As the holiday season approaches, PHR will take a look at what teams are thankful for as the season heads towards the one-quarter mark. There also might be a few things your team would like down the road. We’ll examine what’s gone well in the early going and what could improve as the season rolls on for the Arizona Coyotes.
What are the Coyotes most thankful for?
The flat salary cap.
When the COVID-19 pandemic forced the NHL to hit pause on the 2019-20 season, limited attendance figures across the league, and ended the natural rise of the salary cap, teams all around the league were stuck with bad contracts that they could no longer afford. Enter the Coyotes, who used their massive amount of cap space to leverage draft picks and futures out of several transactions this summer. The team now has eight picks in the first two rounds of the 2022 NHL Draft, while their actual salary expenditure comes nowhere near the collective cap hit of the players they accumulated.
Loui Eriksson, Antoine Roussel, Jay Beagle, Anton Stralman, Shayne Gostisbehere, and Andrew Ladd were all considered bad contracts, but the Coyotes welcomed them with open arms if it meant adding future assets. None of those deals last more than two seasons, meaning the Coyotes will be free to do as they like down the road.
Who are the Coyotes most thankful for?
It’s hard to know if Armstrong has what it takes to build a winner, but at least Coyotes fans have a clear plan to cheer for right now. The team is bad this season. It will probably be bad for the next several seasons. But that’s better than, as Armstrong put it recently, making the playoffs “once every four years — if lucky, get by a first round, but most times get beat out.”
There will be a lot of pressure on Armstrong to pick the right players with these draft picks he has accumulated, but don’t forget that the team brought in some help for the rookie GM. Director of amateur scouting Darryl Plandowski was one of Armstrong’s first hires, bringing him to Arizona after 12 years as the assistant director of amateur scouting with the Tampa Bay Lightning. Plandowski and Armstrong weren’t allowed to participate in the 2020 draft for Arizona because of their previous roles but were responsible for the 2021 group that was headlined by Dylan Guenther (9th overall) and Josh Doan (37th).
What would the Coyotes be even more thankful for?
A healthy deadline market.
There’s little doubt that Armstrong and company would be willing to trade almost anyone on the roster at this point, but their deadline prizes include Phil Kessel, Ryan Dzingel, and Ilya Lyubushkin, among others. Perhaps a player like Gostisbehere, who is experiencing a renaissance in the desert, would also fetch a price if the Coyotes retained salary, despite the Philadelphia Flyers spending two draft picks to get him off the books a few months ago. It’s really not about getting prime, franchise-changing assets at this deadline, but any small piece that can add to the pile would be appreciated.
One thing to note is that because they retained salary on Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Darcy Kuemper already, the Coyotes can’t just trade everyone at a slashed cap hit. They can only retain salary on one more contract for this season–though, Kuemper’s retention expires at the end of the year so they can do it a couple of times again in 2022-23.
What should be on the Coyotes’ Holiday Wish List?
Draft picks, draft picks, and maybe another few veterans?
Quite frankly, the Coyotes don’t want to be good next year. They don’t want to add a young player that breaks out in 2022-23 and leads them to challenge for a playoff spot. They’re stripping it down to the bones and with the 2023 Draft being so impressive (at least at the top), they want to be in the mix for the first-overall pick.
In fact, they actually may turn into something of a buyer at the deadline, if only to take on even more bad money in the form of overpaid veterans. A player like Brett Connolly, currently buried in the minor leagues for the Chicago Blackhawks but still costing them $2.375MM against the cap, is a perfect target for a team like the Coyotes. He could fill out a spot on their team next year without the risk of really turning them into a contender, and potentially even be flipped at the 2023 deadline if things go well. There are many players like this around the league, all which could be collected if Armstrong still wants to weaponize his cap space further.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
3 hockey
What Your Team Is Thankful For: Arizona Coyotes Should be thankful they even have a team still.
manos
In the immortal words of Ned Flanders: Nothing at all, nothing at all, NOTHING AT ALL.
random comment guy
Stupid sexy Flanders
DarkSide830
exactly nothing
MacJablonski--NotVegasLegend
“What Your Team Is Thankful For Arizona Coyotes” — Not having to shovel snow AND tens (not a typo) of adoring fans… and palm trees … and the Scottsdale Mall, where we can find *other* teams’ gear that is really cool to wear!
mario crosby
The rest of the NHL is thankful the Coyotes are in the league. They are an easy way to pick up two points.
Stormintazz
The signing of Alan Hepple from Colorado was a great pick up.
FatherFenix
Armstrong, for sure. All the snarky jokes aside, Maloney and Chayka did half-ass jobs. We needed to burn the roster down and start over, but they just kept making bad long-term moves to save their jobs another year at a time. Armstrong came in, said “if you want me here, we’re tearing it down and starting from scratch”, and the owner gave him the keys instead of committing to more half-assed project GMs.
I’m a Coyotes fan since I was a kid in ’96 and I had to nod at my screen when I first read the article where Armstrong said the “once every four years — if lucky, get by a first round, but most times get beat out” line because that’s exactly the hell we’ve been stuck in and he gets it. As horrible as this year – and the next few – will be, at least it’s by design and it’s our best shot at not sucking for longer than half a season.