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Sharks sign Dmitry Orlov to 2-year contract with $6.5 million cap hit

Sharks sign Dmitry Orlov to 2-year contract with $6.5 million cap hit

New York Times5 hours ago
The San Jose Sharks signed free agent defenseman Dmitry Orlov to a two-year contract with a $6.5 million cap hit on Thursday, a league source told The Athletic's Pierre LeBrun.
The veteran defenseman is a well-rounded presence on the blue line, capable of handling a heavy workload. Orlov has averaged approximately 20 minutes of ice time throughout his 13-year NHL career, and hit that mark almost exactly this past season for the Hurricanes. He had six goals and 22 assists in 76 regular-season games, plus four more assists in the playoffs.
The 33-year-old defenseman has finished with a positive plus-minus rating in 12 of his 13 seasons, and has topped 20 points for 10 straight years. He's not the most dynamic with the puck but is a steady puck-mover with strong durability, especially at 5-foot-11. Orlov missed only six out of 190 total games with Carolina over the last two years while blocking 120 shots and laying 217 hits.
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Unfortunately for Orlov, one of the lasting memories of his 2024-25 campaign will be him crushing his stick across the goal post after a poor performance by he and his Hurricanes teammates against Florida in the Eastern Conference final, but the Russian blueliner's lengthy resume supersedes that disappointing end to the season.
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Young players in key roles in Marlins' improvement
Young players in key roles in Marlins' improvement

Associated Press

time15 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Young players in key roles in Marlins' improvement

MIAMI (AP) — After Eury Pérez struck out his season-high seventh batter on Thursday, the 6-foot-8 Marlins right-hander pumped his fist and looked up at the stands at Miami's loanDepot Park. It was another win for the Marlins — their ninth in 10 games — and the first victory of the season for Pérez after returning last month from Tommy John surgery that sidelined him all of 2024. Pérez allowed just one hit in six shutout innings against the Minnesota Twins on Thursday, the longest start of his career and one of the most dominant. At just 22 years and 79 days old, Pérez is the youngest starter in the majors this season to complete at least six scoreless innings while allowing no more than one hit. 'One of the best outings of the year,' Pérez said through an interpreter. 'That's what we've been working for. I can see the results. I feel very happy for the outcome. I feel great, healthy, and we will continue to keep working for more outings like that.' Thursday's 4-1 win gave the Marlins their fourth straight series victory going back to June 20. During that span, Miami won series at home against the Twins and Braves, as well as on the road against San Francisco and Arizona. The Marlins also went on an eight-game winning streak for the first time since 2008 during that 12-game stretch. That winning streak was snapped in Wednesday's 2-1 loss to the Twins, but Miami's 10 wins overall during the frame were the most in the league. 'Very happy with the way we've been playing this recent stretch,' manager Clayton McCullough said. 'And even going back before the winning streak ... our strike throwing as a whole has trended up, and that's made a big difference. The at-bat quality, the plan guys are taking into the box, being able to string at-bats together. They've continued to get better and better in their belief in that. And finally, the defense that we've played as a whole for me has been a lot better, a lot cleaner.' This season was meant to be a continuation of Miami's rebuild under President of Baseball Operations Peter Bendix, who replaced most pieces from year's 100-loss team and hired McCullough to lead an overhauled roster of prospects and mostly unknown players. What was supposed to be a year solely focused on finding which one of Miami's young additions would be key pieces to build around has brought forth a gritty squad that has far exceeded expectations. Miami is 39-46 entering a three-game series against Milwaukee, the final series of a six-game homestand. Entering Thursday night, the Marlins have the same record as the Braves for third place in the NL East. McCullough indicated that the team's place in the standings isn't necessarily as important as continuing to string together quality wins. 'Where we are right now, record-wise, who's in front, behind,' he said, 'less concerned with that, and just very pleased and proud of how we've played baseball. If we continue to play this brand, this style of clean baseball, then we're going to continue to win games.' Miami has gotten key contributions all over its lineup, from outfielder Kyle Stowers and second baseman Xavier Edwards to rookie catcher/designated hitter Agustín Ramírez, who was one of the top prospects acquired when Miami traded star Jazz Chisholm Jr. to the New York Yankees last summer. Stowers entered Thursday on a nine-game hitting streak and in the middle of his second 10-plus game on-base streak of the season. Ramírez's impressive rookie season has included a six-game hitting streak last month and the MLB lead among rookies in extra-base hits (29). The 23-year-old hit a two-run homer in the first inning Thursday, giving him 13 on the season, which also leads all MLB rookies. 'I think since I got here, the team, we were doing things the right way,' Ramírez said through an interpreter. 'The coach is doing an excellent job. We were doing a great job as well. It's just the results were not there. ... But I think what's going on now is that we were steady with our plan and things are coming up the right way now.' Ramírez added that there are some aspects of being underdogs that fuel this Marlins team. Miami has the lowest payroll in baseball and has lost 80-plus games in four of the past seven seasons. 'It does feel good that we are working really hard,' he said. 'We're trying our best. And now with these outcomes, we can show everybody the results of that.' ___ AP MLB:

Nikolaj Ehlers, the top available NHL free agent, headed to Hurricanes on six-year contract
Nikolaj Ehlers, the top available NHL free agent, headed to Hurricanes on six-year contract

Boston Globe

time26 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Nikolaj Ehlers, the top available NHL free agent, headed to Hurricanes on six-year contract

'Nikolaj was the top free agent available on July 1, and we are proud that he's chosen to make Carolina his home,' general manager Eric Tulsky said. 'He's a highly skilled winger who can really skate and will fit very well with our forward group.' It turned out to be worth the wait for the speedy 29-year-old winger from Denmark who played his first 10 seasons with Winnipeg. Ehlers' contract is the most lucrative of any signed by an unrestricted free agent who left his team this week, and $250,000 more than Brock Boeser got to re-sign with Vancouver. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The only bigger contracts have been K'Andre Miller's eight years and $60 million — also with Carolina in a sign and trade from the New York Rangers — and Ivan Provorov staying with Columbus for $59.5 million over the next seven seasons. Advertisement 'From first-round pick to the highest-scoring Danish player in NHL history, and all the countless memories in between, thank you for everything, Fly,' the Jets posted on social media. 'All the best in Carolina.' Ehlers joins a core that has reached the playoffs seven consecutive seasons under coach Rod Brind'Amour , with two trips to the Eastern Conference final over the past three springs. Carolina still has $10 million in cap space with just about a full roster, providing flexibility to fill holes between now and the trade deadline in March. Advertisement Signing Ehlers could start dominos falling around the league as teams who did not get him — among them, the Capitals — turn to backup plans. That includes potential trades, with Pittsburgh actively in selling mode, along with remaining free agents. Ex-Bruin Orlov latest joining San Jose Elsewhere on Thursday, Dmitry Orlov is heading to the spend-happy Sharks, who have been active this week and even made a pickup off the waiver wire to reach the salary floor. Orlov, who turns 34 later this month, signed a two-year contract worth $13 million. A Stanley Cup champion from his time in Washington who spent the past two seasons in Carolina, the veteran defenseman will count $6.5 million against the cap through 2026-27. Related : Orlov is the latest addition for the Sharks, who needed to add $20 million somehow to get to the $70.6 million minimum for player salaries. That counts money owed to captain Logan Couture , whose playing career is over because of a debilitating injury. San Jose also claimed Nick Leddy off waivers from St. Louis to add to its new-look blue line that includes recently signed veteran John Klingberg, who got $4 million for next season. 'Klingberg was someone we had targeted for a little while now,' general manager Advertisement Leddy also has a year left on his contract at a cap hit of $4 million, with $3 million in actual dollars owed. Orlov is the only experienced defenseman San Jose has signed beyond 2026. Burns's chase for Cup heads to Colorado Brent Burns , who played alongside Orlov the past two seasons with the Hurricanes, agreed to terms with Colorado on Wednesday night on a one-year contract worth $1 million — up to $3 million more is attainable through performance bonuses. The 40-year-old who won the Norris Trophy as top defenseman in 2017, is set to become the 23rd player in league history to play at least 22 seasons. 'I just love it: I love coming to the rink every day and working,' said Burns, who is three games shy of reaching 1,500 in the regular season. 'It really is the best. You're around guys that they're chasing one goal and there's just something special about it: all the laughs and the working hard together. It's really special to try to build something together, and I just enjoy that process.'

Red Wings thoughts: Could Steve Yzerman have another move in store? Plus prospect notes
Red Wings thoughts: Could Steve Yzerman have another move in store? Plus prospect notes

New York Times

time33 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Red Wings thoughts: Could Steve Yzerman have another move in store? Plus prospect notes

