Blue Jackets send Gaborik to Kings

Covering just about every trade on deadline day is hard enough. Another big name that moved was former Ranger Marian Gaborik. He was dealt from the Blue Jackets to the Kings in exchange for forward Matt Frattin, a second round pick and conditional third.

Gaborik has only played in 22 games this season for Columbus. In Year Two with the Jackets after the Rangers dealt him at last year’s deadline for Derick Brassard, Derek Dorsett and John Moore, the 32-year old has six goals and eight assists totaling 14 points. He’s missed significant time this season due to a knee sprain and broken collarbone. After scoring 41 goals and 76 points to help the Rangers reach the Conference Finals, Gaborik has totaled just 18 goals and 41 points over 69 games since.

Analysis: In the final year of a contract that pays him $7.5 million, Gaborik moves onto his third team in a year. The Kings were always interested in his services. Now, hoping he can add offense they finally get him as a rental. He should have plenty of incentive entering the summer unrestricted. Certainly, the Jackets did well getting a solid return. Frattin is a depth player who supplies energy and they got potentially two picks for the future. It’s a fair deal for both sides.

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Typical deadline for Devils, but is that good or bad news?

Newest Devil Tuomo Ruutu (TSN.ca)

It seems like as Devil fans we go through this kind of thing every year on trade deadline day, while all the teams around us make splashy deals like Montreal with Thomas Vanek or the Rangers with the long-rumored Ryan Callahan plus two high picks for Martin St. Louis swap, the Devils always seem to make the under-the-radar deal for a good role player – which Tuomo Ruutu qualifies as.  Though just when you come to expect the Devils to do nothing, they throw out an occasional big-name surprise like trading for Doug Gilmour back in the day, or Ilya Kovalchuk more recently.  This wasn’t one of those deadlines, as trading Andrei Loiktionov and a conditional third-rounder (in 2017!) for Ruutu was our only move of the day.  Before I get to that deal, I’ll talk about what wasn’t done – starting with the Martin Brodeur saga.

Over the last forty-eight hours all Devil fans have gone through a roller coaster of emotions wondering whether Brodeur would be traded, debating should he be traded and if he’s not traded what his role on this team should be going forward.  Although a possible Brodeur trade’s been in the wind for a while things blew up early yesterday morning with reports in the Daily News and on WFAN that a Brodeur to Minnesota trade was imminent.  As soon as that came out, his start last night at home against the Wings took on a symbolic meaning.  A game that was set to be a 14,000 attendance game (going by secondary market prices) turned into a sellout as demand for tickets shot through the roof in the twenty-four hours before the game.  Just my luck that I had a previous engagement I couldn’t get out of and was unable to attend, since last night turned into a storybook finish after Stephen Gionta‘s tiebreaking goal with just 36.6 seconds remaining in regulation that blew the roof off the building – and nearly sent Chico Resch into excited shock during the call – paving the way for a 4-3 win that not only kept the Devils alive in the playoff race but gave Brodeur a possible feel-good finish to his Jersey tenure.

It wasn’t long after the game however, where the Brodeur trade saga again took center stage with a report by Darren Dreger that Brodeur had submitted a list of eight teams he’d okay a trade to and more cryptic comments by Marty after the game all but overtly saying he’d welcome a move, even if he was going to be just a backup on another team and saying ‘no matter what happens tomorrow, I’ll always be a Devil’.  As much as Lou wants to trash the media over irresponsible reporting the way he did yesterday in the wake of the Brodeur to Minnesota rumors, the fact is the media didn’t invent Marty’s own comments over the last weeks and months, where the goalie bemoaned his decreasing playing time and all but literally asked for a trade with the number of times he made reference to being intrigued by the idea and wanting to play more.  How Marty will handle not being traded today remains to be seen, but it seems as if management’s going full bore trying to keep him happy again with two starts in the last three games and comments like coach Pete DeBoer claiming that Cory Schnieder never took over the #1 job even when he got eight straight starts, or Lou claiming Marty’s win total proves he can still get the job done in this league (never mind the team scores 3+ goals for Marty and >2 for Cory).  So it appears we’re now back to a 50-50 split after Cory finally gave up 3+ goals in a game for the first time in almost two months, wonderful.

