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Flames Rumors

Calgary Flames Looking At Trade Options On Defense

August 12, 2019 at 6:14 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 22 Comments

After learning that Juuso Valimaki will miss a considerable amount of time following ACL surgery, the Calgary Flames are in a bit of a pickle. The team needs to clear some cap room in order to sign Matthew Tkachuk, but can’t afford to send out T.J. Brodie to do it anymore. With Valimaki out their defensive depth is razor thin, which is why Flames GM Brad Treliving told reporters including Pat Steinberg of Sportsnet that the team will “be looking externally” for an addition on the blueline. Treliving did mention Oliver Kylington as an internal option.

While this news comes right as rumors swirl around Buffalo Sabres defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen, the Flames would need to move out even more money if they brought in an expensive option like the young Finn. Ristolainen carries a $5.4MM cap hit for the next three seasons, a deal that would leave very little room to sign Tkachuk. The most obvious move now would be trading Michael Frolik, who is on the final year of his deal and has been involved in trade talks in the past. In fact, Frolik was expected to be included in a deal that would have brought Jason Zucker to Calgary at the trade deadline, though that transaction was never completed.

There are certainly no shortage of defensemen the team could go after, but if they want an inexpensive player who can make the same kind of impact that was expected of Valimaki this season they will need to give up more than just Frolik. Those kind of players are few and far between, and usually cost quite a bit in trade if they are even available.

Of course there is always the free agent market as well, though it’s not clear if Treliving wants to go down that route. Veterans like Dion Phaneuf, Dan Girardi, Adam McQuaid and Ben Lovejoy are out there still, along with younger options like Ben Hutton and Alex Petrovic. None of those seem like perfect fits, although they would likely come at a reasonable cost.

One player to consider may be Boston Bruins defender Kevan Miller, who was recently included in some trade speculation thanks to another cap crunch. The Bruins have their own financial troubles when it comes to signing restricted free agents, given they still need to get new contracts done with Charlie McAvoy and Brandon Carlo. The pair of young defenders are huge parts of the team’s future, and with Miller on the final year of his contract he could be moved out to make a little extra room. The 31-year old carries a $2.5MM cap hit, though his right-handedness may be an issue for the Flames, who already have Brodie, Travis Hamonic and Rasmus Andersson who normally line up on the right.

In any case, there are things to come for Treliving and the Flames who will likely have to pivot any trade talks they’ve had over the last few weeks and months while also hammering out a new deal with Tkachuk.

Brad Treliving| Calgary Flames Oliver Kylington

22 comments

Juuso Valimaki Suffers Torn ACL

August 12, 2019 at 1:01 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 4 Comments

Some terrible news has come down the pipe for the Calgary Flames, as the team announced today that Juuso Valimaki has suffered a torn ACL in his offseason training and will need surgery. Valimaki will be out indefinitely, but ACL surgery usually comes with around a six-month recovery timeline and could potentially put his entire 2019-20 season at risk.

Valimaki, 20, was expected to compete for a full-time role on the Flames blueline this season after showing he could handle the NHL level last year. Playing in 24 regular season games he registered just three points, but in his two playoff contests looked more than capable against the Colorado Avalanche. Originally selected 16th overall in 2017, Valimaki was about to enter his second professional season with high expectations but will now have to fight just to get back on the ice.

The injury also complicates things even further for the Flames, who don’t have a ton of cap room available to sign Matthew Tkachuk and Andrew Mangiapane before the year starts. Recent speculation had T.J. Brodie as the most likely player to be traded to make some room, but with Valimaki now on the shelf the team’s defensive depth is a lot thinner. Oliver Kylington will likely step into a bigger role, but moving out Brodie would make the team extremely susceptible to injury troubles throughout the year.

The long-term status of the young defenseman is perhaps more important though, as knee injuries have derailed more than a few careers over the years. We won’t be seeing Valimaki on the ice for quite some time, but hopefully he can return to full strength at some point in the future.

