NHL’s Department of Player Safety comes under fire

The NHL’s Department of Player Safety has come under fire recently, specifically by power forward Evander Kane of the San Jose Sharks. Kane was assessed a two-minute minor penalty for elbowing defenceman Neal Pionk of the Winnipeg Jets in the head on Feb. 14th and was then handed a three-game suspension for the hit.

Kane took to his social media accounts soon after being suspended and laid into the Department of Player Safety and George Parros, the department’s head. Kane didn’t exactly say his actions didn’t warrant a suspension but he questioned why other acts of violence in the league have recently gone unpunished or why the punishment didn’t seem to fit the crime.

A week before the Kane incident, Arizona Coyotes’ Lawson Crouse elbowed Charlie McAvoy of the Boston Bruins in the same manner and was given a two-minute penalty for roughing but received no additional punishment. In addition, Boston’s  veteran blue liner Zdeno Chara viciously cross checked Brendan Gallagher of the Montreal Canadiens in the throat and was handed just a $5000 with no suspension.

Chara was given a minor penalty on the play but so was Gallagher, who did nothing more than absorb the dangerous cross-check. Several days after that incident, Edmonton Oilers’ forward Zack Kassian attempted to kick rearguard Erik Cernak of the Tampa Bay Lightning in the chest and was suspended for seven games.

Kane released a public statement which basically said there have been dozens of incidents in the league over the past few years which were similar to his elbowing penalty on Pionk but they didn’t result in any fines and/or suspensions. He added that the Department of Player Safety lacks consistency as nobody seems to know what exactly does and doesn’t deserve a suspension.

Kane went on to say the players are baffled and he doesn’t understand how the players’ association agreed to the current disciplinary process. He claimed that some players get the book thrown at them while others get a free pass when committing borderline punishable hits. Kane then appeared to get plenty of fan support for his comments from others on social media platforms.

Some fans have questioned why Parros is in charge of player safety since he was an enforcer and fighter when he played. He scored 18 goals and 18 assists in 474 regular-season NHL contests and accumulated 1,092 minutes in penalties while playing an average of 5 minutes and 56 seconds per game. In fact, Parros also started a line of clothing called the Violent Gentlemen Apparel Company with one of it’s slogans being, “Make hockey violent again.”

It’s believed by many that Parros and his department aren’t being as strict as they should be and that’s why some players are getting away with violent conduct, which is leading to inconsistency when it comes to doling out punishment. In addition, the NHL Players’ Association represents players who have been suspended and want to appeal their sentence but the association doesn’t launch appeals on behalf of players who have been the victims of on-ice violence and have suffered from it.

According to Kane, the entire disciplinary process should be decided by an outside third party not the league itself. He believes that punishment should be handled by somebody who has no current or previous ties with the NHL and many fans seem to agree with him.

Columbus netminder Elvis Merzlikins is king of the crease

Luckily for the Columbus Blue Jackets they aren’t paying rookie goaltender Elvis Merzlikins his true worth this season. The 25-year-old native of Riga, Latvia, who was named after Elvis Presley, is making just $874,125 this campaign but has been one of the top goalies in the NHL lately.

Many Columbus fans expected the worst when two-time Vezina Trophy winner Sergei Bobrovsky left the team as an unrestricted free agent last summer and signed a huge multi-year, contract with the Florida Panthers. This left the club with Joonas Korpisalo and Merzlikins as the team’s two untested goaltenders by default this season.

However, Korpisalo was injured at the tail end of December and Merzlikins has been on fire ever since replacing him as the number-one. Merzlikins posted his fifth shutout in eight games on Feb. 7th when he blanked the Detroit Red Wings 2-0 at home. It was also his second straight shutout and fifth of the season which is currently the tops in the NHL.

The victory against Detroit was the eighth in a row for the young goaltender but his streak was halted the next night with a narrow 2-1 loss at the hands of the Colorado Avalanche. Since taking over as the Blue Jackets’ starter, the rookie has posted an impressive record of 12-3. The eight-game winning streak is the longest in the club’s history for a rookie goalie and the longest for any rookie in 2019/20.