Another non-change that’s annoying is of course the defensive logjam, which seems destined to keep Adam Larsson in Albany for the remainder of the season now with eight defensemen on the roster as is.  And despite all Eric Gelinas has done for the Devils’ power play and offense from the blueline, he was again benched last night after taking a third-period penalty and is always one DeBoer twitch away from the doghouse.  When the Devils don’t have Larsson or Gelinas in the lineup, they only ice two defensemen under thirty in the lineup – Jon Merrill and Mark Fayne, who himself isn’t a speedster per se.  Teams with speed give us fits, especially with our equally slow forward core which got slower with the subtraction of Loiktionov and the addition of Ruutu.  To be fair, I’ve always liked the feisty Finn and with Loiktionov a restricted FA and clearly not one of the key players here in New Jersey, he was likely to leave sooner or later anyway.  So player-for-player it’s an upgrade of course…and Ruutu adds a dimension only the injury-prone Ryane Clowe gives us up front.  However adding Ruutu only exacerbates our age and lack of speed, given that we have just four fowards in the starting lineup (when healthy) under 30 now – centers Travis Zajac and Adam Henrique along with wingers Steve Bernier and Damien Brunner.  Do the math – four forwards and two defensemen equal just six of the eighteen players in our starting lineup that are under thirty years old.  Lou’s taken his repeated dictum of ‘age being just a number’ a wee bit too far at this point, despite the smashing success of Jaromir Jagr as a FA signing this year.

One other thing that’s scary vis-a-vis Lou’s acquisition of Ruutu is his conract, though the GM admitted Carolina was retaining some of Ruutu’s $4.75 million salary over the last two plus years of his deal.  Giving up a third-rounder annoyed me, until I found out the third-rounder was a conditional one in 2017…that’s four drafts away if you do the math.  Clearly Lou didn’t want to give up any upcoming picks given our lack of a first-rounder this year and some of the other picks we’ve traded away recently, which was the right call.  Still, when he was asked about not acquiring a scorer at the deadline Lou claimed Ruutu was a scorer citing his 26 goals in 2008-09.  I guess what happened five years ago is more relevant than Ruutu’s last three seasons where he’s put up just twenty-seven goals and fifty-nine points in 146 games.  That’s about a thirty-point pace over almost two full seasons….and with a combined -28 to boot including a -19 this year (though it’s hard to gauge how good or bad defensively anyone is on those Carolina teams).  Despite his pricetag, Ruutu’s not a scorer at this point, though he does have more shootout success (9/22) than anyone on our roster right now, which might help if we have to go to the dreaded skills competition down the stretch.  Still though, he only has two twenty-goal seasons in his career.  Calling Ruutu a scorer is insulting all our intelligence.

To sum up, did Lou meet his goal of making the team better today than yesterday…yes.  Did he give up anything that’s going to kill our future?  No.  In that respect I can’t complain about getting Ruutu and doing nothing else from a short-term perspective.  However, the inaction in regards to dealing Marty and the inability or inaction to clear our defensive logjam could have long-term reprecussions and that isn’t thrilling.  Not to mention the organization’s continuing to cater to Marty could have some short-term reprecussions as well.  As glad as I am he wasn’t traded – particularly to Minnesota –  if things continue the way they are with Brodeur carping about his number of starts and eventually winning his way with Lou and Pete, it might be best for all parties considered if Brodeur goes elsewhere next year, since it’s obvious at this point Marty sees a future for himself beyond this year, and not as a backup.  Sadly Derek knows this scenario all too well with what happened during Mark Messier‘s final days as a Ranger where he still ran the organization despite having diminished as a player.  Of course it’s easier to hide a subpar forward than subpar goaltending which makes it even more imperative that someone in the organization put their foot down, and fast.  After Cory had one outing in the last two months where he gave up more than two goals (against an excellent Shark team no less), he’s been benched two of the last three games, possibly three of four.  While Marty’s earned his way back in the rotation, he should no longer be the head of it.