Calgary Flames

4 comments

Snapshots: Brodie, Marner, Staal

August 11, 2019 at 5:56 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

The Calgary Flames still need to shed some more salary in order to fit in what is expected to be a big contract for Matthew Tkachuk, and Sportsnet’s Eric Francis suggests on radio that T.J. Brodie might have to be the one to go. The defenseman has been involved in trade speculation for some time and as Francis notes, the team has two up-and-coming options in Rasmus Andersson and Juuso Valimaki (not to mention Oliver Kylington, who is also pushing for an NHL spot.)

The Flames already shed themselves of some money by buying out Michael Stone recently, but project to have just over $7.75MM in cap space to sign both Tkachuk and Andrew Mangiapane. The 29-year old Brodie has just one year left on his current contract with a $4.65MM cap hit and is still an effective offensive option from the blueline. Francis worries that the Flames may have to part with another player to find a fit for Brodie after a deal earlier this offseason fell apart with the Toronto Maple Leafs thanks to Nazem Kadri’s no-trade clause. With just a month left before training camps open, Flames GM Brad Treliving still has plenty of work to do.

  • Speaking of the Maple Leafs, they too have an unsigned restricted free agent holding things up. Mitch Marner still doesn’t have a contract for the 2019-20 season, but linemate John Tavares doesn’t seem worried. Speaking with TSN this weekend, Tavares explained that “there’s still some time” for the contract to be worked out and is hopeful that Marner is there on the first day of training camp. The Maple Leafs currently project over the salary cap for the upcoming season but have more than $10MM tied up in Nathan Horton and David Clarkson who will be placed on long-term injured reserve at some point.
  • Jared Staal has been hired by the ECHL’s Orlando Solar Bears as an assistant coach, transitioning to a new role in professional hockey. The younger brother of Eric Staal, Jordan Staal and Marc Staal played two games for the Carolina Hurricanes in 2012-13 but had spent most of his career in the minor leagues. His playing days ended after suiting up for the Edinburgh Capitals of the EIHL in 2016-17. The 28-year old was originally drafted in the 2008 second round, but couldn’t quite climb to the same heights as his brothers. Perhaps he’ll get to that level as a coach, something he’s obviously getting an early start on.

Brad Treliving| Calgary Flames| ECHL| Snapshots| Toronto Maple Leafs Matthew Tkachuk| Mitch Marner| T.J. Brodie

1 comment

Pacific Notes: Coyotes’ Arena, Labanc, Flames’ Goaltending

August 10, 2019 at 3:34 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 3 Comments

While the Arizona Coyotes new owner Alex Meruelo has made it clear that he’s committed to keeping the Coyotes in Arizona, he also didn’t go as far as to say that he wants to keep the team in Glendale, Arizona. The Coyotes have struggled financially at Gila River Arena and Merulo may be interested in moving the team elsewhere, calling Glendale, “a difficult situation.”

The owner made it clear that there are several reasons why Glendale may not be an ideal location in Arizona, including the team keeps losing money, most fans don’t live in Glendale, sponsorship there has been difficult and the team does not have a long-term lease there. However, AZ Central’s Jen Fifield reports that the leaders of the city of Glendale hope to have a meeting with Meruelo “to see how we can help him achieve his goals of success.”

However, Meruelo has made it clear for quite a while that he’s looking to find a new arena in Arizona. The team is currently on a year-to-year arena lease and the owner has made it clear that Glendale “is not viable long-term.”

  • Many eyes went wise earlier this summer, when highly talented restricted free agent Kevin Labanc signed just a one-year, $1MM deal when he could have gotten quite a bit more. NHL.com’s Adam Kimmelman reports that Labanc admits that he put the team first when he signed that deal. “I didn’t want to wait,” he said following a Checking For Charity game at Flyers Skate Zone on Friday. “I wanted to sign the contract, get myself ready for the upcoming year and have nothing hanging over my shoulder.” Labanc, who will be a restricted agent once again next summer, could be in line for an even bigger payday as his role on the ice with the Sharks is likely to increase with the losses of Joe Pavelski, Joonas Donskoi and Gustav Nyquist during the offseason. Labanc put together a solid year last season, posting career highs in goals (17) and points (56) and saw his ATOI improve as the season went on, averaging 15:26 in April despite averaging just 13:34 before the all-star break.
  • With a recent bias over the last few years in the NHL over the importance of height in goaltenders, The Athletic’s Darren Haynes (subscription required) writes that the Calgary Flames seem to be heading towards an anti-establishment policy towards them. In fact, most of Calgary’s goalie draft picks in recent years have been towards smaller goaltenders, including Tyler Parsons, who at 6-foot-1, is not considered to be ranked at the 15th percentile in height. In comparison, he would have been considered in the 89th percentile in 1984-85. The Flames seem to be opting to go against those trends as the team is also loaded with shorter goaltenders, including 2019 seventh-rounder Dustin Wolf at 5-foot-11 and Nick Schneider, who is one of their tallest prospects at 6-foot-2.