DETROIT — Two years ago, the biggest move of the Detroit Red Wings' offseason did not come in the first week of free agency. It was not until July 9 in 2023, that the Red Wings made their big summer splash, acquiring winger Alex DeBrincat, who quickly became one of the team's most important players. Advertisement Will that be the case again this year? That's the big question right now, with two of the Red Wings' key needs still up in the air after a quiet free agency period. Detroit's big move so far is trading for goaltender John Gibson during the draft, and Gibson has plenty of potential to be an upgrade in the crease. Beyond that, they've added a pair of wingers in James van Riemsdyk and Mason Appleton, plus depth defender Jacob Bernard-Docker. But as for the top-four defenseman and top-six winger the Red Wings wanted and needed coming in? Those have not been meaningfully addressed. It's possible, frankly, that they won't be. General manager Steve Yzerman held his press conference Thursday, which certainly doesn't rule out any other moves, but generally tends to be an indication there's nothing imminent in the hopper. Yzerman said that over the next week or two, though, it was possible something could emerge. 'Without going into detail or elaborating, there are a couple teams looking to do some things that we do have some interest in, and are possibilities,' he said. 'Something might come up over the summer, for whatever reason, in another organization. But what I intend to do is, once things settle down here — we've got the holiday weekend — would be to circle back next week with everyone to see what their plans are for the offseason, if they have any holes to fill, or players, for whatever reason, they want to move. So we'll see if anything comes up here in the next week or so.' That's the last real kernel of intrigue remaining in this offseason, vague and open-ended as it may be. Some thoughts on where it all leaves Detroit: 1. At this point, it's hard to know what those trade possibilities could even be. The two defensemen that arguably made the most sense for the Red Wings, K'Andre Miller and Nicolas Hague, have both already been dealt. Forward Mason Marchment, another potential fit, went off the board early to Seattle. Advertisement Assuming Jason Robertson doesn't get traded — and it doesn't look like Dallas will need to, at this stage — the big forward names thought to be on the trade market are a pair of Penguins veterans, Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell, both coming off career years. Both are in their early 30s now, so they're not long-term core pieces, but they do each have three years remaining on contracts in the $5 million AAV range. On defense, there's RFA Bowen Byram, but you do wonder about the fit, specifically if he'd be happy going to another situation where he's not guaranteed to run the top power play. Beyond that, what's out there? Surely, there are names that haven't leaked out being discussed by general managers, but it's not like there's a robust trade market to draw from. 2. I'll have a more thorough depth chart analysis coming early next week, but let's take a stab at a projected forward lineup. Right now, I'd guess something like: James van Riemsdyk – Dylan Larkin – Lucas Raymond Alex DeBrincat – Marco Kasper – Patrick Kane Andrew Copp – J.T. Compher – Mason Appleton Elmer Söderblom – Michael Rasmussen – Jonatan Berggren Yzerman talked about Appleton giving head coach Todd McLellan the chance to put together a checking line that contributes offensively, as well, so the question is really who else is on that line. We can safely assume the center will be one of Compher or Copp, and Yzerman has talked in the past about the possibility of both being on a line together, alternating faceoff responsibilities by side of the ice. So that's what I'm going with here. That being said, I also wonder if that fourth line could benefit from a more offensively inclined center than Rasmussen. Do you swap him for either Copp or Compher, in that case? Rasmussen, after all, can play both center and wing, and certainly fits a checking role. And either Copp or Compher could perhaps facilitate more offense for the two skilled wingers Söderblom and Berggren. Advertisement I'm also not positive that it'll be van Riemsdyk up top. That spot, too, could certainly go to either Copp or Compher, Söderblom, or even Berggren — with van Riemsdyk then slotting as more of a depth scorer. My thought here was that his net front presence and size would play well with Larkin and Raymond, but van Riemsdyk has averaged 13:30 and 12:24 in ice time the last two seasons, so the top line could be a big jump for him. 'We think we have a lot of flexibility that he can go up and down the lineup,' Yzerman. 'And if you check his usage in Columbus, that's exactly what he did. He could play up on their first line at times, up and down, he's a useful power play guy. … There's some flexibility for Todd now, and with his line combinations. He can be equally effective up and down.' As for the 'D,' since there have been no major changes, I'd think you're still looking at a top pair of Ben Chiarot and Moritz Seider, a second pair of Simon Edvinsson and Albert Johansson, and a third pair that is a sort of rotation between Bernard-Docker, Erik Gustafsson and Justin Holl. 3. Regardless of the line combinations, if that is the roster, and the Red Wings aren't able to make another add, the obvious question is: is this a better team than Detroit had a year ago? I think the answer is probably yes, but not by a large margin. The only real subtraction is Vladimir Tarasenko, and by adding Gibson in net, plus another year of growth from Kasper, Edvinsson, Johansson, and even Seider and Raymond, there's the potential for some progress. That's in addition to keeping McLellan, under whom the Red Wings