Will it happen and should it happen, are unfortunately two different questions with probably different answers.

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Rangers add Raphael Diaz to back end

Raphael Diaz is the newest Blueshirt adding blueline depth.  Getty Images

Raphael Diaz is the newest Blueshirt adding blueline depth.
Getty Images

In a move to address blueline depth, the Rangers added defenseman Raphael Diaz from the Canucks for a fifth round pick. A former Canadien who represented Switzerland at the Sochi Games, the 28-year old Diaz is a serviceable righty puck moving type who is an immediate upgrade over Justin Falk.

After spending the last three seasons with Montreal, he’s taken part in six games for Vancouver tallying a goal and assist. Though he’s never been a big producer, Diaz is a solid skater that can play the right side. With the top six intact, he’s a security blanket.

Analysis: Pretty straight forward. This was an area Glen Sather had to address. In the NHL, you can never have enough defensemen. Injuries are part of the sport. Adding Diaz was a smart move.

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Devils acquire Tuomu Ruutu, keep Brodeur

Tuomu Ruutu is the newest Devil coming over from the Hurricanes at today's deadline. www.zimbio.com

Tuomu Ruutu is the newest Devil coming over from the Hurricanes at today’s deadline.
http://www.zimbio.com

On a day many players moved, the biggest one to stay put was Devils goalie Martin Brodeur. A day after making 20 saves in an emotional home start highlighting the Devils’ 4-3 win over the Red Wings, the 41-year old living legend wasn’t dealt. Instead, the all-time winningest goalie and shutout record holder who’s won three Stanley Cups and four Vezinas is likely to finish his career with the team that drafted him. As it should be.

One by one, the other goalie dominoes fell into place keeping Brodeur a Devil. When a Daily News report turned out to be false that had him moving to Minnesota where his twin sons attend Shattuck-St. Mary’s School, it was a good sign for New Jersey fans. Instead, the Wild picked up Ilya Bryzgalov from Edmonton. A day later, other potential target the Canadiens acquired Devan Dubnyk from the Predators. Jaroslav Halak was dealt from the Sabres to the Capitals. Other goalies moved including vet Tim Thomas, who left the Panthers after they picked up Roberto Luongo. He goes to the Stars to back up Kari Lehtonen with Florida getting Dan Ellis in return.

While the crazy goalie carousel revolved, Devils architect Lou Lamoriello did make one move trading for forward Tuomu Ruutu. He sent Andrei Loktionov and a conditional third round pick in 2017 to the Hurricanes for Ruutu. The recently turned 31-year old Finn is a feisty player who brings a physical element and can chip in offensively. Signed through 2015-16, his cap hit is $4.75 million. It’s being reported that Carolina will pick up a portion. How much that remains to be seen. Ruutu earns $5 million annually. In 56 games this season, he has five goals and 11 assists for 16 points with 34 penalty minutes.

Analysis: Given that he’s struggled the past couple of seasons also battling injuries, some Devil fans might not like the move. However, anyone who’s seen Ruutu knows better. He is more than only stats and provides New Jersey with another top nine forward who plays a rugged style. He can definitely help them down the stretch and is signed for two more years. They didn’t give up much. Loktionov is an enigmatic talented Russian who doesn’t fit under Pete DeBoer. He gets a fresh start in Raleigh.

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Islanders trade Vanek to Montreal

Thomas Vanek steers in a rebound as snubbed American linemate Kyle Okposo looks on. Getty Images/Kathy Kmonicek

Thomas Vanek was traded from the Islanders to the Canadiens making a loser of GM Garth Snow.
Getty Images/Kathy Kmonicek

The Islanders traded Thomas Vanek to the Canadiens  for prospect Sebastian Collberg and a second round pick. Vanek wasn’t willing to re-sign with the Islanders forcing Garth Snow to a corner. Vanek moves to Montreal as a rental before becoming unrestricted this summer.

Considering what Snow paid the Sabres for Vanek giving up Matt Moulson, a 2014 first round pick and second rounder in 2015, it looks awful. Buffalo also turned around and shipped Moulson to the Wild with Cody McCormick for Torrey Mitchell and a draft pick. We don’t know what pick they got back. But you can add it to a 1 this year and 2 next year for Vanek.

