Tag Archive | "Free Agent"

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Pens Get Win Out Of Olympic Break Hiatus

Posted on 03 March 2010 by Jeff Jackson

The first game back from the Olympic Break resulted in a Penguins victory against the Buffalo Sabres as both starting goal tenders sat letting their backups carry the load. Miller sitting might have been understandable considering that he had just played two weeks of hockey for Team USA. But Fleury sitting is a bit of a mystery considering that he received his gold medal despite never seeing a single minute of game actions for Team Canada.

The game, which marked the debut for new defenseman Jordan Leopold, a veteran 29 year old blue liner, went well for the Penguins as they pretty much showed no real signs of rust against a great Eastern Conference team and wound up with a 3-2 victory, two points and kept pace with the New Jersey Devils who also won and remain a point ahead of the Penguins with a game in hand.

Gonchar scored his 200thcareer goal in what could very well be his last season as a Penguin as Leopold, who was a -1 in his debut for the Black and Gold provides the Penguins with another, although admittedly lesser, option on defense for providing offense.

What I am really waiting for is Saturday and the debut for the flightless birds of newly acquired rental player Alexei Ponikarovsky who came over from Toronto for the hefty price of Luca Caputi. Personally, I like Poni, or the Ukrain Train as he is known, but I do not like the Penguins giving up a man that has shown he was probably the best chance the Penguins had of a reliable NHL level scoring talentdeveloped from within the organization. That internal development is the best way to put a competitive team on the ice while not flirting with salary cap disaster as the Penguins are now doing.

Ponikarovsky is a free agent at the end of the year and at just 29.  As a proven reliable 20+ goal scoring wing it means he will probably command too much money for the Penguins to even think about resigning. But then again, if Goncharwalks looking for that one more big payday that does free up some money but I wouldn’t hold my breath.  The question for Gonchar is does he want more money or more championships and only he can make that decision on how to end what I think is a Hall of Fame career.

Mortgaging the future for quick benefit is a risky endeavor. I don’t think that the Penguins have destroyed their future and made winning future championships harder by dealing Caputi. But I don’t think they have made it any easier beyond this season.

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Scuderi Watch for July 1st

Posted on 01 July 2009 by Jeff Jackson

I have heard that there are two teams interested in the services of #4 Rob Scuderi. These teams are the Wild and the Lightning.

I don’t know how much each of these teams have available under the cap, but to be talking to Scuds they must have at least a few million to be tossing around.

update:
Pens interested in Mike Knuble from Philly? So I’ve heard. With Pronger added to the team and no backup goalie the Flyers certainly have cap issues of their own to deal with. Knuble has been a 20 goal scorer late in his career but he is also now 37. Can the Penguins afford him for the reported multi-year deal he wants when they could not even sign Feds?

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Penguins Turn Eyes To Three Free Agents

Posted on 28 June 2009 by Jeff Jackson

With the draft done the Penguins now have to concentrate on two days of intense negotiations with three free agents they would love to resign. Now, as much as I like each of these players and the roles they filled this year, none of them are that important that the Penguins should give up the sod farm to sign them. However there is no disputing that each of them fits well into the Penguins system and have played well with the team Chemistry.

First up is Rob Scuderi. It appears that Scuderi will not be signed to a contract by the July 1st deadline and will test free agency to see what teams will offer him. A deal with the Penguins would probably be $2 million a year (at most $2.5) for two or three years. Someone will probably offer him $4 million because that is what happens to free agents who are coming off a Stanley Cup victory especially ones that played the way Scuderi did. The problem is that teams have to consider that the salary cap only went up $100,000 next year and believe it or not will probably not increase much the next year after that and may even go down depending on the economy. These realizations may keeps teams at bay from offering such huge contracts to a defenseman that while he is a good shut down guy is not irreplaceable.

Scud will likely see who offers him the big money. If it is a perennial looser he may forgo it to come back. He may also decide to come back if the offers from other teams are not much more than $2.5 million or even $3.

