Posts Tagged trade

Coyotes and Flames Swap Forwards Stempniak and Langkow

In a late-off season trade, the Calgary Flames and Phoenix Coyotes worked together to trade right winger Lee Stempniak and center Daymond Langkow. The trade is contingent on Langkow passing a physical in Phoenix.

Stempniak will be taking his talents north of the boarder for the second time in his career. He spent parts of the 2008-09 and 2009-10 seasons with the Maple Leafs, where he scored 25 goals and 26 assists in 123 games. When interviewed about the trade, he took a small yet yelling jab at Phoenix when he said to the Flames official Twitter feed ”You want to play in a place where hockey matters. You love being in a market like that. I’m so excited to come to Calgary”.  While with the Coyotes, he played 100 games and recorded 56 points since coming over late 2010. Financially, he is set to make $1.9 million while with the Flames. Look for him to fill several roles for Calgary as he has the potential to score 20 goals when healthy. He scored 19 last season in 82 games. His career high is 27 goals with St. Louis in 2006-07.

Calgary got much needed help on the wing with the addition of Stempniak as they have struggled to generate offense and score goals despite having prolific scorers Jarome Iginla, Alex Tanguay and Rene Bourque. They lost depth at center in the trade, but they will be $3.5 million under the salary cap after the trade according to capgeek.com. They will have the ability to acquire another player via free agency or trade if necessary during training camp and during the season.

Phoenix is looking to verify that Langkow is healthy heading into the final year of a contract that will pay him $4.5 million this season. He has missed more than a full calendar year and more games than an NHL regular season, 88 games in all, with a neck injury he suffered on March 21, 2010 in Minnesota. Langkow missed the final 10 games of the 2009-10 season and the first 78 of the 2010-11 season before returning on April 1 in St. Louis.

Langkow wanted to wait until he was 100 percent healthy before returning to play because he cared about his healthy and family before returning until hockey. After six years of service in Calgary, he returns to the city he called home from 2001-2004, the three seasons before the lockout. In 2001-02, he led the team in points with 62. That season also ended a run of five playoff appearances in their first six years in the desert with a first round loss to San Jose. He scored 52 points in each of his next two seasons with the Coyotes. In addition to having the trade completed pending a physical, he had to waive his no-trade clause in order to make the deal happen. He said he did soon after Calgary General Manager Jay Feaster informed him of the potential deal, and added that playing with Coyotes captain Shane Doan was what got him excited about playing in the desert.

 

 

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Islanders deal Wisniewski To Canadiens

Blue liner James Wisniewski will go from one of the worse teams in the league to a team that will be in the playoff chase in 2011.

In a surprising move, the New York Islanders trade 26-year-old defenseman James Wisniewski to the Montreal Canadiens for two draft picks. This season on Long Island, Wisniewski was tied or the team lead in points this season with 21. His career-year on offense will only help the Habs, as he now moves down to the second-best scorer on a much better team. The Canadiens are without defenseman Andrei Markov for the season due to a knee injury.

The draft picks Montreal dealt were a 2011 compensatory second-round pick they were due to receive for not signing former first-round pick David Fisher. The second pick currently stands at a 2012 fifth-round pick. New York will have that selection if Montreal qualifies for the 2011 Stanley Cup Playoffs and Wisniewski plays in 50 percent of Montreals’ playoff games. If both of those requirements aren’t met, New York will receive a fourth-round pick in 2013.

This selection benefits Montral more than New York because the Habs will receive a young, solid defenseman. Wisniewski has spent his career playing with Chicago and Anaheim. Wisniewski’s cap hit is $3,250,000 and is scheduled to become a UFA next summer. New York originally acquired him from Anaheim on July 20 for a 2011 third-round pick.  Look for Wisniewski to be paired on the top line with Roman Hamerlik. If he doesn’t play on the top line, he’ll play with either Jaroslav Spacek or Alexandre Picard. They now have too many defensemen and look for either Yannick Weber or P.K. Subban to be sent down to the minors as they both have underperformed this season.

I do give credit to Islanders GM Garth Snow for essentially moving a third-round pick for a second rounder in the upcoming draft.

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Halak Heads to St Louis

Goaltender Jaroslav Halak, a key component of the Montreal Canadiens run to the Eastern Conference Finals this past season, has been dealt to the St. Louis Blues according to a report by RDS.