Washington Capitals’ newcomer Ilya Samsonov won seven straight outings earlier in the campaign between Dec. 27th and Jan. 31st. Merzlikins is now one of just nine rookie goalies in NHL history to post an eight-game winning streak. Jordan Binnington of the St. Louis Blues managed to reel off nine straight victories last season.

In addition, Merzlikins became just the sixth NHL netminder since 1930 to post five shutouts over a span of eight games. The last goalie to achieve the feat was the Phoenix Coyotes’ Brian Boucher in 2003/04. In fact, Boucher recorded five straight shutouts in his streak. However, just one other rookie has managed to pull it off and that came back in 1938/39 when the Boston Bruins’ Frank Brimsek managed it.

Due to the fine play of Merzlikins, Columbus has a record of 30-17-9 season for 69 points and is 9-1-1 over their past 11 games. They have also gone 19-3-5 since December 9th with 43 of their points coming since then. As of Feb. 9th they were hanging on to the third and final playoff spot in the Metropolitan Division, just one point ahead of the New York Islanders and two in front of the Philadelphia Flyers and Carolina Hurricanes.

Perhaps the play of Merzlikins shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise though. The 6-foot-3-inch, 180 lb goalie was taken in the third round of the 2014 NHL Entry Draft by Columbus with the 76th overall pick. He then won several awards while playing internationally for Latvia and for HC Lugano in the Swiss National League. He was named the league’s top goalie in 2015/16 and 2017/18 and then signed with the Blue Jackets last March.

Merzlikins made his NHL debut in October of this season and was shelled for seven goals by the Pittsburgh Penguins. He was then sent down to play in the American Hockey League with the Cleveland Monsters in November before being recalled. He caught a big break when Korpisalo was injured on Dec. 30th and Merzlikins won his first NHL game on New Year’s Eve with a 4-1 victory over the Florida Panthers.

As of Feb. 9Th, Merzlikins was top-five in the NHL in goals-against average at 2.19, first in save percentage at 93.0 and first in shutouts with five. Unless he completely goes of the rails the rest of the way this season it looks like Merzlikins should be in for a big raise since his current contract is for just one year.

William Nylander contract could be a bargain for Toronto Maple Leafs

When William Nylander didn’t sign a new contract with the Toronto Maple Leafs until the very last minute in December, 2018 many fans felt the team highly overpaid the young forward. Nylander inked a six-year, $45 million deal worth a yearly average of $6,962,366 against the salary cap and then proceeded to score just seven goals and 20 assists in 54 contests over the remainder of the season.

If we fast forward to the current campaign though we see the 23-year-old is certainly earning his pay cheque. As of February 2nd, Nylander had posted a career-high 24 goals along with 23 assists for 47 points in 52 games. That placed him third in team scoring behind Auston Matthews’ 61 points and Mitch Marner’s 51. Nylander has served just eight minutes in penalties this year and his 18 even-strength goals ranked second on the team.

Nylander has achieved all of this while playing more than two minutes per-game less than Matthews per night and over three minutes fewer than Marner. Nylander’s game picked up following last season’s playoffs when the Leafs lost to the Boston Bruins in seven games and he headed to the IIHF World Hockey Championships. He led the tournament in scoring with 18 points in eight games ( 5 goals, 13 assists) and the confidence he gained there has carried over to the 2019/20 NHL season.

Supporters of Nylander feel he isn’t playing any differently this season but he’s finally scoring the goals he deserves. The main reason for this is due to his shooting percentage being a consistent 16.0 per cent which means he’s having more luck around the net. This is more than double last year’s total of 7.69 per cent while his career average is approximately 11 per cent.

He’s among the top Leafs in all scoring stats and has been silencing his critics by scoring most of his goals from the slot. In the past, he’s been accused of playing around the perimeter and being afraid to drive to the net. However, those claims have been proved wrong this season and in recognition of his fine play Nylander was named the Comeback Player of the year at mid-season by the Professional Hockey Writers’ Association.

