Bought out Redden signs with Blues

It didn’t take long for Wade Redden to find a new team. After clearing waivers, he was bought out by the Rangers and signed with St. Louis for one year worth a reported $800,000.

The 35-year old veteran defenseman spent the last two years with the Connecticut Whale totaling 62 points (12-50-62) while assuming a leadership role with the Rangers AHL affiliate. It had to be very tough for the former All-Star who team president and GM Glen Sather signed to a long-term deal worth an average of $6.5 million. He’ll receive $5.2 million from the Blueshirts for the buyout and get a chance to make the Blues.

There’s no guarantee Redden will play in St. Louis, who possesses a strong D core led by Norris darkhorse Alex Pietrangelo and offensive minded Kevin Shattenkirk. Carlo Colaiacovo, Roman Polak, Barret Jackman, Kris Russell, Kent Huskins and Ian Cole are all still in camp. So, it’s possible Redden could go down to Peioria in a similar role he served for the Rangers organization.

As much as he didn’t fulfill expectations with our big club his first two seasons, he wasn’t as bad as some made him out to be. It was a classic case of Sather overpaying a free agent who was on the downside of his career. Hopefully, Redden will surprise with his new team. Despite how it turned out, he handled everything first class. Best of luck Wade.

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Salvador named Devils captain

It took Bryce Salvador five seasons playing in junior and three more in the AHL before he finally made the NHL in 2000, at the age of 24.  Eight years later, he was traded to New Jersey and instead of bolting like most other deadline rentals, he chose to sign a four-year contract and put up roots in his new home.  Two years ago, Salvador missed the entire season due to an inner ear concussion and many – including me – thought he was finished.  Last year, he played every single game in the regular season and playoffs (106 all told), leading a no-name defense by example during the regular season and going on a surprising scoring binge in the playoffs to help spur the underdog Devils to the Stanley Cup Finals.  Even after that run, most figured he would surely leave this offseason for one last payday given the depth the Devils have on their blueline…and again, he stayed.

Leadership, loyalty and perserverance – those are the reasons Salvador became the tenth captain in Devils history this afternoon.  Perhaps some see this as a surprise choice given that Ilya Kovalchuk is still on the roster, despite the best efforts of certain people in Russia to convince him to stay after the lockout ended, and he has previous experience as a captain.  Indeed, Kovy and Patrik Elias (also a prior captain) are the assistant captains this year but make no mistake, Salvador was the right choice for this team.  Arguably, there’s nobody in the room more respected than the understated 37-year old vet, who reacted with typical humility and a tinge of humor:

“It’s been a really interesting last two years for me personally to miss a season and not really now what was going to happen, what the future was going to be,” he said. “Then, the team has a good year last year and now to be named captain, I don’t know what the odds would have been for that in Vegas two years ago. But, that being said, it’s the team around you too that builds the captain. This organization, it’s the coaching staff, it’s the players, it’s management, in their own way they all have their say.”

Although many teams make their best player captain by rote, you don’t have to be the best player on the team to lead, and indeed the Devils have many leaders including Martin Brodeur, the team’s elder statesman.  However, it’s generally not feasible for goalies to be captain for a number of reasons, and Elias by his own admission had his time when he was captain for a year before inexplicably being stripped of the C by then-coach Brent Sutter.  Kovy was the smart money choice to get the C, and certainly showed his leadership by pacing the team in scoring throughout the playoffs last year with a bad back, but arguably has enough on his plate as it is being the sole go-to-guy on offense now that our last captain bolted for Minnesota.

There isn’t any worry about that with Sal, who re-upped for the second time as a free agent this offseason despite many – again, including me – figuring there was no place for him as part of a stacked blueline of fellow vets under contract (every starter except Marek Zidlicky is inked for multiple seasons) with prospects ready to join the fold.  Our defensive logjam is a question that still has to be answered in the weeks, if not hours ahead before the Devils’ Opening Night roster gets finalized at 3 PM tomorrow.  One thing we do know is that #24 won’t be going anywhere for some time now.

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Tortorella speaks to Francesa

Yesterday, Rangers head coach John Tortorella joined WFAN talk show host Mike Francesa on Miked On to talk about the upcoming shortened season. Following two more days of intense training camp, the Rangers open 2013 at Boston Saturday with Pittsburgh visiting MSG Sunday.