Analysis: The Islanders had no choice. Vanek already rejected an extension and wasn’t returning. At the time, I understood the gamble Snow took hoping to catch lightning in a bottle with a healthy John Tavares, Frans Nielsen and an improved Kyle Okposo. However, he never addressed the goalie situation if Evgeni Nabokov got injured. That along with a thin defense that needed Lubomir Visnovsky to stay healthy doomed them. Josh Bailey has been a huge underachiever. At least Michael Grabner has come around and might reach 20 goals.

Snow did a better job retrieving two picks from the Flyers in exchange for Andrew MacDonald yesterday. Calvin de Haan has at least emerged into a top four defenseman the organization believed he could be. A lot of upside there. But the Islanders come away big losers this season.

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Thank You Captain Cally

Dan Girardi and Ryan Callahan are on the trade block. It would be sad to see either go. Getty Images

While Dan Girardi stays, the Rangers forever captain Ryan Callahan has left. It is a sad day.
Getty Images

 

When a player fans idolize is traded, it’s hard to put into words. For the Rangers and their fans, Ryan Callahan epitomized what it means to be a Ranger. Since the day he was drafted, Callahan has been a classic overachiever that’s been easy to root for. Selected in the fourth round of the 2004 Draft 127th overall, the Rochester native has been a joy to watch. As hard working a player as this city has seen, there was a reason he was so popular.

New Yorkers appreciate lunch pail players who bring their hard hats to the court, field, gridiron or in Callahan’s case, the ice. I can remember seeing him play for Team USA at the U-18 World Junior Championship and projecting him as a gritty third liner who could kill penalties. It was obvious early that he would become a fan favorite. It didn’t take long for him to become a regular. There was the memorable St. Patty’s Day 7-0 Boston massacre when he scored twice after being recalled from Hartford in ’07. He was part of a team that advanced to the second round before losing a hard fought six-game battle to the Sabres. Ironically, his hometown club that might come calling this summer if he doesn’t re-sign with the Lightning.

Callahan struggled the following year. He was sent back to the Wolf Pack before finally coming back a different player. He never saw the AHL again. It happened that quickly. In ’08-09, he achieved personal bests with 22 goals, 18 assists and 40 points in what’s still a career high 81 games. Maybe that should’ve been an indicator of what kind of player the Rangers had. It didn’t take long for the Garden Faithful to see that a player listed at 5-11, 190 would play much bigger in stature doing whatever it took to help his team win hockey games. That’s the kind of ultimate warrior he was.

Three times in his eight-year Ranger career Callahan surpassed 20 goals. His best season came when he was named captain. Under coach John Tortorella, he excelled along with former teammates Artem Anisimov and Brandon Dubinsky. The 2011-12 Blueshirts won a division title and finished with the East’s best record. Callahan established career highs in goals (29), points (54), power play goals (13) and game-winners (9). With Captain Cally, it was never about statistics. Rather the ferocity with which he played daily. The reason that team advanced to the Eastern Conference Final was due to how hard they played. The captain was the emotional leader sacrificing his body. Whether it was delivering a big hit or laying out to block a shot, he did whatever it took. That grinding style is what made the Black and Blueshirts such a tough out despite a lack of consistent scoring.

Callahan’s no nonsense approach helps explain why he won four Steven McDonald Extra Effort Awards voted on by fans as Team MVP. He exemplified what fans loved. A passionate team oriented player who accepted whatever role given to him. Predictably, his physical style resulted in injuries. The one that stands out the most was when the Rangers were desperate for a victory against Boston, he dove in front of a Zdeno Chara shot and broke his leg missing the playoffs. That was the price of winning. Not surprisingly, the Rangers were dumped out of the first round by the Capitals. Such bravery is what defined Callahan’s time spent on Broadway. A lasting image that should stick with Rangers fans.