ESPN is reporting that the Habs will receive forward Lars Eller and Ian Schultz. Eller was a first-round pick of St. Louis in 2007 and Schultz was a 2008 third-round pick. Eller appeared in seven games with the big club as he spent the rest of the season with Peoria of the AHL. Schultz played his third junior season in 2009-10 with Calgary of the Western Hockey League.

For the past two seasons, Halak split time between the pipes with Carey Price, but Halak’s game seemed to improve after his run with Slovakia in the Vancouver Olympics. He finished with a 26-13-5 regular-season record, a 2.40 goals-against average and .924 save percentage. In the playoffs, Halak had a 2.55 GAA and .923 save percentage in 18 games.

This is a risky move for St. Louis, as Halak becomes a restricted free-agent on July 1 and is eligible for salary arbitration. In two seasons, he becomes a unrestricted free-agent. This is the second goalie they acquired in consecutive summers.  They acquired Ty Conklin from Detroit last off season, and Chris Mason, who started 61 games last season. Mason does enter this summer as a unrestricted free-agent, and with his $3 Million salary and Halak’s $800,000 salary from last season, they will let Mason walk and go into next season with a Halak-Conklin duo in net.

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Time for sniper to be a team player

Senators Maple Leafs Hockey

The Dany Heatley saga has been anything but professional since the onset of the storyline right before the NHL draft in June. Claiming that he was unhappy with the direction of his role with the Ottawa Senators under new head coach Cory Clouston, Heatley reached out to Ottawa management and asked for the trade after only one year of his new 6-year contract worth $45 million. From the very beginning, however, this whole ordeal has been a mockery of professionalism on the part of the Heatley camp.

The first mistake made was Heatley’s corner publicly announcing that they had filed a request for a trade, which hamstrung Ottawa from the get-go. Instead of being able to queitly shop the scoring left winger and get a marginal return, Senators GM Brian Murray was put in a tough spot with the public announcement. Now that teams know Heatley is disgruntled and wants out of Ottawa, since other GM’s know that Ottawa is looking to deal, they aren’t willing to give the return that should be given on a sniper like Heatley. Instead, it becomes an issue of how little you can give away and still get Heatley on your roster in return.

The other issue became persuading Heatley to lift his no-trade clause, which Heatley said he would only do for certain clubs and gave management a list of preferred destinations, many of which could not offer a real return on Heatley in a trade, nor could they absorb his tremendous salary.

The only team to really step up with a legitimate offer was Edmonton, whose offer seemed remotely fair given the circumstances. The Oilers offered up forwards Dustin Penner and Andrew Cogliano along with defenseman Ladislav Smid. Although Penner has been a huge underachiever since signing an offer sheet with Edmonton in 2007, the big forward may have benefit in Ottawa from playing with other high-caliber players to take some of the pressure off of his own shoulders. However, Heatley decided against this trade and refused to waive his no trade clause. That didn’t stop Edmonton from courting the prized winger, until recently when Oilers GM Steve Tambellini announced that the Oilers were no longer interested in Heatley’s services.

“We gave ourselves an allotted amount of time internally … to explore every opportunity to see if there was something that would work — it didn’t. It’s time for us to move on. We’re very comfortable with that,” Tambellini said. The Oilers GM worked for over a month trying to persuade Heatley to come to Edmonton.

So, let’s sum up the scenario. Heatley demands trade, but wants to dictate where that trade leads him according to his own personal agenda. But the actions out of his camp from the very beginnings of this saga made it nearly impossible for Ottawa to get the type of return that they should get for a forward able to score 50 goals and is in the prime of his career. And when Ottawa did get a legitimate offer, Heatley refused to waive his no trade clause because the destination didn’t fit with his personal agenda, even though any team who would fit his agenda doesn’t have the cap space or isn’t willing to give up first-or-second tier forwards in return for a prima donna like Heatley. It sounds like Heatley needs to suck it up and be a team player.

My suggestion for Ottawa? Keep Heatley. Don’t trade him. Let him know that he brought his current situation upon himself and that he is going to play in Ottawa this coming season because of it. Who knows, with the addition of Alex Kovalev to the Senator’s roster, Heatley may feel differently come October when some of the pressure may be lifted off of the shoulders of Heatley. But, if Heatley doesn’t want to play? Bench him. I understand that Heatley makes way too much money to bench, but he needs to understand that come trade deadline time, nobody will want to add an underachieving scorer whose heart and worth ethic just aren’t there. At this point, if Heatley wants to be traded somewhere that fits his agenda, he needs to work for it. It’s time to step up to the plate and be a professional for once in this long, drawn out saga. It’s time to sit down, lace up your skates, and play hockey.

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