Here are some of Tortorella’s thoughts on what to expect this year.

On Practice: “My biggest thought is recovery. … I looked at the team yesterday and they were ragged. … I think it’s just gauging your team and seeing where everyone is.

On Fitness: “There are some guys you can see who are in really good shape. Other guys are trying to find their way and other guys you can see there’s a lot of work to do. … I expect the first games to be sloppy. … My biggest responsibility coaching the team is to understand what we can give them.”

On Leaders: “I discuss with [Callahan] what I can do with the team. He helps me decide what kind of drills to do. … I trust this group. … I think our club here has done a really good job the past three or four days. … We have so many players back the last two or three years.”

On Ideal Camp: “I would like in the way we do it, two weeks is good for me. Our camp is set up where we don’t touch many pucks the first week. It’s strictly conditioning. … We have the middle of the camp where we push the team concept. And then you have the last five or six days.”

On Injuries: “I worry about that. You can tell. The trainers come to me. Their hip flexors. Their groins. It’s a big worry to me. I don’t think they’ve had enough time. … Try to keep them on the plane where they don’t lose their adrenaline.”

On Managing Minutes: “I want to win all 48. … I want to win every game. You don’t want to get in a jam. … I’m going to try to make the right decisions to win that particular game.”

On Lundqvist: “When he starts getting sloppy and that’s when he doesn’t practice much, his game tends to slip. … If we get the opportunity to play in the playoffs, we need a fresh goalie. … I think he realizes that he needs to practice the right way.”

On Schedule: “I look at my schedule right now. I have 23 days off. To me, you can fall into the trap ‘We need to practice. We need to do that.’ The most important thing to me is recovery.”

On Sloppy Play: “I think in the end zone. You’re going to see more penalties. And quite honestly, I’m just worried about the frequency to sustain the grinding.”

On Expectations: “I think a big step for our team this year is to handle the expectations. We make the Nash deal and everyone expects us to take the next step. … It’s a tough league. … We need to stay within ourselves. … Handle each game. Handle each day. Then everything will fall into place.”

On Last Year: “I think they believe. Before you can win, you need to believe you are going to win. … You have to really, it’s tough to win… it’s tough to win in this league. … I think the mental approach is the biggest thing that’s improved the last two years. … Tremendous leadership group that takes care of the room.”

“If we’re going to go where we want to be, I think all players need to improve. … We’re not sneaking up on anyone. … We lose a guy like Anisimov, Dubinsky, Prust, Fedotenko. It’s tough to replace. … We play as a team. I think that’s important so everyone contributes in more aspects.”

On Nash: “He hasn’t had the opportunity to play in the playoffs. … In the short time I’ve known him, he doesn’t say a lot. … He’s low maintenance. … I expect big things out of him. He’s a really good player in the league who goes about his business. No baggage here.”

On Being Favorites: “I don’t care what people are picking. We’re going to go about it one day at a time. And we’ll see where we’ll land. … I’m not worried about them.”

On His Approach: “I have a schedule for camp here and I’ve already made adjustments. … I have a foundation for how I want to go about it. I have to be open minded here in watching how our guys are. I like structure. … I need to listen to the athletes going forward.”

“I think it’ll be unpredictable. … I think the teams that stay with it and are mentally tough and get through it to where they want to be. But with this schedule here, I think some crazy things could happen.” 

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More on Zajac’s 8-year, $46 million extension

Barely seventy-two hours before the 2013 season officially gets underway, Devil fans got some unexpected good news when GM Lou Lamoriello announced that key pivotman Travis Zajac signed a max-term extension to stay in New Jersey for the next eight seasons – nine total counting this last year on his previous contract signed as an RFA.  Locking a two-way center such as Zajac up before he went UFA was absolutely critical for this franchise, especially now as the team is still trying to recover from losing captain Zach Parise (a.k.a Mr. Minnesota) last offseason.

Zajac’s deal, and the way I received the news both represent a changing world – in and out of hockey.  It was just another day at work and I was refreshing Twitter on my phone a couple of hours ago.  I only follow a limited number of hockey people – most of the reknown insiders like Bob McKenzie, Renaud Laviole and of course Tom Gulitti, the Devils’ beat writer for The Record and author of the popular Fire & Ice blog relating to the team.  After refreshing it once I was scrolling past and suddenly saw this tweet out of nowhere:

Lamoriello announces Zajac has been signed to long term contract.