did look better than in their first half. That being said, Yzerman acknowledged the New Coach Bump is over now, and that 'it's up to the players and the coaches to show that they can sustain that level, and I expect them to.' 4. The Red Wings went 26-18-4 in 48 games under McLellan, a 96-point pace over a full season. If they could do that in 2025-26, it would put them in playoff range — albeit still not a slam dunk. Advertisement The last two years in the Eastern Conference, that cutoff has been 91 points. In 2023, it was 92. But the year before that, it took 100, and there are certainly teams in the race who are getting better. Montreal added Noah Dobson. The Rangers added Vladislav Gavrikov. Columbus, like Detroit, has plenty of young talent that could spur more improvement. It's a crowded field, and while the Red Wings are in that group, they haven't distinguished themselves from it. 5. There are also fair questions about the sustainability of what Detroit did in the second half under McLellan. The general manager clearly expects that to be the standard, but consider that under McLellan, the Red Wings still ranked 22nd in expected goals share (and 21st in actual goals share) at five-on-five in that span. Their elite power play boosted them, and could very well continue to, but this still was not a five-on-five powerhouse. Again, that speaks to the need for existing players to drive some improvement, as well as the additions like Appleton potentially slotting the lineup into more natural roles. 6. I asked Yzerman about how, if at all, the age of some of his current key pieces shapes his approach. Kane is 36. Larkin is squarely in his prime, and will soon turn 29, and DeBrincat will be 28 in December, with just two years before he can become a free agent. 'Well, Brad Marchand at 37 just signed a six-year contract, so I've got Dylan for another 15 years I figure, so we've got plenty of time,' he began, clearly joking. 'We're trying to build around that same group of guys. They've got a lot of years ahead of them, which isn't comforting at all to anybody, but I'm not concerned with the age of Dylan Larkin, Alex DeBrincat — they're great athletes, they train hard, they take good care of themselves and they're very motivated.' He also added, 'Believe it or not, we are trying to improve our team, we are trying to get in the playoffs.' He alluded to the younger players who grew into big roles last year — Edvinsson, Kasper and Johansson at the top of that list — and certainly it's possible another young name gets added to that list this year. Perhaps, at some point, that's young center Nate Danielson. Advertisement 'We just kind of keep sticking with it, and again, unfortunately the free agent situation this year wasn't conducive to getting a real impact player for us,' Yzerman said. 'But we'll keep that option open.' 7. Speaking of the young players, this week doubled as Red Wings' development camp, although it was a smaller camp than in some past years. It was a smaller camp roster to begin with, and some injuries throughout the week ultimately led Detroit to cancel its planned scrimmage on Thursday due to a lack of bodies. That event is usually the most fertile for observations, so I'm light on those this year — there were very few head-to-head drills to observe, either. So I really only have a couple of takeaways. 8. One was Jesse Kiiskinen, the prospect Detroit acquired in the Andrew Gibson trade last summer. I've liked Kiiskinen's motor and scoring ability going back to his draft year, after seeing him with the Finnish national junior team, but seeing him throughout this week, his shot really popped. That's not a surprise, as he scored six goals in seven games at the World Juniors last year, but it was notable seeing not just how hard it was, but how often it actually found the net. The two aren't always correlated. 9. The other was from Brandsegg-Nygård, who normally, I feel like I notice more in games for obvious reasons: his big traits are his shot and his physicality, and he didn't get a chance to use the latter of those this week. But what I keyed into, while watching him, was how efficient he can be with puck touches. He's not someone who's going to dust the puck off five times before he does something with it, nor does he need to. Again, without competition to draw on, it's hard to make significant conclusions, but I just think he's a savvy player who doesn't need to overcomplicate things to be effective. That's a nice quality to have. We all saw Brandsegg-Nygård come over and translate well into the AHL playoffs, putting up two goals and three points in three games. I think he'll fit really nicely in that league over a full season in 2025-26. Advertisement 10. Red Wings' 2022 second-round pick Dylan James was someone I thought Detroit might have signed by now, after three years in college at North Dakota. James had a career-high 14 goals last season, and the Red Wings really like his skating and penalty killing, thanks to his anticipation. James told me he did have the chance to leave after his junior year, but he felt like the chance to develop more with more ice time as a senior at North Dakota than turning pro. He'd like to play on the power play, with the potential for more offense coming there, and 'didn't want to rush out of there and kind of hinder myself at the next level. I want to make sure that I'm ready before I jump to the next level.' Obviously, by going back, there's the threat that James could become a free agent next August. But it sounds like the Red Wings were OK with his decision to go back for his senior year, and they are still the only team that can sign him next spring. If they are able to sign him, he certainly has some projectable traits in his game to translate into a checking role down the line.

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