Today, sports have become a business. Unfortunately, we saw the ugly side with the Rangers purposely leaking out negotiations that should’ve stayed behind closed doors. The organization split up a fan base on a beloved player. It’s sad that it had to end this way. Understandably, Callahan’s asking price was high. Given his role and stature, paying such a hefty price would’ve hurt the franchise over the long haul. However, you have to wonder if it would’ve been wiser to just keep him for the season’s duration and then let it reach July 1. Instead, they decided Martin St. Louis was too good to pass up with 20 games remaining. It comes at a heavy price that could hurt the Rangers future even more. Sacrificing draft picks for an older superstar who is signed only through 2014-15.

Whatever happens will determine if the Rangers are winners. They have decided to go for it. It’s just odd that it came at the expense of their former captain. One whose loss can’t be underestimated. The Rangers were already a soft team. They just became even more vanilla. That’s a risk they were willing to take.

Goodbye to Ryan Callahan. Thank you for eight great years. You’ll never be forgotten.

Signed,

Derek Felix, New York Puck/Battle Of New York

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Captain for Captain: Rangers trade Callahan for St. Louis

 

Captain For Captain: In one of the biggest deals ever, the Rangers and Lightning swapped captains with Ryan Callahan going to Tampa Bay for Martin St. Louis. Getty Images

Captain For Captain: In one of the biggest deals ever, the Rangers and Lightning swapped captains with Ryan Callahan going to Tampa Bay for Martin St. Louis.
Getty Images

In an absolute blockbuster of epic proportions, the Rangers have traded Ryan Callahan to the Lightning for Martin St. Louis. Astonishingly, the much ballyhooed rumor WFAN’s Boomer Esiason first leaked following the Olympic Break has actually happened. The deal became reality less than an hour ago. Of course, it wasn’t straight up. The Rangers threw in a 2014 second round pick and a first round pick in 2015 to complete the stunning transaction that sent Twitter into chaos.

Captain for Captain. There’s probably never been such a deal at the trade deadline. It’s as bold and daring as it gets. When it became official, I sat open mouthed. Apparently, Glen Sather wasn’t bluffing on holding firm to his final offer which was reported to be six years, $36 million for Callahan. Despite the two sides closing in on a new contract, apparently the no movement clause was a huge factor. When they re-signed Dan Girardi, he agreed to a limited no trade clause the first three years. The next three, he can be moved.

With the Rangers deciding they couldn’t afford to pay Callahan what he wanted due to the salary cap, Sather finally pulled the plug. St. Louis had indicated he wanted out of Tampa Bay and would only accept a trade to New York. That made it easier for such a deal to come down. In getting the electrifying 38-year old who’s tied for eighth in scoring with 61 points (29-32-61), the Rangers finally added another scorer to a roster starved for it. Adding him to Rick Nash, former Lightning teammate Brad Richards and Mats Zuccarello changes the dynamic. There’s little doubt that the highly skilled and speedy former Hart winner should fit into Alain Vigneault’s system. The big question is how much of an affect will such a move have on the locker room.

It can work. St. Louis has an incredible work ethic and is very coachable. He wanted a change. Tampa GM Steve Yzerman granted him his wish. It would’ve been easy for both clubs to hold onto their captains and wait till the summer. Unless he re-ups with his new team, Callahan is set to hit the market this summer. St. Louis is signed through next season and has a cap hit of $5.625 million. His 2014-15 salary will decrease from $6.5 million to $5 million. If he reaches free agency the following summer, he’ll be 40. St. Louis turns 39 June 18.

Such a trade is a huge risk. Sather is banking on St. Louis delivering for the short term. On paper, he should make the Rangers better. However, if you’ve followed this team you know how much Callahan meant on and off the ice. It wasn’t just about statistics. Rather intangibles that included his leadership on the bench and in the locker room. By subtracting their captain, the Rangers just became much softer. They weren’t a big or physical group to begin with. Callahan was the key ingredient that made them tough to play against. Now, it’ll be more geared towards offense and relying on Henrik Lundqvist in a run and gun. That style got exposed over the weekend in a 6-3 loss to Boston. A team they still don’t match up against.