WHAAAA! was my initial reaction…in a good way, of course.  It turned out Lamoriello met the press during one of the intermissions of a team scrimmage this afternoon and broke the news himself without even the remote hint of a leak beforehand (well, some things never really do change, do they?).

But think about how fast news travels these days compared to even five-ten years ago.  As much as I was annoyed at Twitter during the lockout because of all the conflicting information/rumors that got reported, it’s quite useful for breaking actual news and getting it out there.  If it wasn’t for Twitter and the Internet, we would be lucky to hear a report of this on the radio.  And if it wasn’t for phones being able to connect to the Internet and Twitter, I probably wouldn’t have found out about this deal until now since unlike Derek (who to his credit broke the news ‘here’), I was not listening to WFAN today.  Little harder to listen to local sports radio when your teams aren’t playing or being covered.

As far as how the hockey world’s changed, obviously this deal was the first example of a player getting max years and re-upping before FA under the new CBA.  Would this deal have been possible before the new CBA’s term limit restrictions?  Possibly, assuming you take the Devils’ GM at his word that the bulk of negotiations happened before the lockout.  However, the new term limits (seven years if you’re signing with another team, eight if you’re re-signing with your own) certainly provide more of an incentive for Travis to re-up when you factor in that even a good year for Zajac meant he would have had to get nearly $7 million per year to top the Devils’ offer financially because they could offer the extra year – and $7 million is unlikely for almost any FA next offseason given the decreasing cap.

Make no mistake, this is certainly a win-win for both player and team.  Travis gets some long-term security after a subpar year two years ago following an injury-plagued season last year (though before that, Zajac had set a team record for consecutive games played so it’s not like injuries are a constant issue), while the Devils lock up their most important UFA of this offseason early, and one of their most important players period.  It’s no accident the Devils went from being an afterthought for most of 2011-12 to a real contender once Zajac came back and had a big playoff year, starting with the crucial OT goal in Game 6 against Florida in last year’s first round – see above video.

That moment really signaled the beginning of what turned out to be a fun Spring.  Given Zajac’s offensive and defensive ability, plus the fact he’s the top faceoff man on the team and plays in all situations, he would have been next to impossible to replace.  Certainly Lamoriello recognized Zajac’s value with this contract, locking the Winnipeg native up until his 35th birthday:

“He’s developed himself into an all-sitiuation complete player,” Lamoriello said. “He’s one of our core leaders. He has been from Day One. His play in the playoffs was certainly monumental for us. Him coming back was very evident to what he means.”

Even the contract structure reflects a brave, new world for the NHL.

2013-14   $3.5 million (inc. $1 million signing bonus)
2014-15   $5 million (inc. $1 million signing bonus)
2015-16   $6.5 million
2016-17   $6.5 million
2017-18   $6.5 million
2018-19   $6.5 million
2019-20   $5.75 million
2020-21   $5.75 million

Although the 2013-14 figure is lower (presumably because of worries over escrow payments next year), it’s a deal that does exactly what the NHL set out to do with its latest CBA – eliminating artifically low cap hit seasons, while still providing flexibility for teams and players to move around money a little bit.  Zajac’s deal also includes a full no-trade clause that will go into effect immediately…a result of some of Paul Holmgren‘s deals in Philly during the last CBA where no fewer than three players re-upped long-term only to be traded before their NMC extensions kicked in.

While it would seem that the FA question marks of Patrik Elias, David Clarkson and Danius Zubrus will be left until after the season, that’s okay.  As Lou himself said ‘they know what we think of them’ and they should get fair offers this offseason as well, unless one surprisingly signs in the next 72 hours since the team policy of not re-upping guys during the season (sans Martin Brodeur several years ago) remains in effect.

Interestingly, there’s still some actual suspense over who’s going to be named captain as well.  During the offseason, it seemed a fait accompli Ilya Kovalchuk would get the C once Parise bolted for riches back home, but the Star-Ledger’s Rich Chere implied that defenseman Bryce Salvador could be named the C.  And with news of this deal, some even think that Zajac himself may get the C.  Whoever winds up getting the C – and there will be a decision announced by the end of camp – at least we’ll know that player is here for the next few years and wants to be here.