Calgary Flames| San Jose Sharks| Utah Mammoth Kevin Labanc

3 comments

Salary Cap Deep Dive: Calgary Flames

August 8, 2019 at 7:52 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 4 Comments

Navigating the salary cap is one of the more important tasks for any GM. Teams that can avert total cap chaos by walking the tightrope of inking players to deals that match their value (or compensate for future value without breaking the bank) remain successful. Those that don’t see struggles and front office changes.

PHR will look at every NHL team and give a thorough look at their cap situation heading into the 2019-20 season. This will focus more on those players who are integral parts of the roster versus those who may find themselves shuttling between the AHL and NHL. All cap figures are courtesy of CapFriendly.

Calgary Flames

Current Cap Hit: $73,743,375 (under the $81.5MM Upper Limit)

Entry-Level Contracts

D Rasmus Andersson (one year, $756K)
D Oliver Kylington (one year, $731K)
D Juuso Valimaki (two years, $894K)

Potential Bonuses

Andersson: $57.5K
Kylington: $82.5K
Valimaki: $450K

These three players project to be a big part of Calgary’s back end in the near future but only Andersson has a full NHL season under his belt.  Accordingly, he’ll likely wind up with the biggest second contract among the three but it shouldn’t break the bank.  Valimaki, a 2017 first-rounder, probably has the most overall upside of the group but he still has to lock down a full-time NHL spot first.  Assuming they don’t go and add a veteran depth piece.  There were questions surrounding Kylington going back to his draft year which caused him to slide but he has shown some NHL upside as well.  He’ll also get a chance to push for a full-time spot this coming season.  At this stage, short-term post-ELC deals are likely on the horizon for all three.

One Year Remaining, Non-Entry-Level

D T.J. Brodie ($4.6504MM, UFA)
F Austin Czarnik ($1.25MM, UFA)
F Michael Frolik ($4.3MM, UFA)
D Travis Hamonic ($3.857MM, UFA)
F Mark Jankowski ($1.675MM, RFA)
G Cam Talbot ($2.75MM, UFA)

Frolik has been part of trade speculation for quite a while now after his agent opted to up the pressure on Calgary for a perceived lack of playing time.  While he hasn’t really been able to live up to the offensive potential he showed as a youngster, he has still been an effective middle-six forward.  However, given what transpired last year plus their cap situation, he’s a prime candidate to be dealt and won’t be able to land similar money on his next deal.  Jankowski followed up his rookie year with a decent sophomore campaign as he set a new career-best in points despite playing less than 13 minutes a night.  Unless his role increases, another short-term pact (this time with arbitration rights) could be on the horizon next summer.  Czarnik was one of two Group VI UFAs that landed surprisingly rich deals in free agency last summer and like Matthew Peca in Montreal, this didn’t really pan out well as Czarnik struggled to hold down a regular spot in the lineup and was frequently on the fourth line when he was in.  Unless he takes a step forward in 2019-20, he’ll be in tough to match his current AAV.

Calgary was reported to be listening to offers on both Brodie and Hamonic earlier this summer.  It’s not that they’re not pleased with their play but rather facing the reality of their situation.  The odds of keeping both beyond this season are low.  The cost to sign both will be considerably higher than their current price tag and they do have the youngsters that will be pushing for more minutes before too long.  And, of course, there’s the fact that they still need to clear salary.  A strong season from Brodie could push him towards the $5.5MM-$6MM range while one from Hamonic would push him closer to $5MM as his offensive upside (or relative lack thereof) limits his ceiling in terms of a big contract.