Entering tonight’s pivotal home match against the Maple Leafs, the Rangers are clinging onto third in the Metro Division with 69 points. With last night’s win, the Blue Jackets have tied them but are the wildcard due to one fewer ROW (regulation overtime win) with the same amount of games (20) remaining. Both are only one up on the Capitals, who are on Wednesday’s schedule versus the second place Flyers. With their third win in four, the Devils have 67 and are two behind.

There’s no guarantee it’ll work. Given how great a player St. Louis is, you have to think the Rangers should be a playoff lock. If they don’t make it, Sather will have a lot of egg on his face. One of the stipulations for the trade is if the Rangers make the Conference Final in one of the next two years, Tampa sends them a pick back. One fact about the current roster is they are a win now team. At least Sather went for a player who fits that criteria.

Analysis: While it’s hard to argue against trading for a player of St. Louis’ stature, Sather gave up a lot. The 2015 first round pick in a very deep draft could come back to haunt them. I could’ve lived with it being a 2014 first rounder instead. It’s the reverse. The Lightning will get a second round pick this year and a first round pick next year. That’s quite a return for an aging star. If you want to look at the glass half full, I don’t believe St. Louis is close to done. Given the kind of shape he keeps himself in, he could play another five years. Nothing would surprise me.

Unless the Rangers reach a Stanley Cup Final, you have to rule the trade in favor of the Lightning. Sather has forever changed the foundation. It won’t be easy to replace what Callahan brought. Even if it probably was for the best long term. Like many, I will just be a very curious observer.

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Canucks stun hockey world by trading Luongo to Panthers

It's Back To The Future for Roberto Luongo. miamiherald.typepad.com

It’s Back To The Future for Roberto Luongo.
miamiherald.typepad.com

Roberto Luongo is finally free from Vancouver. The stunning news just came down that the Canucks have indeed unloaded the 34-year old goalie back to Florida. Astonishingly, Canucks general manager Mike Gillis was able to get a decent return from the Panthers acquiring Swedish goalie prospect Jacob Markstrom and center Shawn Matthias.

Once thought untradeable, Luongo fell out of favor recently under new Canucks bench boss John Tortorella. The controversial former Rangers coach opted to start rookie Eddie Lack in the Hockey Heritage Game which Vancouver lost to Ottawa on Saturday. When Luongo didn’t play, there was an uproar. Maybe they shouldn’t have been surprised considering how much he’d struggled. He dropped his last five decisions posting a 3.48 GAA with a .880 save percentage. In fact, he permitted at least three goals over his final six starts as a Canuck including a 5-4 overtime win over the Coyotes on Jan. 26.

Luongo still posted respectable numbers going 19-16-6 with a 2.38 GAA, .917 save percentage and three shutouts over 42 appearances. Originally an Islanders first round pick in ’97, he was traded to Florida with Olli Jokinen for Oleg Kvasha and Mark Parrish on June 24, 2000. Then Islanders GM Mike Milbury made the move along with taking Rick DiPietro first overall. In Sunrise, Luongo developed into a capable number one goalie but the Panthers were never good enough to make the playoffs.

Almost six years to the day, Florida sent Luongo with Lukas Krajicek and an ’06 sixth round pick to Vancouver in exchange for Todd Bertuzzi, Alex Auld and Bryan Allen. Finally on a better roster, he blossomed into one of the game’s top netminders helping guide the Canucks to six postseasons including a trip to the Stanley Cup Final in 2011. Unfortunately, Vancouver blew series leads of 2-0 and 3-2 falling in seven games to Boston including a 4-0 Game 7 humiliation at home.

The next two seasons treated Luongo unkindly with then backup Cory Schneider stealing accolades and replacing him in a first round series loss to LA and starting over him in another first round disappointment against San Jose. Ironically, Alain Vigneault was the coach. Following his dismissal, many expected Luongo to finally go last summer. Instead, Gillis shocked everyone by dealing Schneider to the Devils in exchange for a 2013 first round pick (Bo Horvat).

Finally after eight years, he gets his wish. Who would’ve ever believed he’d be headed back to Florida? Luongo finishes his Vancouver Canucks career as the all-time franchise leader in wins (252) and shutouts (38). He also backstopped Canada to Olympic Gold in Vancouver (2010). For all the criticism he received, Luongo was a quality goalie that helped put the Canucks back on the map. Barring something unforeseen, he’ll go down as their best netminder.

