career, the 29-year-old Hornqvist now has 15 goals on the season, and 10 in 17 career games against the Coyotes.

His three-goal performance continues an impressive run across the NHL:

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VIDEO: Maple Leafs’ Sparks makes sprawling stick save

Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Garret Sparks hasn't seen NHL action since Dec. 17, but you'd never know from his early performance Monday against the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The 22-year-old made 15 first-period saves to keep the game scoreless, including the series of saves above, ending with a sprawling stick stop to rob Valtteri Filppula.

General manager Lou Lamoriello said he needed a better look at Sparks after trading James Reimer to San Jose ahead of the trade deadline, and the young goalie is certainly making a good impression so far.

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VIDEO: Lundqvist makes glove save … from the bench

Lundqvist has 1 save on 1 shot tonight from the bench #hockey #NYRvsCBJ - Streamable

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There are no nights off for Henrik Lundqvist.

The New York Rangers goaltender made a glove save while sitting helmetless on the bench as the backup netminder in the first period of Monday's game against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Is there anything he can't do?

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Blue Jackets GM: ‘Quietest trade deadline I’ve ever seen’

Despite speculation forward Scott Hartnell and defenseman Fedor Tyutin could be on the move, the Columbus Blue Jackets stood pat at Monday's trade deadline, and general manager Jarmo Kekalainen confessed he never came close to making a deal.

"Quietest trade deadline day I've ever seen," Kekalainen said, per Aaron Portzline of the Columbus Dispatch. "Nothing else is close."

He admitted that though the team had two phone lines for incoming calls, his line alone was "plenty enough today."

Kekalainen, Blue Jackets GM since 2013, made a pair of deals at last year's deadline, moving defensemen Jordan Leopold and James Wisniewski to Minnesota and Anaheim respectively while adding young players and draft picks.

Since then, he's made a pair of notable moves, acquiring Brandon Saad from the Chicago Blackhawks during the offseason and bringing in Seth Jones from a deal that sent No. 1 center Ryan Johansen to Nashville.

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Flames trade David Jones to Wild for Niklas Backstrom, late pick

Three hours after the deadline came and went, there was one more deal on the docket.

The Calgary Flames traded forward David Jones to the Minnesota Wild for goaltender Niklas Backstrom and a sixth-round pick Monday.

Jones notched nine goals and six assists in 59 games for the Flames, and played his final game with Calgary on the top line with Johnny Gaudreau and Sean Monahan.

"As much as I love Calgary and my teammates, I think this situation for me is great," Jones said.

Backstrom hasn't played an NHL game this season. The 38-year-old former Wild starter leaves Minnesota as the franchise leader in games played (409), wins (194) and shutouts (28) at the position.

The Flames take on Backstrom's $3.42-million cap hit this season, while the Wild absorb Jones' $4-million hit. Both players are pending unrestricted free agents.

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Canadiens’ GM Bergevin: No surgery for Carey Price

Carey Price skated in full gear Monday, and later in the day, Montreal Canadiens general manager Marc Bergevin provided more positive news regarding their star goaltender.

Related: Carey Price skates in full equipment

"There never has been surgery and there never will be," Bergevin said of Price's lower-body injury, per TSN's John Lu. The 28-year-old hasn't played since Nov. 25, and though many believe he could be shut down for the year, Bergevin implied he's closer to full health.

"I'm convinced if he played a position other than goalie he'd be playing hockey right now," he added, according to NHL.com's Arpon Basu.

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Treliving, Flames rise to another significant occasion

The biggest events bring out the best in Brad Treliving.

Eight months after plucking Dougie Hamilton off the draft floor, the Calgary Flames' second-year general manager executed another plan on another salient event on the NHL calendar, engineering a series of shrewd deals in the lead-up to the trade deadline.

In all, Treliving turned a depth forward approaching his ceiling and three players on expiring contracts that, for all intents and purposes, could re-up with the club this summer, to acquire six functional assets (and a sixth-round lottery ticket) to fuel the team's continuing reconfiguration.

Here's his handiwork in full:

OUT: D Kris Russell, F Jiri Hudler, F Markus Granlund, F David Jones

IN: F Hunter Shinkaruk, D Jyrki Jokipakka, F Brett Pollock, two second-round picks (one of which could become a first), fourth-round pick, sixth-round pick

Perhaps his best move came at the expense of the organization which might, nay, is, feeling the most wrath from its fan base. Treliving revisited (and feasted) on a previously useful, and perhaps unusual, trade partner in Jim Benning's Vancouver Canucks with last week's acquisition of Shinkaruk for Granlund.

A former first-round selection, Calgary native, and one of the top AHL goal-scorers, Shinkaruk possesses much more upside than Granlund - a player who failed to carve out a role in 86 games.

With that swindling, Treliving then turned his attention to expiring contracts on his payroll.

First, two days before the deadline, Calgary received value on Hudler, acquiring second- and fourth-round draft picks from the Florida Panthers. Hudler contributed massive numbers previously, but needed 53 games this season (largely spent alongside Calgary's best two offensive players) to reach the 10-goal plateau.

For comparison sake, Hudler is averaging just 0.31 points per 60 minutes more than Kris Versteeg, who the Los Angeles Kings acquired for a fifth-round pick and a low-grade prospect.

Lastly, Treliving manufactured the trade deadline's greatest rental bounty. Russell, the mid-to-bottom pairing blue-liner who hangs his hat on shot blocks and intangibles, brought back a young, controllable, NHL-ready puck mover to fill out the team's current group in Jokipakka, a former second-round pick and point-per-game WHL scorer in Pollock, and conditional second-round selection.

The pick, currently the Flames' third in the second round this summer, will be upgraded to a first-round pick should the Dallas Stars - currently third in the overall standings - win two series this spring.

Oh, and then long after the deadline has passed, it was announced Treliving dumped a third expiring contract in David Jones onto the Minnesota Wild for a sixth-round pick (and the right to house goalie Niklas Backstrom).

***

Stan Bowman's masterful roster augmentation in Chicago was objectively unmatched. But for Treliving and the Flames, who unlike the Blackhawks must balance improving the existing makeup with devotion to the process, might be right there behind the defending champions.

Until draft day, Brad.

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