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Devils re-sign Zajac to max deal

In news that just came across the airwaves on WFAN in New York, the New Jersey Devils have re-signed Travis Zajac. The Devils’ top center reached agreement on an eight-year extension worth a reported $46 million. It averages out to $5.75 million per year.

“During his time in New Jersey Travis Zajac has become a solid, all-situation player and one of the core leaders of our hockey club,” said Devils team president and GM Lou Lamoriello in a team statement.

Zajac becomes the first player to sign a max deal under the new Collective Bargaining Agreement. A player can re-sign with their own team for eight years. If Zajac had become a free agent this summer, he could’ve signed elsewhere for seven years. Teams have the edge in retaining players due to the extra year.

It was vital for the Devil organization to get this done. Especially in light of losing top scorer Zach Parise to Minnesota. They can now turn their attention to David Clarkson, who’s in the final year of his contract. He’s set to earn a pro-rated $3 million. Hasan will have more on this breaking story later.

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Visnovsky expected to report to Islanders

The Islanders received some good news. Lubomir Visnovsky is expected to report to the club. The 36-year old veteran defenseman was acquired at last year’s NHL Draft from Anaheim in exchange for a second round pick.

According to a tweet from Newday’s Arthur Staple, there’s no timetable for his return. This comes a day after the KHL announced that they won’t allow Visnovsky to play in any more games for HC Slovan Bratislava unless the Islanders release him from his contract. A positive for the NHL with the Kontinental Hockey League cooperating under the transfer agreement.

SB Nation’s Matt Brigidi covered the issue in a post yesterday that included a full statement from the KHL. Here’s an excerpt that was posted over on Facebook by the KHL:

Of the 43 players from the NHL who as a result of the lockout signed contracts to play in the KHL Championship, 42 have returned to North America to train for the forthcoming NHL campaign. However, defenseman Lubomir Visnovsky, who spent the lockout at Slovan Bratislava and is currently under contract with the New York Islanders, has announced that he plans to continue playing in the KHL.Mr. Visnovsky and HC Slovan Bratislava have submitted a request to the League asking that the player be permitted to sign a contract with Slovan until the end of the 2012-13 season, citing the player’s complex personal circumstances and his desire to continue his career in his homeland.

The 2012-13 season is covered by the Memorandum of Understanding signed by the KHL and NHL, which contains a clause stating that players under contract with a club from one league cannot fulfill any obligation to a club from the other league during the term of the player’s contract. The KHL has therefore refused permission for Slovan to enter into any further agreement with LubomirVisnovsky until the end of the current season.

In addition, the Memorandum of Understanding made provision for negotiations between the two leagues in the event of such a situation arising. Official representatives appointed by the KHL and NHL are to meet in the very near future to review Lubomir Visnovsky’s case and seek a compromise. In the event of these negotiations failing to produce a positive outcome, the player and the club may, in accordance with the Memorandum of Understanding, exercise their legal right to apply for the matter to be resolved through arbitration.

 
For the time being, Visnovsky will remain home due to his son’s health issues. European based sports reporter Matias Strozyk reported about yesterday. Hopefully, it’s not too serious.
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Tortorella reschedules live camp for Thursday

Day Four of Rangers training camp has been rescheduled. Coach John Tortorella decided to give his team a day off to recover. Instead, they’ll return to the ice tomorrow. MSG’s extensive coverage will air Thursday.

“Torts does a great job of checking in with the leaders to find out when the team needs rest during the season, and he is doing a really good job managing our ice time here in camp,” team captain Ryan Callahan pointed out to Jim Cerny on Blue Shirts United.

The Blueshirts will take part in two practice sessions. Today, they held team meetings and looked at video. Tortorella doesn’t want to overwork his team with a hectic 48-game schedule beginning Saturday in Boston. The Rangers return to Madison Square Garden Sunday for their first home game against the Penguins. That should be interesting.

Only one player skated today. Brad Richards missed the first three days of camp due to the flu. The first line center could start the season centering Carl Hagelin and Rick Nash. He was excited about the possibility of reuniting with Hagelin, who’s entering his second year.