Talbot signed a one-year deal with the hopes that he can take over the starting job (or least get the higher split of a platoon workload) in an effort of restoring some value around the league.  He spent most of last season behind a poor defense in Edmonton and now comes to a strong unit in Calgary so there’s a good chance his numbers will rebound accordingly.  However, if he doesn’t do enough to show that he can be a legitimate starter, his next deal probably won’t be much higher than this one.

Two Years Remaining

F Sam Bennett ($2.55MM, UFA)
G David Rittich ($2.75MM, UFA)
F Derek Ryan ($3.125MM, UFA)

Bennett continues to be a perplexing player.  He has shown flashes of being an impact player over the years but has also had stretches of play where he didn’t move the needle much.  The end result is three nearly identical underwhelming seasons which has resulted in another bridge deal.  More repeat performances will only add to trade speculation but if he puts it together, a much better contract could be on the horizon.  Ryan managed to equal his output from his career year with Carolina despite averaging two minutes less of ice time per night.  He’s an effective third liner but it’s hard to see him getting much more than he is now when his contract is up.

Rittich surprised many last season by staking claim to the number one spot for several stretches although he struggled a bit in the second half.  Given his limited track record, Calgary opted for this short-term deal.  If Rittich can lock down the number one job for these two seasons, he could double his AAV on the open market but if he stays in a platoon role, he will largely be capped like Talbot in terms of what his earning upside may be.

Three Years Remaining

F Johnny Gaudreau ($6.75MM, UFA)
F Mark Giordano ($6.75MM, UFA)

Gaudreau bypassed the bridge contract and opted to sign what was at the time considered to be a pretty big post-ELC deal just before the 2016 regular season started.  With only two full years of NHL experience under his belt, the signing was considered to be a little bit of a risk even though he was coming off a near point-per-game season.  Now, as RFA contracts have exploded, it’s turned into a pretty good bargain after Gaudreau took his offensive game to another level last season.  He should be pushing for $10MM or more three years from now.

Giordano was a late bloomer but has certainly blossomed into a legitimate number one defenseman and was a worthy recipient of the Norris Trophy.  Certainly, his deal has to be considered as well below market value after seeing what some of his peers have signed for in recent years.  His contract was once held as the standard in terms of how much their top-paid player could make but that’s highly likely to change in the near future.  Having said all that, it’s unlikely that Giordano will get much more than this on his next deal, if there is a next deal.  He’ll be turning 39 in October of 2022 when his next contract would kick in and while he’s the type of player that could still be an impact defender at that time, it’s hard to imagine him still being able to log 24+ minutes a night.

Four Or More Years Remaining

F Mikael Backlund ($5.35MM through 2023-24)
D Noah Hanifin ($4.95MM through 2023-24)
F Elias Lindholm ($4.85MM through 2023-24)
F Milan Lucic ($5.25MM through 2022-23)*
F Sean Monahan ($6.375MM through 2022-23)

* – Edmonton is retaining the other 12.5% of Lucic’s contract

Monahan has emerged as a legitimate number one center and is at a price tag that second liners are starting to get.  He might not be able to hit double-digits in terms of per-season salary but he could come close four years from now.  Lindholm, the other player alongside Monahan and Gaudreau, had a career year and is making that deal appear to be very team-friendly.  Like Monahan, he’ll still be in his 20’s when he reaches the open market and at this point, he’ll be seeking a significant raise.  Backlund has settled in nicely behind Monahan on the depth chart and is a dependable two-way center.  He’s not a bargain at that price tag but he certainly isn’t overpaid either.  He’ll be 35 when his deal is up so this could wind up being his highest-priced contract.

Then there’s Lucic.  His signing with Edmonton can only be classified as disastrous.  Calgary is clearly banking that a change of scenery can get him going but even at that, it’s still going to be a drag on their books for the next four years.  The structure of his deal makes a buyout rather prohibitive so he’s probably going to play the deal out.