He started his career with back-to-back 61-point campaigns before last year’s disappointing numbers but that should have been expected since he missed the first 28 games. The winger was determined to prove to fans that last season was a fluke and he’s certainly been good to his word this year. Like several of his teammates, Nylander has also been much more effective since Sheldon Keefe replaced Mike Babcock as the team’s head coach in mid-November.

He recently scored goals in five consecutive outings and posted a string of 13 goals in 16 games. As long as he stays healthy down the stretch Nylander should easily set a new career high in points this season. If there is room for improvement it would be on the power play. Nylander’s already one of the better players in the league when it comes to 5-on-5 production and his numbers could easily grow with more contribution on the power play.

So far this year he’s scored six goals and seven assists for 13 points with the man advantage which isn’t too shabby. But as a rookie he posted 26 points on the power play to rank 13th in the NHL for forwards and first on his squad. Nylander managed just 12 points with the extra man in 2017/18 and just six last season. He’s on pace to rack up 20 points on the power play this year but if he can improve on that number next season he could easily become a point-per-game NHL’er.

At his young age and with added confidence, fans who were demanding the overpaid Nylander be traded last year have suddenly become quiet. And at an average salary cap of just over $6.9 million per season the Leafs may actually have a bargain with his contract. Only time will tell over the remainder of the deal, but Nylander’s certainly been on a hot streak so far in 2019/20.

NHL All Star Weekend recap

The NHL just wrapped up its All Star Weekend at the Enterprise Center in St. Louis, Missouri on January 25th with the Pacific Division edging the Atlantic Division 5-4 in the three-on-three tournament. The Pacific doubled the Central Division 10-5 in their opening game while the Atlantic downed the Metropolitan Division 9-5.

Boston Bruins’ forward David Pastrnak chipped in with a goal and assist in the final game for the Atlantic Division after notching three goals and an assist in his first contest to take home the MVP Award. Tomas Hertl scored the game-winner in the final with just 2:36 remaining on the clock as the Pacific squad fought back to claim the million dollar prize after falling behind 3-1 in the first period.

The Pacific Division also won the event in 2018 and 2016 while the Metropolitan Division captured the prize in 2019 and 2017. Next year’s All Star Weekend will be held in Sunrise, Florida, at the home rink of the Florida Panthers. NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said the league may alter the format in 2021 and one possibility could see North American players taking on players from other nations.

The current format features teams from each of the league’s four divisions playing three-on-three games that are 20 minutes long with two periods of 10 minutes each. Each team plays the other squad in their conference with the two winners meeting in the final tilt. The NHL also holds a popular skills competition the night before the games are held.

Mathew Barzal of the New York Islanders won the fastest skater event as he strode a lap of the rink in 13.175 seconds. The Edmonton Oilers’ Connor McDavid, who won the competition the last three years, came second at 13.215 seconds. McDavid’s best time in the three previous seasons was 13.310 so Barzal did well and also improved on his 13.780 third-place finish of last year. Chris Kreider of the New York Rangers finished third in the eight-man event this weekend at 13.509 seconds.

In the goaltenders’ save streak competition, Jordan Binnington of the hometown St. Louis Blues came out on top with 10 consecutive saves. Andrei Vasilevskiy of the Tampa Bay Lightning was second with nine and Frederik Andersen of the Toronto Maple Leafs placed third with seven.

Defenceman Jacob Slavin of the Carolina Hurricanes won the shooting accuracy event by nailing all of the targets in a time of 9.505 seconds and was followed by Leon Draisaitl of the Edmonton Oilers at 10.257 seconds and Jonathan Huberdeau of the Florida Panthers at 13.074 seconds.

As far as the hardest shot event goes, blue liner Shea Weber of the Montreal Canadiens blasted a 106.mph slap shot to earn the league’s hardest shooter bragging rights. Fellow defenceman John Carlson placed second at 104.5 mph while forward Elias Pettersson of the Vancouver Canucks was third at 102.4 mph.

