The NHL’s roster freeze period is now in effect. While there usually aren’t a flurry of transactions in the days leading up to it, we saw three trades made on Wednesday while numerous teams made roster moves as well.
However, that won’t be the end of things on the roster movement front despite what the term freeze would imply. Section 16.5 (d) in the CBA goes over what is and isn’t allowed during this period. Let’s break that down. The first section is as follows:
(i) For all Players on an NHL Active Roster, Injured Reserve, or Players with Non-Roster and Injured Non-Roster status as of 11:59 p.m. local time on December 19, a roster freeze shall apply through 12:01 a.m. local time December 28, with respect to Waivers, Trades and Loans; provided, however, that Players may be Recalled to NHL Clubs during this period and, provided further, that if a Player is placed on Regular Waivers prior to the roster freeze period and is claimed during such roster freeze period, the roster freeze period shall not apply and the Player shall immediately report to the claiming Club. However, during the roster freeze period a Club can make any Player transactions necessary for the Club to come into compliance with Article 50 as a result of a Player being removed from the Bona-Fide Long-Term Injury/Illness Exception.
From a waiver perspective, we’re unlikely to see any new activity on that front (unless a team needs to make a move to get cap-compliant following an LTIR activation) but Tyler Johnson’s pending termination in Boston will be able to be completed.
You might also notice in the CBA text that there’s nothing prohibiting recalls during this time. Accordingly, teams can still bring players up and with many teams playing in three games between now and the break that starts on Tuesday, there will undoubtedly be several recalls across the NHL.
Now, let’s look at the other section of this rule which will preview a lot of the transactions that will be coming early next week:
(ii) Notwithstanding Section 16.5(d)(i), a Player on emergency Recall may be Loaned during the roster freeze period and a Player who was Recalled after December 11 may be Loaned through 11:59 p.m. local time on December 23, provided such Player is not required to be placed on Waivers during the roster freeze period in order to effectuate such Loan.
In essence, anyone recalled during the freeze is eligible to be sent down by Monday and in most circumstances, they will. Meanwhile, anyone recalled (regular or emergency) since December 11th is eligible to be sent down. There will be quite a few of those in that category as well, even if it’s just in an attempt to save a bit of money on the salary cap.
The one exception to this is if a player becomes waiver-eligible during this time. This occurs when a player has been on an NHL roster for 30 days or played in 10 games since last clearing waivers. If that happens to someone during this stretch, they’ll be ineligible to be sent down during the freeze.
With this all in mind, while there technically will be a roster freeze in place for a little over a week, there will still be considerable roster activity for the first half of it so don’t be surprised when the transactions keep coming in over the coming days.
Grocery stick
That’s very interesting and good to know. Thanks for the sum-up.
layventsky
I’ve always thought it was weird that the league has a roster freeze when there are games still being played.
FeeltheThunder
The roster freeze is more towards trade transactions than anything else. The fact 3 notable trades occurred just before the roster freeze says that the trade market is going to be quite active after the freeze. Teams this season seem more open to make moves earlier than in prior seasons. January could be an active trade month heading towards the early March trade deadline. Usually February is when things start rolling but this season seems a little different IMO.