Well, what about Ruslan Fedotenko? It is amazing how playing along side of someone like Evgeni Malkin can make teams that last year wouldn’t touch Fedotenko with a 50 foot pole all of a sudden have an interest in him. Ruslan was a good forward playing for a bad Islanders team however and people got to see what he was really capable of this year. Rumors are that the Penguins offer to Feds was not where either he or his agent wanted it to be and it is doubtful that the Penguins will budge much on their offer. Fedotenko will also likely test the free agent market to see what he is offered.

Then there is Billy Guerin. Guerin’s hefty salary this year means that in all likelihood to return he would have to take a million dollar pay cut to stay with the team and would probably only be offered a one year deal on top of that. Guerin’s gritty but old. He has another year or two left on his aging frame and someone is bound to offer him comparable money to what he was making this past season. The question is does Billy want the money or does he want to win?

Well, we will have to see.

Now here is the real problem for each of these players. If they decide to play the game of testing the free agent market they could loose out. The Penguins are not going to sit around and wait. They will be tendering offers to other free agents when the market opens up and there are players out there to be had in the Penguins price range. The question is whether or not the Penguins see them as a better fit for less money than any of these three.

The double edged sword can cut either way so be careful guys.

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Don’t Be Pesonen-mistic About Next Year

Posted on 17 June 2009 by Jeff Jackson

With the Penguins certain to loose a few player to free agency including at least one or two or three scoring wingers in the group of Sykora, Guerin, Fedotenko and Satan, the Penguins might look like a potentially weaker team next season. Of course the free agent market works both ways and I really think that while the Penguins will look at who is available and at what price I think that Guerin and Fedotenko are priorities to resign. And if Sykora and Satan are given their exit interviews, that frees up some dollars to resign those previously mentioned and highly targeted wingers.

But let us not forget about someone in the minors who I still think has a world of potential at the NHL level – Finnish winger Janne Pesonen. Pesonen came into the Pittsburgh system after tearing up the hockey world in Europe and feeling he had nothing left to prove there. He signed for peanuts which is pretty good considering he did not play all that much for Pittsburgh’s NHL franchise. He appeared in just seven games and failed to register a point while seeing limited ice time.

I was personally disappointed that the team never really gave him a chance this year to get his legs under him and play regularly with some real talent. But his production in Wilkes-Barre was impressive scoring 32 goals and registering 50 assists in 70 games for the Baby Pens. Now that, my friends, is impressive. I do not care who you are, if you register 82 points in the AHL you have NHL talent.

Pesonen will be an unrestricted free agent this summer but the good news is he has said that he would like to resign with the Penguins to help realize his dream of playing regularly in the NHL. Even better, Ray Shero seems intent on seriously attempting to make sure that Pesonen returns to the Penguins system. And who know, with a couple openings sure to arise for wingers over the summer, he may just get to do to the NHL what he did in the minors and Europe.

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Will He Stay Or Will He Go?

Posted on 16 June 2009 by Jeff Jackson

Rob Scuderi, number 4, the Scud Missile himself has a decision to make and so do the Pittsburgh Penguins now that the Stanley Cup is back in the ‘Burgh. Yes, the Finals are over. So too is the parade. And well, with some time to kill before Steelers start reporting for camp I have some time to think about things. Things like who among the free agents on the Pittsburgh Penguins roster should the Penguins even attempt to resign and who should they let go.

It’s life with a salary cap …

So let’s look at the list of Pittsburgh Penguins preparing to shop their services this off season:
Craig Adams, C
Mike Zigomanis, C
Mathieu Garon, G
Petr Sykora, F
Ruslan Fedotenko, F
Bill Guerin, F
Miroslav Satan, F
Hal Gill, D
Phillippe Boucher, D
Rob Scuderi, D

Now, let’s discuss …
Craig Adams – Adams was undoubtedly an upgrade on the fourth line over Godard although not much of an enforcer which you need during the regular season. Adams made $600,000 this season and could still be resigned for a reasonable price if the Penguins wanted him. He’s gritty but he’ll be a 4th liner and be a platoon guy at that in all likelihood.

Mike Zigomanis – Ziggy’s salary this year was $650,000. He’s a face off specialist and the team certainly suffered in that department after his injury. Having spent a lot of the season injured he could probably also be resigned at a reasonable rate. The problem is that the Penguins are absolutely stacked with quality role players or at least are right now. Once free agency is over this may be another story.