The league introduced a new competition this year called shooting stars in which players shoot several pucks from a platform located high in the stands behind one of the end zones. The object is to hit targets that have been place in various locations on the ice. The inaugural winner was forward Patrick Kane of the Chicago Blackhawks with 24 points.

Kane and Mitch Marner of the Toronto Maple Leafs finished the event with 22 points each with Kane then scoring two points in a one-shot tie-breaking round. Matthew Tkachuk of the Calgary Flames came in third place with 20 points. In addition, the league held a three-on-three, 20 minute women’s game between the USA and Canada with the Canadians coming out on top by a score of 2-1.

NHL coaches walking on thin ice this season

It’s nothing new for NHL coaches to be fired midway through a season but the 2019/20 campaign has been especially harsh on bench bosses so far. We’re just three weeks into the new year but a total of seven head coaches have been relieved of their duties since the puck dropped on the season in early October. The latest to be let go was Gerard Gallant of the Vegas Golden Knights as he was sent packing on January 15th after his club lost its fourth straight game.

Gallant was the Golden Knights’ first and only coach and guided the franchise to the Stanley Cup Final in its inaugural season in 2017/18, losing to the Washington Capitals in five games. He was also named the NHL’s coach of the year that season for his work behind the bench. That didn’t help him hang onto his job though as he was replaced by Peter DeBoer, who was fired as head coach of the San Jose Sharks earlier this season.

Five head coaches have been let go due to the performance of their teams while Bill Peters was basically forced to resign from the Calgary Flames when he admitted to using racist language in the minor leagues a decade earlier. It was also revealed that Peters punched and kicked players on the bench when he was coaching in the NHL with the Carolina Hurricanes.

In addition, the Dallas Stars sacked head coach Jim Montgomery this season for what the club called unprofessional conduct. It’s believed Montgomery is now undergoing rehabilitation for alcohol abuse. Peters was replaced by Geoff Ward and Montgomery’s job was given to Rick Bowness.

It appears NHL owners aren’t afraid to fire coaches mid-season due to the recent success of coaching changes. For example, the St. Louis Blues relieved Mike Yeo of his post last season and replaced him with Craig Berube. The club sank to the bottom of the league ladder a couple of months later but then stormed all the way back to win the franchise’s first-ever Stanley Cup.

Mike Sullivan took over as head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins in December, 2015 and then led the team to two consecutive Stanley Cups. Darryl Sutter was hired as head coach of the Los Angeles Kings in December of 2011 and ended up winning the Stanley Cup that season and again in 2013/14.

Other head coaches to lose their jobs this season include Mike Babcock of the Toronto Maple Leafs, John Hynes of the New Jersey Devils and Peter Laviolette of the Nashville Predators. Like DeBoer though, Hynes has landed on his feet and is already back in the NHL as head coach of Nashville. Sheldon Keefe took over in Toronto, Alain Nasreddine in New Jersey and Bob Boughner in San Jose.

In total, there are 14 of 31 NHL coaches who are in their first year with their team this season and Berube has been with St. Louis for just 14 months. Just three coaches have been with the same club since 2015/16.  Jon Cooper has been with the Tampa Bay Lightning since March, 2013 while Paul Maurice has coached the Winnipeg Jets since January, 2014 and Jeff Blashill was hired by the Detroit Red Wings in the summer of 2015.

Making the playoffs is definitely harder for NHL coaches these days since 16 of 21 teams made the postseason back in 1987 and in 2019/20 16 of 31 clubs will make the playoffs. Soon it will be 16 of 32 franchises as Seattle is set to enter the league in 2021/22. With so many head coaches losing their jobs this year NHL teams may soon realize it’s not in their best interests to sign coaches to long-term deals anymore.

Babcock is a prime example of what can happen when coaches are signed to multi-season contracts as the Maple Leafs are still obligated to pay him for another three-and-a-half-years or until he takes another job. But if he’s raking in an average of $6.25 million on his eight-year deal there’s probably not much to motivate him into looking for a new job.