“I’m excited to play with (Hagelin),” he said. “I think he’s already better just from what I’ve seen in the fall and what we did last week. Obviously he has the speed, but he’s starting to calm down with the puck and make plays. I think that’s a big step for him, and with that speed, he’s just so dangerous.”

It’s probably a wise decision to split Nash and Marian Gaborik up, giving the lineup more balance. With Chris Kreider struggling in Connecticut, the rookie out of Boston College was on the third line with Brian Boyle and Taylor Pyatt. A big checking line if that’s what Tortorella starts with. Gaborik is getting a look at left wing where he might play with Derek Stepan and Callahan. It’ll be interesting to see if he can adjust. The fourth line so far is Mike Rupp, Jeff Halpern and Arron Asham. A crash bang trio who should be an upgrade.

Tortorella heaped praise on former Ranger Brandon Prust yesterday. He’ll be tough to replace but Tort likes the additions of Pyatt, Halpern and Asham, who should make our team grittier. The fiery coach will join WFAN’s Mike Francesa at 5:30 today to discuss this year’s club. There are many expectations with many picking them to win the Atlantic and face Pittsburgh in the Conference Finals. The heat is on beginning Saturday.

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MSG to air Rangers practice

If you love the Rangers, you’ll get your fill thanks to MSG later today. For the first time ever, they’ll broadcast Camp Tortorella from the team practice facility in Tarrytown, New York. It will air live at 11 AM with repeats at 5 PM and midnight.

It’ll be a chance for fans to get even more perspective on the team they follow. From my standpoint, it will show how hard players must prepare daily. Something I alluded to during the lockout. Nobody has it tougher than the guys we root for. Sure. We pay their salaries and they’re living the dream. However, they’ve committed their lives to hockey and being the best they can be. That means sacrifice and dedication.

I’m wondering if Tort will ratchet it up for the cameras. From Sam Rosen to Joe Micheletti to Al Trautwig, John Giannone, Dave Maloney and Kenny Albert, who had the memorable call of Brad Richards’ tying goal against the Capitals in Game Five of the Eastern Conference Semifinals, they’ll be there covering the Blueshirts. I’m sure all the college students home for the break will be locked in. I’ll definitely catch some of it.

Aside from giving fans an extra treat, MSG will also have their full hockey preview Thursday night at 8 PM on Hockey Night Live. We really are lucky in this area to have such extensive hockey coverage from a network that gets it. Even I have to give Dolan his due even if the Ranger pom poms are out.

There’s also something else I’ll get to in the next post that involves the Rangers. A real eye opener that enthused me for the shortened season. Stay tuned.

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KHL All Star Game SuperSkills Full Highlights / Матч Звед КХЛ, День 1

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Kovalchuk bids farewell with All-Star hat trick

Over the weekend, Russian stars Ilya Kovalchuk and Pavel Datsyuk returned to the ice one last time to take part in the KHL All-Star Game in Chelyabinsk. By participating, they gave KHL fans a nice send off before returning to the NHL for training camp.

It was a last chance for European fans to say goodbye to two of the most breathtaking players. Not surprisingly, the game didn’t disappoint with the two rosters combining for 29 goals. The East prevailed 18-11 thanks to Evgeny Kuznetsov’s four goal performance. The Cap prospect remains the best player not in the NHL. Just wait till he joins forces with Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom and Marcus Johansson. Ex-Coyote defenseman Deron Quint added two markers in the East’s victory.

Kovalchuk didn’t disappoint recording a hat trick in a losing cause for the West. He also electrified the crowd during the Master Show Super Skills Competition by winning the Captains’ Duel over ex-Pen Alexei Morozov. It was one of the most interesting duels that had them banking shots into nets facing the opposite way along with target practice and was topped off with Kovalchuk and Morozov figure skating. He was so much bigger than the woman figure skater but showed flair like the showman he is.

Of course, Datsyuk took the Shootout with another of his magic tricks floating a puck into the net. I liked the Puck Control relay. Datsyuk nearly caught up but the East prevailed. The West won the marquee event, which featured a Fastest Skater Team Relay. Even the goalies took part which was classic. During the Super Skills, they also got to shoot pucks into the opposite net.

It was a great celebration of hockey in Eastern Europe.

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