NHL: Free Agency, Trade, Injury, and Rookie News!

Hockey Hearsay: Cujo regrets leaving Leafs

Sportsnet.ca

09/15/05 9:00 AM

In an interview with the Toronto Star, the Phoenix Coyotes' newest goaltender Curtis Joseph admits he made a mistake leaving Toronto.

"Absolutely, in hindsight, it would have been better for me if I had stayed in Toronto," Joseph told the Toronto Star.

"It's a very tricky question, and there's a lot of things that happened that nobody knows about. But as a friend of mine in business says, sometimes your worst decisions work out the best, and sometimes your best turn out to be your worst."

Joseph left Toronto in the summer of 2002, signing a three-year, $24 million contract with the detroit Red Wings.
 

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NHL Transactions for Thursday, September 15th

Colorado Avalanche - Agreed to terms with forward Wojtek Wolski, their first-round pick in the 2004 draft.

Philadelphia Flyers - Signed forward Brian Savage to a one-year contract.
 

I've not been impressed with Savage. Kappy was and is the better player, but eh, it's not like 10 weeks will kill the Flyers THAT much.
 

Latest signing for the Habs!

:p

Two sport mascot

Sportsnet.ca

MONTREAL (CP) -- The storied Montreal Canadiens are getting a mascot -- and not just any old one.

Youppi!, who was the Montreal Expos' mascot for years before the team moved south, is coming out of retirement to join the National Hockey League team.

The super furry animal is still orange but is expected to wear the Canadiens' white or red jersey when he entertains fans at the Bell Centre.

There was no immediate comment from Canadiens management whether they believe the new signing can help the team win its first Stanley Cup since 1993.

Youppi! was once ejected from a baseball game against the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Canadiens will be hoping the lumbering giant can keep his temper in check.

Contract details have not been released.
 

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NHL WEEKLY for the 3rd week of September!

And now for something a little more serious...

The Score's Notebook
http://forecaster.ca/thescore/hockey/news.cgi?notebook

Here's the highlights... Canadian teams and free agency talk. If you want to read the rest then click the above link.

THE CANADIAN SIX PACK

CANADIENS The early buzz at Habs camp has been the spectacular play of Alex Kovalev, which was expected, as well as the surprising performance of 18-year-old winger Guillaume Latendresse--which is a huge surprise. Drafted in the second round (45th overall) in June, Latendresse has the size/scoring combination the Habs crave on the wing. It's early, but the QMJHL product has given himself a chance to see action in the preseason because of strong play in the scrimmages.

CANUCKS Veteran B.C. native Cliff Ronning, who played with the Canucks from 1991-96, may be signed to a league-minimum contract before the end of training camp--according to reports out of Vancouver. If the 'Nucks add Ronning, who will turn 40 before opening night, he'll probably be used as a reserve forward, power-play specialist and possible shootout candidate.

FLAMES As expected, veteran free-agent acquisition Tony Amonte--late of the Philadelphia Flyers--has been moved over to left wing to begin training camp. The 35-year-old Amonte will probably play on the first line alongside Daymond Langkow and captain Jarome Iginla in what could be one of the most potent offensive trios Calgary has iced in several years. In fact, Amonte and Langkow may help Iginla earn his first Art Ross Trophy as the NHL's leading scorer in 2005-06.

MAPLE LEAFS Steve Thomas, affectionately known as 'Stumpy', is back with the Maple Leafs--albeit on a tryout basis. If he makes the club out of training camp, the 42-year-old Thomas would begin a third stint with Toronto. He'll most likely get a look on the fourth line. Meanwhile, veteran bruising defenseman Bryan Marchment is also in camp without a guaranteed contract, but expect him to make the club as the No. 7 defenseman--since Toronto still lacks toughness from the back end.