Tampa Bay Lightning equal franchise record of 10 straight wins

After quite a slow start to the 2019/20 NHL season the Tampa Bay Lightning eventually caught fire and recently reeled off a franchise-tying 10-game winning streak. They equalled the club high mark with a 1-0 away win over the Philadelphia Flyers on January 11th but saw the streak end with a 3-1 defeat in New Jersey to the Devils the next. The Lightning outscored their opponents 42-17 during the streak with nine of those goals coming in a 9-2 drubbing of the Vancouver Canucks.

Tampa Bay set their club record of 10 consecutive victories just last year when they were red hot between February 9th and 27th. Their recent streak equals this season’s NHL high mark as the New York Islanders also won 10 straight games earlier in the campaign from October 12th to November 5th. The Lightning are now the fourth club in NHL history to win at least 10 games in a row in two consecutive seasons.

The Columbus Blue Jackets achieved the feat in 2016/17 and 2017/18 while the Pittsburgh Penguins pulled it off in three straight seasons in 2010/11, 2011/12 and 2012/13 and the Philadelphia Flyers managed it in 1984/85 and 1985/86. Tampa’s loss in New Jersey snapped a five-game winning streak on the road but they’re still an impressive 8-2-1 in their last 11 away outings. The five-match road winning streak also equalled the second-longest road winning string in the NHL this season.

Tampa hadn’t given up a goal in 169:05 minutes of action until New Jersey scored in the second period of their game and fell just short of their franchise best of 184:06 which was set last February 12th to 18th. The Lightning also scored 13 straight goals before New Jersey tallied which meant they also fell short in their attempt to tie their franchise record of 14 consecutive goals which was also set lest February.

The recent hot streak has seen Tampa Bay soar up the standings in the Atlantic Division where they currently sit in second place with a record of 27-14-4 after 46 games. They trail the first-place Boston Bruins by seven points with a game in hand and have a four-point lead over the third-place Toronto Maple Leafs also with a game in hand.

Collectively, the Lightning have scored the fourth-most goals in the league at 162 and their 130 goals against ranks ninth best. The club’s special teams have also been pulling their weight as their power play is ranked second in the league behind the Edmonton Oilers at 27.8 per cent and the penalty killing is tied for fourth best with the Dallas Stars at 83.5 per cent.

Individually, right-winger Nikita Kucherov (last year’s Art Ross Trophy winner as the NHL’s top scorer), leads the way with 17 goals and 49 points and is followed by centre Steven Stamkos at 17 goals and 44 points. Defenceman Victor Hedman is next with nine goals and 41 points while centre Brayden Point has notched 18 goals and 40 points and centre Alex Kilorn has chipped in with 18 goals and 37 points.

The Lightning have also been getting solid goaltending from Andrei Vasilevskiy as he’s 22-9-2 with a goals-against average of 2.58 with a 91.5 save percentage. Veteran backup netminder Curtis McElhinney hasn’t been quite as sharp and is 5-5-2 with a 3.10 GAA and a 90.4 save percentage. The Lightning have recorded just two shutouts this season with Vasilevskiy posting both of them in the ninth and 10th games of their recent winning streak.

But even with the team’s recent hot run, the Lightning can’t afford to take the foot off the gas since they have just a five-point lead over the Florida Panthers and the last playoff spot in the Atlantic Division. They are also only two points in front of the Carolina Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference wild-card playoff race as of January 13th with each team having 37 games remaining in the regular season.

Canadian NHL hopefuls win Junior Gold

The final of the 2020 Under-20 International Ice Hockey Federation World Junior Championships came down to Canada and Russia in Ostrava, Czech Republic on January 5th with the Canadian coming out on top by a score of 4-3. Meanwhile, Sweden captured the bronze medal with a narrow 3-2 victory over Finland in the third-place matchup which was the same result when the two teams met in group play earlier in the tournament. Finland entered the championships as the defending champion.