While Hanifin may not become the true number one defender that his draft status might suggest, he continued to show improvement last season and should easily slot in as a number two or three for their long-term future.  Getting someone in that role for that long is certainly a bargain.

Buyouts

F Troy Brouwer ($1.5MM per year through 2021-22)
D Michael Stone ($1.167MM per year through 2020-21)

Retained Salary Transactions

None

Still To Sign

F Andrew Mangiapane
F Matthew Tkachuk

Tkachuk is one of the more prominent players in this RFA class and as he has established himself as a high-quality power forward, he’s in line for one of the bigger deals in the weeks to come.  In doing so, he will almost assuredly exceed Giordano and Gaudreau’s $6.75MM threshold and will quite likely put the Flames back over the Upper Limit even with Stone’s recent buyout.  As for Mangiapane, he impressed over his part season but he doesn’t have much in the way of leverage.  In order to trim as little from the roster as possible, Calgary will likely want to pursue a one-year pact at or around his $766.5K qualifying offer.

Best Value: Gaudreau
Worst Value: Lucic

Looking Ahead

In the short term, there’s clearly some work that still needs to be done.  They will need to free up some extra payroll room for their remaining RFAs and will almost assuredly be tiptoeing around the Upper Limit in 2019-20.  They have a decent chunk of money coming off the books which will give them a bit of flexibility next summer although they’ll have a few important spots that they’ll need to fill with that money.  While things may not be quite as tight after this season, don’t expect the Flames to have plenty of salary cap space for quite a while.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Calgary Flames| Salary Cap Deep Dive 2019

4 comments

2019 Arbitration Figures And Results

August 6, 2019 at 7:30 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

August 6th: All arbitration cases have now been completed. In total, six cases were decided by an arbitrator’s award this year. That number, though seemingly not many, actually presents a 50% increase over last summer and more than the past two off-seasons combined. Of those six decisions, the teams and players received the favorable decision an even three times apiece, and each award landed within $150K of the midpoint. All things considered, there were few surprises in arbitration, even though there were more awards than expected. Now the question is where the relationships between those teams and players go from here.

Originally published on July 19th: Friday marked the start of the arbitration season in the NHL, with Brock McGinn first scheduled for his hearing with the Carolina Hurricanes. The appointments will come fast and furious after that, with 23 cases left on the books. When we asked our readers how many would actually get to the hearing stage more than 36% of voters thought 3-4 was reasonable, the same number that reached last year.

We know now that at least one will, as Andrew Copp’s agent Kurt Overhardt told Ken Wiebe of the Winnipeg Free Press that their camp will “look forward to” the hearing scheduled for Sunday. Copp and the Jets exchanged figures earlier today. It is important to remember that the two sides can actually work out a deal in the short period after the hearing and before the actual decision is submitted by the arbitrator. For every case except Ville Husso, who the St. Louis Blues took to arbitration, the team involved will be allowed to choose the duration of the contract awarded. They can choose either one or two years, unless the player is only one year away from unrestricted free agency, at which point only a one-year deal is available.

Here we’ll keep track of all the hearings still on the books and the figures submitted. This page will be updated as the numbers come in:

July 20:

Brock McGinn, Carolina Hurricanes – Team: $1.75MM AAV, Player: $2.7MM AAV
Settled: Two years, $2.1MM AAV

July 21:

Andrew Copp, Winnipeg Jets – Team: $1.5MM AAV, Player: $2.9MM AAV
Awarded: Two years, $2.28MM AAV

July 22: 

MacKenzie Weegar, Florida Panthers
Settled: One year, $1.6MM AAV

Zach Aston-Reese, Pittsburgh Penguins
Settled: Two years, $1.0MM AAV

Ville Husso, St. Louis Blues (team-elected)
Settled: One year, two-way, $700K AAV

Christian Djoos, Washington Capitals – Team: $800K, Player: $1.9MM
Awarded: One year, $1.25MM AAV

July 23: 

Evan Rodrigues, Buffalo Sabres – Team: $1.5MM, Player: $2.65MM
Awarded: One year, $2.0MM AAV

July 24: 