Now, he’ll return to the Panthers who never found a suitable replacement. The combination of Jose Theodore and Scott Clemmensen got them to the playoffs two years ago and pushed the Devils to the brink before losing in sudden death. The ’11-12 season is the only one they’ve seen the postseason since 2000. Somewhat ironically, Luongo and Bruins Conn Smythe winner Tim Thomas are reunited after facing each other for Lord Stanley. As odd as it gets.

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Islanders send MacDonald to Flyers

Andrew MacDonald has played his final game for the Islanders. The defenseman was dealt to the Flyers. islanders.nhl.com

Andrew MacDonald has played his final game for the Islanders. The defenseman was dealt to the Flyers.
islanders.nhl.com

The Islanders have dealt Andrew MacDonald to the Flyers for a 2014 third round pick and a 2015 second rounder. The 27-year old defenseman tallied four goals and 20 assists with two power play goals and two game-winners in 63 games for the Islanders. Set to become a free agent this summer, MacDonald’s days were numbered. Especially with the development of former first round pick Calvin de Haan.

Originally an Isles sixth round pick in ’06, MacDonald developed into a top four defenseman under coach Jack Capuano. Last year teamed alongside Travis Hamonic, they helped lead the club to the postseason and gave the Pens a series before losing in six. A solid skater who always sacrifices his body, he leads the league in blocked shots (198). The Flyers filled a need adding another defenseman capable of logging key minutes.

Analysis: It was a no brainer for Garth Snow. As poor a job as he’s done with goalie, he always seems to get good returns at the deadline. This is no exception. Now if only he can find a taker for Thomas Vanek and recoup lost assets. The Ducks freed up room by sending Dustin Penner to the Caps. Other potential destinations are Boston, LA and Pittsburgh. We’ll see if anyone bites.

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McKenzie: Callahan and Rangers nearing extension

Ryan Callahan could be staying put on Broadway. D Day is fast approaching for Glen Sather. nydailynews.com

It looks like Ryan Callahan could be staying. According to TSN’s Bob McKenzie, Callahan and the Rangers are close to reaching agreement on a new deal. In the final year of a contract that pays him $4.275 million, he’ll turn 29 on March 21 and can become unrestricted this summer.

In an injury riddled campaign, Callahan has 11 goals and 14 assists for 25 points over 45 games. On a low scoring club, his 11 goals tie him with Benoit Pouliot for seventh. Rick Nash leads them with 19 followed by Brad Richards (16), Mats Zuccarello (15), Chris Kreider (14), Derick Brassard (13) and Carl Hagelin (12). Derek Stepan ranks ninth with 10 giving the Rangers scoring balance.

If Callahan re-signs, it’ll probably mean he finally came down to $6 million over six years. Both parties were able to agree on length but terms were still being worked out. As a staunch supporter of the Rangers captain, I understand the risks. If he signs on the dotted line, it will mean less wiggle room for Glen Sather to add pieces this summer. He must concentrate on signing key Group II’s Brassard, Kreider, Zuccarello and defenseman John MooreAnton Stralman turns unrestricted July 1. Sather also faces a big decision on Richards, who can be amnestied.

With the cap expected to go up approximately seven million, it gives them more space. Brian Boyle, Dan Carcillo, Dominic Moore and Pouliot are unrestricted. Sather also faces a challenging following season with Marc Staal needing to be re-signed. Stepan and Hagelin will be due raises and Cam Talbot can become a free agent.

In other words, Slats has his work cut out. In between figuring out if Callahan stays or goes, he must upgrade the roster by adding a legit number one center plus more size up front and defensive depth. He might want to see what the Canucks want for Ryan Kesler. Being that Stepan is a John Tortorella favorite, perhaps there could be a match. Of course, that won’t get it done with Vancouver seeking a good prospect and high pick. The Rangers definitely need to upgrade at center.

Stay tuned for more hard hitting analysis as the trade deadline approaches. Follow me @newyorkpuck.

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