OILERS While the Oil were not able to land former captain Mark Messier, who retired from hockey after 25 NHL seasons earlier in the week, Edmonton did manage to re-sign the club's current heart and soul--left wing Ryan Smyth. Smyth signed a two-year contract worth a reported $7 million. Messier's retirement could be good news for OHL star center Robbie Schremp, who has already looked good in camp and may be the offensive center the Oilers crave.

SENATORS Former Thrasher Dany Heatley, who was thought to be a natural candidate to switch over to left wing (a trouble spot in Ottawa over the years), has instead begun camp at his natural position on the right side next to first-line center Jason Spezza. It is speedy Martin Havlat who has moved over to left wing to begin training camp, as new coach Bryan Murray tries to place most of his offense on the top two lines. Havlat is skating with Bryan Smolinski and Daniel Alfredsson.

FREE AGENT WEALS/WOES

BRUINS Goaltender Tim Thomas, who played sparingly with the Bruins in 2002-03, has signed a one-way contract with the club--according to reports out of Europe. The B's signed the 31-year-old Thomas away from Jokerit Helsinki of the SM-Liiga as an insurance policy, since No. 1 man Andrew Raycroft remains un-signed and projected backup Hannu Toivonen has yet to appear in an NHL game. If Raycroft doesn't sign soon, the Bruins may anoint Toivonen the starter.

CAPITALS Slovakian defender Ivan Majesky, who signed a one-year deal worth $800,000 with the Caps earlier this summer, failed his physical because of a knee injury (incurred at the 2005 IIHF World hockey championships). As a result, he may get a very late start to training camp with his new Washington teammates. This is potentially bad news for the team, but good news for fellow right-shooting defensemen Mathieu Biron, Mike Green, Jamie Heward and Nolan Yonkman.

FLYERS With Finnish veteran Sami Kapanen expected to miss up to 10 weeks due to a right shoulder injury, the Flyers signed left wing Brian Savage to a one-year contract on Thursday. Kapanen was expected to play on the third line next to captain Keith Primeau, so Savage will probably battle the likes of Donald Brashear, Jon Sim and rookie Ben Eager for the job. The 34-year-old Savage has been in steady decline since 2000-01, and has bounced around somewhat.

HURRICANES The 'Canes signed 22-year-old winger Vince Bellissimo to a contract earlier in the week, following a solid performance in rookie camp. Bellissimo was originally drafted by Florida with the 158th overall pick in 2002, but was eventually let go. He attended Carolina's rookie camp on a tryout and earned his way into the organization. He'll likely begin his pro career in the AHL.

PREDATORS Still in search of another capable center, the Predators have invited veteran Yanic Perreault to training camp. The former Toronto, Los Angeles and Montreal pivot should compete for the third-line center job with the likes of Randy Robitaille, Simon Gamache and Kris Beech--though wingers Adam Hall and Steve Sullivan may be moved to the middle if none of the candidates pan out during the preseason. Also, keep an eye on Russian winger Alexander Radulov.

SHARKS After going the entire off-season sans a newcomer, the Sharks finally added a player this week with the free-agent signing of former Senators winger Josh Langfeld. Langfeld, who can play either wing position, will probably battle rookies Ryan Clowe and Steve Bernier for a roster spot at training camp. Langfeld has the edge, largely based on his NHL experience (51 NHL games).

THRASHERS While the Thrashers continue to wait on un-signed restricted free agent Ilya Kovalchuk, the team added more scoring depth earlier in the week with the signing of veteran Slovak Peter Bondra. With Bondra in tow, Atlanta may now boast 2 Russians and 2 Slovaks among their top-six wingers this season (Kovalchuk and Vyacheslav Kozlov, plus Bondra and fellow newcomer Marian Hossa). It gives coach Bob Hartley plenty of options--as long as Kovalchuk re-signs.