Oskar Sundqvist, St. Louis Blues
Settled: Four years, $2.75MM AAV

Neal Pionk, Winnipeg Jets
Settled: Two years, $3.0MM AAV

July 26: 

Colton Sissons, Nashville Predators
Settled: Seven years, $2.86MM AAV

July 27: 

Sam Bennett, Calgary Flames
Settled: Two years, $2.55MM AAV

July 28: 

Mirco Mueller, New Jersey Devils
Settled: One year, $1.4MM AAV

July 29: 

David Rittich, Calgary Flames
Settled: Two years, $2.75MM AAV

Pavel Buchnevich, New York Rangers
Settled: Two years, $3.25MM AAV

August 1: 

Remi Elie, Buffalo Sabres
Settled: One year, two-way $700K AAV

Chandler Stephenson, Washington Capitals
Settled: One year, $1.05MM

August 2: 

Linus Ullmark, Buffalo Sabres – Team: $800K, Player: $2.65MM
Settled: One year, $1.33MM

Will Butcher, New Jersey Devils
Settled: Three years, $3.73MM AAV

August 4: 

Jake McCabe, Buffalo Sabres – Team: 1.95MM, Player: $4.3MM
Settled: Two years, $2.85MM AAV

Anton Forsberg, Carolina Hurricanes – Team: $700K/$70K, Player: $833K
Awarded: One year, $775K AAV

Sheldon Dries, Colorado Avalanche
Settled: One year, two-way $735K AAV

Rocco Grimaldi, Nashville Predators – Team: $700K/$70K, Player $1.275MM
Awarded: One year, $1MM

Joel Edmundson, St. Louis Blues – Team: $2.3MM, Player $4.2MM
Awarded: One year, $3.1MM

Arbitration| Buffalo Sabres| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Colorado Avalanche| Florida Panthers| Free Agency| Nashville Predators| New Jersey Devils| New York Rangers| Pittsburgh Penguins| Schedule| St. Louis Blues| Washington Capitals| Winnipeg Jets Andrew Copp| Anton Forsberg| Brock McGinn| Chandler Stephenson| Christian Djoos| Colton Sissons| David Rittich| Evan Rodrigues| Jake McCabe| Joel Edmundson| Linus Ullmark| Mirco Mueller| Neal Pionk| Oskar Sundqvist| Pavel Buchnevich| Remi Elie| Rocco Grimaldi| Sam Bennett| Sheldon Dries| Ville Husso| Will Butcher| Zach Aston-Reese

3 comments

Calgary Has Options On Where To Move Michael Frolik

August 4, 2019 at 1:00 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg Leave a Comment

  • The Calgary Flames may have $7.76MM in projected cap room still, but with Matthew Tkachuk and Andrew Mangiapane still unsigned, the team will be forced to offload a contract to bring both forwards, especially Tkachuk under contract. While there has been plenty of talk of Calgary trading away a defenseman such as T.J. Brodie or Travis Hamonic, The Athletic’s Kent Wilson (subscription required) writes that another option would be Michael Frolik. The middle-six forward is still just 31 and is coming off a 16-goal season, which might make him more palatable than many of the veteran free-agent options remaining on the market. Frolik has one year remaining at $4.3MM. Wilson suggests that Ottawa might make a good fit. The Senators are way under the cap, but Frolik will actually be paid just $3MM in salary despite his cap hit number, something that the budget-focused Senators love to acquire. The scribe adds the New Jersey Devils, Columbus Blue Jackets and Philadelphia Flyers as alternative options for Calgary.
  • Sportsnet’s Luke Fox writes that Calgary Flames new goaltender Cam Talbot hopes to prove his value to his new team. Talbot, who signed on to be a veteran backup to David Rittich this summer, struggled in his final two seasons with the Edmonton Oilers before finally being traded at the trade deadline. Talbot said he hoped that a trade to Philadelphia would be the reset of his career that would allow him to bounce back. However, Talbot played just three and a half games with Philadelphia as the backup to Carter Hart and never got a chance to prove his value. Now in Calgary, Talbot said he hopes to be more than just a backup to Rittich and hopes to split time with him evenly. “[Rittich] played extremely well last year and kinda took that spot and earned his right to battle for it. I’m going in. I want to complement him,” says Talbot.