Russia made it to the final after an exciting come-from-behind 5-4 win over Sweden in the semifinals while Canada blanked Finland 5-0 in their final-four showdown. Sweden’s Samuel Fagemo, a 2019 second-round draft pick of the Los Angeles Kings, led the way in scoring with with eight goals and five helpers for 13 points in seven contests. Nineteen-year-old Rasmus Sandin, of the Toronto Maple Leafs was named best defenceman of the tournament as the Swede finished it with a position-high three goals and seven assists for 10 points.

Sandin was also named to the event’s All-Star Team along with fellow blue liner Alexander Romanov of Russia. Joel Hofer of Canada was named the All-Star Team’s goaltender while the forwards were Fagemo along with Barrett Hayton and Alexis Lafrenière of Canada. Lafrenière was also named the tournament’s most valuable player as he notched four goals and six assists for 10 points in five outings. The 18-year-old Lafrenière of Saint-Eustache, Quebec currently plays with Rimouski Oceanic of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League and missed two games for Canada due to injury.

Lafrenière was named the Rookie of the Year in the QMJHL last season and also made the league’s first All-Star Team as he racked up 32 goals and 48 assists for 80 points in 60 games and added four goals and seven points in seven playoff contests. He then followed up with 105 points in his second junior campaign on 37 goals and 68 assists in 61 games with another nine goals and 23 points in 13 postseason appearances. The 6-foot-1-inch, 192 lb left-winger is expected to go first overall in the 2020 NHL Draft  in June and also captained Canada to the gold medal at the 2018 Under-18 Hlinka Gretzky Cup.

Canada captured their leading 18th  World Junior gold medal and 32nd overall against Russia at this year’s event with fourth-liner and Los Angeles Kings’ prospect Akil Thomas scoring the game-winner with 3:58 remaining in the third period. The goal, which was Thomas’s first and only of the tournament, capped off an impressive comeback as Russia held a 3-1 lead just six minutes and 42 seconds earlier. It was the fifth time in nine tries that the Canadians have beaten Russia for the gold medal since 1996  and it came after being thrashed 6-0 by the Russians in group play a week earlier.

The loss means Russia hasn’t won a gold medal at the prestigious event since 2011 and the nation has now lost four straight finals since then. It was an eventful tournament for Canada and head coach Dale Hunter as it was the country’s first medal since taking gold in 2018. They finished sixth place at home last year after losing to Finland in the quarterfinals. In addition, their 6-0 defeat to Russia in the group stage was Canada’s worst loss in the 44-year history of the tournament.

Washington Capitals’ defender John Carlson’s hot as a pistol

Washington Capitals’ defenceman John Carlson is on a torrid scoring pace this season as he leads all blue liners as of December 22nd with 47 points from 13 goals and 34 assists in 37 games. The 29-year-old from Natick, Massachusetts co-leads the league with six game-winning goals and is on pace to register 104 points in 2019/20. If he manages to keep up the pace he’ll definitely be joining some elite defencemen when it comes to scoring statistics.

Since the NHL began the 100-point barrier by a defenceman has been reached just 14 times and only five players have managed to achieve it. These are Bobby Orr, Paul Coffey, Denis Potvin, Brian Leetch and Al MacInnis. Orr did it six times while Coffey pulled it off five times and the rest reached 100 points or more once each. Leetch was the last rearguard to do it in 1991/92. For Carlson to join those legends he’ll need to score 53 points in his next 45 games.

No NHL defenceman has scored more than 90 points since 1993/94 when Ray Bourque did it and just three blue liners have notched more than 80 points since the 1995/96 campaign. These were Brent Burns of the San Jose Sharks in 2018/19, Erik Karlsson of the Ottawa Senators in 2015/16 and Nicklas Lidstrom of the Detroit Red Wings in 2005/06. Carlson had a 13 point lead over Dougie Hamilton in blue line scoring on Dec. 22nd and was tied for seventh overall in the league.

Carlson has recorded a point on 37 per cent of his team’s goals sop far this year while Hamilton was next for a defender at slightly more than 30 per cent. Since 2017/18, Carlson has been on quite a roll with 41 goals and 144 assists for 185 points in 199 regular-season outings. This ranks him first or second for defencemen in goals scored, assists, total points, game-winning goals and even-strength goals. He now has 103 goals and 347 helpers for 450 points in 725 games while averaging 23:30 of ice time per night.

