NHL News
New York - Rangers
center Derek
Stepan sustained a broken jaw in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference
Final on Thursday, coach Alain
Vigneault said Friday. Stepan was having surgery when Vigneault
spoke to the media shortly before 1 p.m. ET. Vigneault said he
wouldn't know more about a timeframe for Stepan's return until
Saturday. Stepan was injured when Montreal
Canadiens forward Brandon
Prust hit him 2:45 into the first period. Stepan left the game at
the time, but returned during a television timeout at 8:15 of the
first and resumed a normal shift. He played 17:24 and assisted on
Chris
Kreider's game-tying goal in the final seconds of the third
period. Vigneault said he did not become aware of Stepan's injury
until Friday morning. Stepan had X-rays on his jaw after the game
Thursday, but further consultation with a specialist Friday morning
revealed the fracture. Prust was not penalized for the hit on Stepan,
but he is scheduled to have a phone hearing with the NHL Department
of Player Safety on Friday because of what is being called
interference on the play. Stepan is tied for second on the team in
scoring in the Stanley Cup Playoffs with 11 points in 17 games.
Montreal - Canadiens
left wing Brandon
Prust will have a phone hearing with the NHL Department of Player
Safety on Friday afternoon for his hit on New
York Rangers center Derek
Stepan during the first period at Madison Square Garden on
Thursday night. No penalty was called on the play at 2:48 of the
first period. Stepan briefly left the game before returning later in
the first period. On Friday, Rangers coach Alain
Vigneault announced Stepan would undergo surgery for a broken jaw
and there was no timetable for his return. Montreal won Game 3 of
the Eastern Conference Final, 3-2, in overtime. The following
grounds are being considered for supplemental discipline:
Interference. However, the Department of Player Safety retains the
right to make adjustments to the infraction upon review.
Uniondale - After trading for the rights of pending
unrestricted free agent Jaroslav
Halak on May 1, the Islanders locked up their new goalie Thursday
with a four-year contract. For a team that hasn't had much stability
at the position or success on the free-agent front in recent years,
the signing is a major step in the right direction. Halak, a
productive fantasy goalie behind a stingy defense during his tenure
with the St. Louis
Blues, is one of four goalies with a 2.15 goals-against average
and .920 save percentage or better over the past three regular
seasons combined (minimum 100 outings). Cory
Schneider, Tuukka
Rask and Henrik
Lundqvist are the others. He has never hit the 30-win mark in his
NHL career, largely because of injuries and the goalie competition
between him and Brian
Elliott, but will have an opportunity to finally do so with the
Islanders if he stays healthy. The closest he came to 30 wins was
this past season, when he won 24 in 40 games with the Blues and five
in 12 (2.31 GAA, .930 SV%) with the Washington
Crapitals. He was traded from St. Louis to the Buffalo
Sabres in the Ryan
Miller deal on Feb. 28 and shipped to Washington on March 5. The
Islanders have finished 21st or worse League-wide in team goals
allowed per game in each of the past seven seasons. But in 2012-13
(48-game season), the Isles rode veteran Evgeni
Nabokov to the Stanley Cup Playoffs despite pedestrian
goals-against average (2.50) and save percentage (.910) totals. Rick
DiPietro was the last goalie anywhere near Halak's caliber to
play for the Islanders. But after injuries and struggles derailed
DiPietro's career, New York used one of its compliance buyouts on his
massive contract last summer. In 2013-14, Nabokov, 38, battled injury
yet finished 15-14-8. The Islanders were competitive for the most
part when he was in net despite a suspect defense corps. Mark
Streit signed with the Philadelphia
Flyers last summer. Lubomir
Visnovsky (24 games played) and Travis
Hamonic (69) missed time due to injuries and Andrew
MacDonald was dealt to the Flyers prior to the NHL Trade Deadline. Kevin
Poulin (28 games) and Anders
Nilsson (19) each saw their share of playing time in 2013-14 but
failed to seize the opportunity. Each had a goals-against average
over 3.00 and a sub-.900 save percentage. If things are going to
change on Long Island, those numbers are not going to cut it. With
little depth on defense and in net compared to other teams around the
League, as well as the impact of John
Tavares' injury at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, it's not a surprise
the Islanders finished among the League's bottom five. There have
been many reasons why New York has finished that low in the standings
in recent years, but the lack of a reliable franchise goaltender has
topped the list. It's up for debate whether Halak will remain a
top-15 fantasy goalie in the coming years, but there's no question
he's a significant upgrade to his new team and should be targeted in
the 15-20 range come fantasy draft day. He isn't worthy of being
drafted over top-tier workhorses or even top 10-to-15 goalies (i.e.
Schneider, John
Gibson, Elliott, etc.) on paper, but the goalie landscape
traditionally thins out in the 15-to-20 range. That's where Halak
actually could prove to be worth your while if he falls that far.
Halak's value will not be as high entering the 2014-15 season as it
was entering any individual season he spent in St. Louis, but he will
have every opportunity to start 60-plus games for the Islanders. If
healthy, he could finally win 30-plus games and will almost certainly
produce much better totals than any Islanders goalie has in quite
some time. Halak's potential with the Islanders will be reevaluated
as the offseason progresses. For a player who has missed time himself
due to injury in recent seasons, it's important for the Islanders to
not only address their thin defense but also secure an adequate
NHL-level backup goalie to keep Halak's workload manageable. But,
regardless of how the Islanders attack their offseason agenda, this
signing is a win-win situation for New York and gives this
29-year-old goalie the opportunity to stay productive.
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