The Dallas Stars acquired center Jason Spezza from the Ottawa Senators on Tuesday, and agreed to terms with former Senators forward Ales Hemsky on a three-year contract. In exchange for Spezza, the Senators received forwards Alex Chiasson, Nicholas Paul and Alexander Guptill, plus a second-round pick in the 2015 NHL Draft. The Stars also received forward Ludwig Karlsson. The Stars also signed goaltender Anders Lindback to a one-year contract. Hemsky had 17 points in 20 games, playing mostly with Spezza, after Ottawa acquired him in a trade from the Edmonton Oilers on March 5. He has 494 points in 672 games, including 477 points in 652 games with the Oilers. Hemsky had 43 points in 75 games last season, the most he's had in a season since he had 66 in 2008-09. He hasn't appeared in the Stanley Cup Playoffs since 2006, when Edmonton made a run to the Stanley Cup Final. Spezza had to waive his no-trade clause to go to Dallas. Ottawa general manager Bryan Murray said June 11 that Spezza had requested a trade and last week Murray had a trade in place with the Nashville Predators but Spezza rejected the move. Spezza has one year remaining on a contract that carries a $7 million NHL salary-cap charge. He is owed $4 million in salary having already been paid $45 million of the $49 million total value of his contract, according to CapGeek.com. He can become an unrestricted free agent following the 2014-15 season and said he has not had contract talks with Dallas. Ottawa saved approximately $6.1 million in salary-cap space in the trade. Chiasson has one year left on his entry-level contract with a salary-cap charge of $866,000. Paul and Guptill are not expected to be on the Senators' NHL roster in 2014-15. Spezza likely will be the Stars' second-line center behind Seguin, who had 37 goals and 84 points in 80 games last season, his first in Dallas after being acquired from the Boston Bruins last summer. Spezza has played his entire career for the Senators, and has 251 goals and 687 points in 686 games. Ottawa selected him with the No. 2 pick in the 2001 NHL Draft. He has played at least 60 games in nine of the past 10 seasons; a back injury limited him to five games in the lockout-shortened 2012-13 season. Chiasson, 23, had 13 goals, 35 points and a minus-21 rating in 79 games for the Stars last season after scoring five goals in his first nine games. He had two points and a minus-7 rating in six Stanley Cup Playoff games. Paul, 19, was invited to Hockey Canada's National Junior Team Evaluation Camp in August in Montreal. He had 26 goals and 46 points in 67 games for the North Bay Battalion of the Ontario Hockey League last season. Dallas selected him in the fourth round (No. 101) of the 2013 NHL Draft. Guptill, 22, finished his collegiate career at the University of Michigan last season before joining the Texas Stars of the American Hockey League. He had two assists in five games in the AHL regular season but did not get into a game during Texas' run to the Calder Cup championship. Dallas selected Guptill in the third round of the 2010 NHL Draft (No. 77). Karlsson split last season between the Binghamton Senators of the AHL and the Elmira Jackals of the ECHL. He had zero points in eight AHL games, and 11 goals and 24 points in 39 ECHL games. He has one year remaining on his contract. Lindback, 26, spent the past two seasons with the Tampa Bay Lightning. He was 8-12-2 last season with a 2.90 goals-against average and .891 save percentage and also started all four games for the Lightning in the Stanley Cup Playoffs after Ben Bishop was injured.
"I'm very excited," Spezza said
on a conference call with reporters. "Dallas is a team from
the get-go that I thought would be a good fit for me. I think me and
Brian sat down at the end of the season and we had a very frank
conversation of where I thought the team was at and where I thought I
was at and where I felt was the best fit for myself. I think that it
was best for me to move on. I think Brian felt it could help the team
to have me move on too, so it was tough. It was a tough decision and
you know how much I've liked being there and playing there, but I
felt like go on to the next chapter of my career. I want to try to
win a Stanley Cup, and I felt like a change of scenery could help me
get there and to get to a team where I could play with some of the
forward depth that I'm getting with [Jamie] Benn, [Tyler] Seguin and
those guys. I think that I want to go there, just establish myself
and play and show them how much I can contribute and just help the
hockey team win. The contract stuff always takes care of itself. If
it's a fit for the team and it's a fit for me, then we move forward
with that, but it's not a focus at all. I couldn't be more thrilled
with the young group they have there [in Dallas]; I think I can
really add to that team."
"I talked with Dallas even before Jason
got traded, but I talk to Jason a lot the last couple weeks,"
Hemsky said. "I talked to him about that and asked him about
his options. I didn’t know he was going to get traded there or he
would go somewhere else. It wasn't a huge factor because they told me
I could play with a lot of good players, but now it's even better
that Jason got traded there, so I'm very happy about that."
"I'm thrilled because we had great
chemistry at the end of the year," Spezza said of reuniting
with Hemsky. "So it's nice to hear. We played on a line for
23, 24 games, so we got to know each other pretty well pretty
quickly. So that's exciting for me, for sure."
"I'm just excited for the opportunity,"
said Lindback, who began his career with the Nashville
Predators after he was selected in the seventh round (No. 207) of
the 2008 NHL Draft. "I played in the West with Nashville, so
I know it's a little different from the East. It's a little more
travel, especially living and playing for Dallas. It's a really tough
conference, but it's a challenge I'm taking right now. Dallas has a
very interesting team with a lot of good players, especially with
adding a couple pieces today, so I'm really excited and looking
forward here to the challenge."
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