FOOTNOTE: SID THE KID

PENGUINS The long-awaited debut of Sidney Crosby in a Penguins uniform was a resounding success Friday, as he accumulated three assists in an intra-squad game. For now, it appears coach Ed Olczyk has decided to team the 18-year-old rookie in between veteran wingers Mark Recchi and John LeClair. However, captain Mario Lemieux did not participate in the scrimmage but is expected to play left wing on the top line with Crosby and Recchi when the regular season starts.
 
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It was thought that the Oilers had actually signed Mess, and was waiting until just before the beginning of the pre-season, when they would announce it to much fanfare. I guess the Moose decided that at 45, he was done. Probably a good idea.

Huh, looks like the Bruins signed Raycroft. 1.3 mil for 1 year. Where does that leave Boynton, I wonder?
 

NHL Transactions for Friday, September 16th

Boston Bruins - Re-signed restricted free agent goaltender Andrew Raycroft to one-year contract.

Ottawa Senators - Sign goaltender Jeff Glass to a three-year entry-level contract.

St. Louis Blues - Suspend Keith Tkachuk for failing a physical.
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Raycroft re-signs in Boston

Sportsnet.ca

In other NHL moves Friday, the Ottawa Senators signed goaltender Jeff Glass to a three-year entry-level contract.

(CP) -- Goaltender Andrew Raycroft, the NHL's last rookie of the year, re-signed with the Boston Bruins on Friday. The 25-year-old signed a one-year deal worth $1.3 million US.

"Andrew has emerged as one of the brightest young goaltenders in the NHL," GM Mike O'Connell said in a statement. "That was established when he won the Calder Trophy in 2004 and finished among the league leaders overall in goals against average and save percentage. We expect that he will continue to build on that and remain among the core of our team for many years to come."

Raycroft, who played junior hockey with Sudbury and Kingston of the Ontario Hockey League, split his first three professional seasons between Boston and its AHL affiliate in Providence before breaking into the NHL on a full-time basis in 2003-04.

The native of Belleville, Ont., finished sixth overall in the league that season in goals-against average (2.05) and fifth overall in save percentage (.926). His 29 were was the most by a Bruins rookie goaltender since Frank Brimsek's 33 in 1938-39.

Raycroft played 11 games with Tappara Tampere in Finland in 2004-05 with a 4-5-2 record, 2.92 GAA and one shutout.

His career NHL record stands at 35-27-10 with a 2.22 GAA in 78 career NHL games.

In other NHL moves Friday, the Ottawa Senators signed goaltender Jeff Glass to a three-year entry-level contract.

Glass was Ottawa's third-round pick, 89th overall, in the 2004 NHL draft.

The 19-year-old from Calgary helped Canada to a gold medal at the world junior championship in Grand Forks, N.D., posting a 5-0-0 record and 1.40 GAA.

Playing for the Kootenay Ice of the Western Hockey League, Glass was named CHL goaltender of the year last season. He holds eight Kootenay Ice franchise records: the most games played (143), minutes played (8,206), GAA (2.16), save percentage (0.918), saves (3,296), wins (75), ties (14) and shutouts (17).
 
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Tkachuk fails physical, suspended

Canadian Press

9/16/2005 10:15:02 PM

ST. LOUIS (AP) - St. Louis Blues forward Keith Tkachuk failed a physical and was suspended Friday by the team.

General manager Larry Pleau did not elaborate on the status of Tkachuk, but said he was expected to return to the team.

TSN has learned that Tkachuk showed up overweight and the team felt it had no choice but to suspend him.

"Players have to come to camp in shape," Blue coach Mike Kitchen told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Friday. "He's been terrific following the program previously. The work stoppage has been hard on a lot of people. We had a lot of frustrated players. ... They had so many dates they had to peak, and they weren't able to hold their level of fitness."

The 33-year-old left wing had 33 goals and 38 assists in 2003-04, the last season before the lockout. He has scored 431 goals and added 401 assists in his career.

The Blues' first full-squad workout is Saturday, and the team opens the pre-season Wednesday at home against the Predators.
 


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