Mathieu Garon – Garon is a $1,000,000 backup to Fleury who wasn’t used much by the Penguins at all. The team has a glut of Goaltenders in the minors and they can let Garon go and recover some cap room. I just do not see Garon being invited back. Nothing personal.

Petr Sykora – Sykora had a price tag of $2.5 million this season. That’s pretty cheap for a scoring winger of his caliber. The problem is that his caliber has somewhat diminished it seems. He really did not perform well at all down the stretch which led to him being benched in favor of Miroslav Satan. My understanding is that Malkin likes Sykora and has a good rapport with him … but Malkin doesn’t need Sykora. Sykora will be 33 in November and while not a spring chicken he isn’t old and shriveled either. The problem is do the Penguins think that he can still score. If so, they might be able to resign him at his current value.

Ruslan Fedotenko – Now this is a guy I think the Penguins need to target for resigning. He made $2.25 million this year and complimented Malkin well. I would rather see him on Malkin’s wing than Sykora. Please, don’t take offense to that Petr, but he was definitely better and more consistent there than you were this season and if I were the Penguins I would be targeting Ruslan for a new contract. At 30 years of age he has the right mix of grit and scoring skills to be worth it. Take some of what you would pay Sykora and use it to resign Fedotenko.

Bill Guerin – Bad Boy Billy is one of those guys that I like and like a lot. Always have. Despite being 38, will be 39 in November, he looked to still have enough in him for one more year along side of Sid. $4.5 million might be a bit steep though, which is what he was making this year. I am wondering if he would take that or perhaps slightly less (considering where he is in his career) to remain a Penguin. Of course, at 38 and off of a successful Stanley Cup run maybe he is thinking of retiring. I really hope not and according to reports he has said he has no plans to retire and is looking to move his family to Pittsburgh IF the Penguins want him back.

Miroslav Satan – As much as I really enjoy all the jokes that just roll off the tongue because of having a man named Satan on the team eh, I don’t know about the Penguins interest in resigning him. He made $3.5 million this year and started out great but really had to reinvent himself as a 4th line winger. That was not what he was brought in to be and even though he played well in that roll you are not going to pay a man that kind of money to log under ten minutes of ice time a game. He’ll be 35 years of age when the season starts and he could be another guy that would just be better to let go unless he is willing to take a lot less money. Of course … he is also another candidate for retirement on a high note.

Hall Gill – Hal Gill, or more precisely Harold Priestley “Hal” Gill III, is one of those guys that you just have a hard time replacing. The man is huge and his wing span gives the opposition absolute fits while trying to enter the zone and cycling once in the zone. $2.1 million is not a bad price to pay for a shutdown defenseman like Gil and at 34 he might be coaxed to coming back at about that next year. But with a plethora of good young defensemen in the minors the Penguins may forgo him as an option on the blue line next year. I think that would be a mistake.

Phillippe Boucher – No waterboy jokes please! At $2.5 million Phillipe may be an odd man out. He came in highly touted as to what he was going to bring to the team offensively but played sparingly late in the season. You like to have defensive depth, but with the salary cap I just do not see him staying IF the Penguins target …

Rob Scuderi – Yes, I left Scuds until last for a few reasons. One of which is because I have a to say about him. Another reason is because out of all the free agents on the Penguins roster none are going to get more attention and interest than the man who night after night sacrifices life and limb and limb and limb to cause havoc in the defensive zone. Scuderi made a paltry $725,000 this season and is worth more; a lot more. I do not know that you can replace him for his current salary so if the price is right the Penguins have to try and bring him back. The kind of kamikaze style he plays just cannot be taught. It is instinctive. It takes a certain kind of … well … nut to play it. I mean that in the nicest possible way Scuds. And it is very hard to convince a guy to get into the path of pucks like he does for that price.

I say the Penguins have to make an attempt to sign him. Not for ungodly sums of money mind you, but something serious and in line with other defensemen on the team. I do not think that $2,000,000 would be unreasonable, but more than that just might be. That being said, if some team throws a bucket full of dollars at Scuds I would not begrudge him leaving for financial security. He’s 30 but you could sign him for 2 or 3 years I think and have a good investment.

Now, let the games begin!

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