Calgary Flames| Columbus Blue Jackets| Edmonton Oilers| New Jersey Devils| Ottawa Senators| Philadelphia Flyers| Utah Mammoth Cam Talbot| David Rittich| Michael Frolik

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Calgary Interested In Alex Petrovic?

August 3, 2019 at 4:32 pm CDT | by Holger Stolzenberg 1 Comment

  • Former Edmonton Oilers defenseman Alexander Petrovic remains unsigned, but the Edmonton Journal’s Jim Matheson writes that he’s heard that there is interest from the rival Calgary Flames for the blue liner. The team could look to add a veteran depth defenseman like Petrovic, who just bought out Michael Stone. Petrovic, acquired in December from Florida for Chris Wideman and a 2019 third-round pick, played just nine games for the Oilers, posting a minus-seven in that time.

Calgary Flames| Dave Tippett| Edmonton Oilers Adam Larsson| Mike Smith| Mikko Koskinen

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Brad Trelviing Expects To Sign Matthew Tkachuk Before Training Camp

August 3, 2019 at 10:53 am CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

The Flames made a move earlier this week to free up some funds to re-sign winger Matthew Tkachuk when they bought out defenseman Michael Stone.  While they still have some work to do to in order to free up enough cap room to get a new deal done, GM Brad Treliving told NHL.com’s Aaron Vickers that he expects to get Tkachuk signed before training camp.  Calgary currently has $7.75MM in cap room per CapFriendly but also still needs to get a deal done with RFA winger Andrew Mangiapane.  With Tkachuk being one of the players at the top end of the RFA market, it’s quite possible that his new contract will exceed their current cap room so expect more movement from the Flames in the weeks to come.

Calgary Flames| Chicago Blackhawks| Pittsburgh Penguins| RFA Brendan Perlini| Marcus Pettersson| Matthew Tkachuk

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Calgary Flames To Buy Out Michael Stone

August 2, 2019 at 11:10 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

Friday: Stone has cleared waivers and was officially bought out by the Flames. He is now an unrestricted free agent.

Thursday: The Calgary Flames received a second buyout window after dealing with their arbitration cases and will use it to buy out Michael Stone. The veteran defenseman has been placed on unconditional waivers according to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet, which will be followed by a buyout tomorrow. Stone has one year remaining on his contract and carries a $3.5MM cap hit. The move will result in the following cap hits being applied to the Flames:

  • 2019-20: $1,166,667
  • 2020-21: $1,166,667

Stone signed a three-year $10.5MM contract with the Flames in the summer of 2017 after being acquired earlier that year from the Arizona Coyotes. The 6’3″ defenseman at that point was just a year removed from a solid 36-point campaign and looked like he could be a big part of the Flames’ blueline. Unfortunately that first full year in Calgary didn’t go according to plan and Stone was routinely limited to third-pairing duty, playing fewer than 16 minutes 40 of his 82 games. He registered just ten points on an extremely disappointing team that failed to even make the playoffs.

His second year with the team didn’t go much better, this time marred by injury and a blood clotting issue that kept him out for some time. Stone ended up playing just 14 games for the Flames all season. With the emergence of Juuso Valimaki and Rasmus Andersson as legitimate NHL options, there wasn’t a lot of room left for Stone to try and rehab his value. He’ll have to do that elsewhere.

For Calgary, a move like this was absolutely necessary in order to re-sign Matthew Tkachuk. The team currently projects to have just $4.67MM in cap space prior to a Stone buyout, leaving them little wiggle room to get the young star under contract. If they’re planning on signing Tkachuk to a long-term deal it will likely take up a huge amount of cap space and make him their highest-paid player, something that wasn’t possible without a trade or buyout of some sort.

Stone though shouldn’t have to wait around long to find work if he is truly healthy and ready for the season. The right-handed defenseman is still just 29 years old and could represent a bargain pickup if he can reclaim any of his past success. That’s obviously not guaranteed, but for cap-strapped teams looking for a defensive upgrade he may be an option.

Calgary Flames| Waivers Elliotte Friedman| Michael Stone

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