Edmonton Oilers general manager Craig MacTavish spent a busy Wednesday trading away a goalie the organization once thought would be its No. 1, only to later acquire a goalie that will likely be given the opportunity to be its next No. 1. In separate deals announced less than an hour apart, the Oilers sent Devan Dubnyk to the Nashville Predators in exchange for veteran forward Matt Hendricks and acquired Ben Scrivens from the Los Angeles Kings for a third-round pick in the 2014 NHL Draft. Dubnyk and Scrivens are scheduled to be unrestricted free agents after the season. Hendricks is signed for three more seasons with an annual salary-cap charge of $1.85 million. The Oilers now have Ilya Bryzgalov and Scrivens as their goaltenders, with each player on an expiring contract. Edmonton will carry $1.75 million of Dubnyk's $3.5 million salary-cap charge as part of the trade with Nashville, according to CapGeek.com. The deal reunites Scrivens with Edmonton coach Dallas Eakins, who was his coach in the American Hockey League with the Toronto Marlies for parts of the past two seasons.
"He played very well for Dallas and he's
got a shot to come in here and really establish himself in the
National Hockey League," MacTavish said. "It was
important that Dallas gave him the thumbs up in terms of his
relationship with Ben."
Dubnyk, 27, has struggled this season, going
11-17-2 with a 3.36 goals-against average and .894 save percentage in
32 games. He started the season as the Oilers' undisputed No. 1
goalie after finishing last season with a .920 save percentage and
2.57 GAA, but the team signed Bryzgalov on Nov. 8. Each has played 14
games since Nov. 25. Dubnyk was taken by the Oilers with the 14th
pick of the 2005 NHL Draft.
"We really felt for everybody it was time
for a change with Devan," MacTavish said. "I think
this change is really going to benefit Devan as well. I think it's
been tough on everybody, and that includes our goaltenders. It's a
fresh start for Devan, which is important for him. He's a guy who's
always been a consummate professional for us."
Dubnyk will provide the Predators with a veteran
presence in goal while starter Pekka
Rinne continues to rehabilitate from arthroscopic hip surgery to
remove a bacterial infection. Rookie Marek
Mazanec has played the majority of the games with Carter
Hutton as his backup. However, Predators coach Barry
Trotz went public with criticism of Hutton's play in a Jan. 5
loss to the Carolina
Hurricanes. Hutton has played once since then, making 22 saves in
a 4-2 win against the Calgary
Flames on Tuesday.
"This has nothing to do with Pekka and his
recovery," Predators general manager David Poile said during
a press conference. "This was all about winning hockey games
with no timetable for Pekka's return. We've been trying for quite
some time to acquire a goalie. We wish we could have done it earlier,
but we are glad it occurred today. We very much believe Pekka is
coming back. There is still no timetable on his return, and Dubnyk is
great to fill in that spot.
Hendricks, 32, has two goals and two assists in 44
games with the Predators. During the summer he signed a four-year,
$7.4 million contract with the Predators, the team that selected him
in the fifth-round of the 2000 NHL Draft. In six NHL seasons,
Hendricks has 29 goals and 62 points in 307 games with the Predators,
Colorado
Avalanche and Washington
Capitals. He signed a free-agent contract with Nashville last
summer. Scrivens was a success story for the Kings earlier this
season after starter Jonathan
Quick went down with a groin injury. Scrivens went 6-1-3 from
Nov. 14 to Dec. 2. He had two shutouts and didn't allow more than two
goals in any of his 10 starts. However, rookie Martin
Jones got a start on Dec. 3 and proceeded to win eight in a row
before losing three straight. Quick returned and Jones was sent back
to the Manchester Monarchs of the AHL, but the Kings felt he had
proven himself as a NHL goalie, making Scrivens expendable. Shortly
after trading Scrivens, the Kings recalled Jones from Manchester.
Scrivens, 27, is 7-5-4 with a 1.97 GAA and .931 save percentage this
season. He is 18-19-6 with a .917 save percentage and 2.54 GAA for
his career.
"He really emerged when Jonathan
Quick went down to injury the first time. Ben came in and played
outstanding in relief of Jonathan," MacTavish said. "He was
making a case for himself as a No. 1 NHL goaltender in those starts
that he had. That caught everybody's attention and what's given him
this great opportunity."
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