Many high-scoring defencemen are sometimes a liability in their own end but Carlson is a plus 101 for his career and is third in the league this season at plus 21. He’s also proved to be quite effective on the blue line once the playoffs start as he’s racked up 18 goals and 42 assists for 60 points in 107 postseason encounters. He chipped in with five goals and 20 points in 24 encounters in 2017/18 to help the Capitals win their first ever Stanley Cup.

It seems Carlson doesn’t just chip in with a point here and there as he’s already registered 14 multi-point games this season which is almost double any other blue liner in the league. The 6-foot-3-inch 220 lb rearguard was drafted by Washington in 2008 with the 27th overall pick in the first round and then registered 16 goals and 76 points in 59 games for the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League the next season to prove the Capitals had made the right choice.

With 70 points last season and 68 the year before it looks like Carlson’s now hitting his peak. He doesn’t come cheap as he inked an eight-year deal in the summer of 2018 for a total of 64 million. This averages out to $8 million a year but if he keeps scoring at the same pace for the next few seasons it may well be money worth spending.

New York Rangers named NHL’s most valuable franchise for fifth straight year

The annual Forbes’ list of the NHL’s  most valuable franchises was recently released with the New York Rangers taking the top spot for the fifth consecutive year. The club has been valued at U.S. $1.65 billion, which is a six per cent increase over last year. The Toronto Maple Leafs were runners up with a value of $1.5 billion while the Montreal Canadiens were third at $1.34 billion followed by the Chicago Blackhawks at $1.085 billion and the Boston Bruins at a billion dollars.

All of the top five franchises are known as “original six’ NHL teams. However, the Rangers, Canadiens and Blackhawks all missed the playoffs last season and along with Toronto are all in non-playoff positions as of this December 16th.  The top 10 is rounded out by the Los Angeles Kings at $850 million, the Philadelphia Flyers at $825 million, the Detroit Red Wings at $800 million, the Washington Capitals at $775 million and the Vancouver Canucks with a value of $740 million. According to Forbes, there were no new additions to this year’s top-10.

The rest of the franchises from number 11 to 31 are ranked in value as follows: 11-Pittsburgh Penguins ($665 M), 12-Dallas Stars ($600 M), 13-Vegas Golden Knights ($580 M), 14- Edmonton Oilers ($575 M), 15- New Jersey Devils ($550 M), 16-San Jose Sharks ($540 M), 17- St Louis Blues ($530 M), 18-New York Islanders ($520 M), 19- Minnesota Wild ($510 M), 20-Calgary Flames ($500 M), 21-Anaheim Ducks ($480 M), 22-Colorado Avalanche ($475 M), 23-Tampa Bay Lightning ($470 M), 24-Nashville Predators ($460 M), 25-Carolina Hurricanes ($450 M), 26-Ottawa Senators ($445 M), 27-Winnipeg Jets ($420 M), 28-Buffalo Sabres ($400 M), 29-Columbus Blue Jackets ($325 M), 30-Florida Panthers ($310 M), 31-Arizona Coyotes ($300 M).

All 31 franchises saw their value rise compared to 2018 with Vancouver, Vegas and Winnipeg increasing by just one per cent while New Jersey increased the most at 21 per cent followed by the New York Islanders at 18 per cent, Dallas and St. Louis at 14 per cent, Calgary at 11 per cent and Colorado at 10 per cent.

Forbes also released a partial list of the league’s best fans based on stadium attendance, the secondary ticket sales market, the teams’ merchandise sales, their social media reach and popularity and their local television ratings. The Pittsburgh Penguins’ fans ranked number one followed by supporters of Boston, Chicago and Vegas. The rest of the top 10 is as follows: 5-Buffalo, 6-Toronto, 7-St. Louis, 8-Winnipeg, 9-Nashville, 10-Detroit.

This is the third time Penguins’ fans have been ranked number one since the list originated in 2009. Pittsburgh, Boston and Chicago have all treated their fans to success over the past decade as Chicago won three Stanley Cups (2009/10, 2012/13 and 2014/15). Pittsburgh captured two (2015/16 and 2016/17) and the Bruins one (2010/11). The Bruins also played in another two Stanley Cup Final series (2012/13 and 2018/19). Also, Vegas reached the Stanley Cup Final in the club’s first year in the league in 2017/18.

Goaltender Tristan Jarry fighting for Pittsburgh Penguins’ starting job

After playing just two NHL games for the Pittsburgh Penguins last season, 24-year-old goaltender Tristan Jarry is now staking his claim for the team’s starting job in the crease. Jarry posted his second consecutive shutout on Dec. 6th with a 2-0 home win over the Arizona Coyotes just two days after blanking the visiting St. Louis Blues 3-0. Jarry stopped a combined 61 shots in the two outings and is now 7-4 on the season and hasn’t allowed a goal in his last 142 minutes and 46 seconds of action..

Jarry is making a strong case for the starting job as the Penguins’ number one goalie as Matt Murray simply can’t match the youngster’s numbers this year. Jarry owns a goals-against average of 1.81 this season with a 94.3 save percentage and has a 1.00 GAA in seven home games along with two shutouts. The 6-foot-2-inch, 195 lb native of Surrey, British Columbia has won six of his last seven starts and has allowed two or fewer goals in those half dozen victories and in nine of his ll games this season.

As of December 8th, Jarry was leading the NHL in save percentage and goals-against average and has been the Penguins’ top man in net after playing in just four of the squad’s first 19 outings. Meanwhile, the 25-year-old Murray is struggling at 5-0-4 with a 2.85 GAA and 89.7 save percentage. Jarry has made the most of his chances in net this year and it appears Pittsburgh will continue to ride his hot hand for the time being.

Jarry was originally drafted by Pittsburgh in the second round in 2013 with the 44th-overall pick while playing with the Edmonton Oil Kings of the Western Hockey League (WHL). He was the WHL’s top goalie in 2012/13 with a 1.61 GAA and 93.6 save percentage in 27 games. The next season he went 44-14-3 and 16-5 in the playoffs. He led his team to the Memorial Cup title and was named to the league’s Eastern Conference First All-Star Team. He made his pro debut in 2015/16 with the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins of the American Hockey League and was called up by the Stanley-Cup-winning Penguins for the NHL playoffs as an emergency replacement.

Jarry played the 2016/17 season in the AHL and went 28-15-2 in 45 contests with a 2.15 GAA and 92.5 save percentage. He played in the league’s All-Star Game and shared the Harry “Hap” Holmes Award with Casey DeSmith as league-leading Wilkes-Barre posted the AHL’s lowest GAA. Jarry made his NHL debut in April, 2017 in the final game of the regular season with a 3–2 defeat at the hands of the New York Rangers. He then dressed as Pittsburgh’s backup for 11 postseason outings as the Penguins won the Stanley Cup for the second straight season.

In 2017/18, Jarry played with Pittsburgh early in the season while Murray was out of action and then returned to the AHL in January before being recalled to the NHL in February. He went 14-6-2 with Pittsburgh with a 2.77 GAA and 90.8 save percentage while going 9-5-2 in the AHL with a 3.05 GAA and 90.1 save percentage. Following the campaign, Jarry re-signed with Pittsburgh for two more years for a total of $1.35 million. However, he was injured in a 2018/19 preseason game with Pittsburgh and assigned to the AHL. He made history with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton in November of that season by becoming the club’s first goaltender to score a goal but played in just two NHL games.

When the current season faced off Jarry had made the Penguins’ NHL roster and has definitely earned his keep with his stellar play so far. He’s taken over from Murray as the number one at the moment and has helped the Penguins to a 17-9-4 record as the club fights for an Eastern Conference playoff spot. Jarry will be an unrestricted free agent next summer but is a bargain for the team this season with a salary cap hit of just $675,000. However, he should definitely earn a considerable raise next year if he keeps up his fine play in 2019/20.