Eben Etzebeth, the Springboks lock serving a 12-week ban for eye-gouging Alex Mann of Wales, has claimed it was “never intentional”, contradicting the verdict of an independent disciplinary committee announced last week.
In an Instagram post on Wednesday the Sharks second row accepted guilt and apologised, saying “unfortunately mistakes happen”. The 34-year-old double Rugby World Cup winner also appeared to distance himself from the act by drawing attention to “other factors”. Along with three videos accompanying the post, Etzebeth claimed two Welsh players involved in the fracas, along with Mann, changed “the dynamic of the entire picture”.
A first-round pick by the St. Louis Blues in the 2014 NHL Draft (No. 21 overall), the 29-year-old signed a one-year, two-way contract on Wednesday morning amid the Blues' ever-growing list of injured forwards.
The contract pays $775,000 NHL, $300,000 AHL.
Fabbri was with the Pittsburgh Penguins during training camp on a PTO but was released.
In a corresponding move, the team put Jordan Kyrou (lower-body injury), who is listed as week to week, on injured reserve.
The Blues currently have Kyrou, Jimmy Snuggerud (wrist), Alexey Toropchenko (leg burns), Nathan Walker and Nick Bjugstad (upper body) left Tuesday's 5-2 loss to the Boston Bruins in the second period.
And Springfield has been skirted as a result due to call-ups of Aleksanteri Kaskimaki, Matt Luff and Hugh McGing.
In Fabbri, who played his first three-plus seasons with the Blues before being traded to the Detroit Red Wings on Nov. 6, 2019 for Jacob de la Rose, last played in the NHL last season with the Anaheim Ducks and had 16 points (eight goals, eight assists) in 44 games.
He has 216 points (101 goals, 115 assists) in 442 NHL regular-season games, including 73 points (32 goals, 41 assists) in 164 games with the Blues. Fabbri also spent nearly five seasons with the Red Wings before joining the Ducks last season.
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Back in September, the Pittsburgh Penguins signed forward Robby Fabbri to a professional tryout (PTO). Fabbri participated in their training camp and preseason, but the Penguins released him from his PTO without offering him a contract.
Earlier this month, Fabbri then landed a PTO with the Florida Panthers' AHL affiliate, the Charlotte Checkers. Now, after posting one goal and one assist with Charlotte, Fabbri has landed an NHL contract, but not with Florida.
The St. Louis Blues have announced that they have signed Fabbri to a one-year, two-way contract for the remainder of the 2025-26 season. With this, Fabbri is back with the organization he kicked off his NHL career with.
Fabbri will now be looking to have a bounce-back season with the Blues after a tough 2024-25 campaign with the Anaheim Ducks. In 44 games with the Ducks this past season, he recorded eight goals, eight assists, and 16 points. This was after he had 18 goals and 32 points in 68 games for the Detroit Red Wings in 2023-24.
In 442 career NHL games split between the Blues, Red Wings, and Ducks, Fabbri has posted 106 goals, 110 assists, and 216 points.
The Buffalo Sabres are currently at the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings. Due to this, it would not be surprising in the slightest if they made changes to their roster if they do not improve quickly.
One Sabres defenseman who could be worth keeping an eye on as a potential trade candidate this season is blueliner Mattias Samuelsson.
Samuelsson has been in the rumor mill before, and with the Sabres having so many left-shot defensemen, he could be worth parting ways if it helps improve their roster elsewhere. There would likely be interest in Samuelsson, as he is a big defenseman who has shown that he can play top-four minutes.
Samuelsson could be a solid trade chip for the Sabres to use to land an impactful forward or even a top-four, right-shot defenseman. This is especially so when noting that the 6-foot-4 defenseman has had a strong year, as he has recorded five goals, 12 points, 38 hits, 59 blocks, and a plus-6 rating in 28 games.
The one thing that may complicate a potential Samuelsson trade is his contract, however. This is because he would be far more than a rental for any potential suitors, as he has a $4,285,714 cap hit until the end of the 2029-30 season.
Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani, right, with his former interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
After 18 months of shopping the script, the proposed Lionsgate Television series based on the gambling scandal involving Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter is in development at Starz.
The project will spotlight the audacious theft by Ippei Mizuhara of $16 million from Ohtani to pay off staggering gambling debts. Mizuhara was fired by the Dodgers after the crimes came to light in March 2024. A year later, he was convicted of defrauding Ohtani in federal court and sentenced to 57 months in prison.
The series will be produced by Tony Award winner Scott Delman, known for “The Book of Mormon” and “A Raisin in the Sun,” and sports journalist Albert Chen. Alex Convery, who wrote "Air," is on board as showrunner and screenwriter while Justin Lin (the “Fast and Furious” franchise) will direct, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
“This is Major League Baseball’s biggest sports gambling scandal since Pete Rose — and at its center is its biggest star, one that MLB has hitched its wagon on,” Chen said in a statement to The Times. “We’ll get to the heart of the story — a story of trust, betrayal and the trappings of wealth and fame.”
Lionsgate was having trouble selling the project to companies with media rights agreements with Major League Baseball — Disney, Warner Bros., Discovery, Apple, Netflix and Comcast — because the companies didn't want to jeopardize their relationships with the league, according to the Hollywood Reporter. Lionsgate is the former parent company of Starz, but the two formally separated in May.
The story unquestionably is compelling. Mizuhara befriended Ohtani in Japan when the player who would become the most accomplished hitting and pitching combination in baseball history was an 18-year-old rookie with the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters.
Ohtani came to the United States in 2018 at age 23, signing with the Angels. Mizuhara soon became his most trusted friend and interpreter, serving as an intermediary between Ohtani and nearly everyone who spoke English, including the media, his agent and Angels officials.
Mizuhara arranged wire transfers from Ohtani’s bank account without the player's knowledge or permission and impersonated him during more than two dozen phone calls with bank employees, all to feed a gambling habit that accumulated $40 million in losses across thousands of bets.
Mizuhara allegedly collected $142 million in winnings but lost about $183 million.
Ohtani signed a 10-year, $700-million contract with the Dodgers in December 2023 and the scandal came to light three months later. Ohtani was absolved of wrongdoing and described as a victim by federal authorities.
“Ippei has been stealing money from my account and has told lies,” Ohtani said through his new interpreter, Will Ireton, shortly after Mizuhara was arrested. “I never agreed to pay off the debt or make payments to the bookmaker.
“I’m just beyond shocked. It’s really hard to verbalize how I am feeling at this point.”
Ohtani quickly put the episode behind him, leading the Dodgers to World Series championships in 2024 and 2025. He was named National League Most Valuable Player both years.
"But honestly, I'm home. My daughter had tryouts yesterday. My nephew had a basketball game. My son has a game coming up on the 12th. I have never seen my son play a game in person. Not a middle school game, not a high school game. So I'm excited about seeing him play...
"I'm actually at peace with everything. More than anything, I'm excited about being around and getting a chance to play a small role in whatever anything looks like next."
What comes next is five days from now, Dec. 15, when Paul becomes eligible to be traded, and the Clippers are working with Paul and his agent to find him a new home. While there are teams looking for point guard depth, finding a new home for CP3 may not be that easy because league sources told NBC Sports that teams interested in him are just willing to wait the Clippers out, wait for them to waive him, and then sign Paul as a free agent.
However it comes to pass, Chris Paul will finish his career on an NBA roster somewhere, and he seems more open to those final months being farther away from his family in Southern California than he might have previously preferred.
Also on the Paul front, his coach with the Clippers, Tyronn Lue, denied the reports that he and CP3 were not on speaking terms in the run-up to Paul being sent away from the team. Here is what Lue said, via Law Murray of The Athletic.
"We were talking," Lue said when asked if he was on speaking terms with Paul throughout November. "How you gonna play if I'm not talking to him? There was a stretch where we said he wasn't gonna play, he was gonna be out of the rotation, that was tough for him, because he's a competitor and what the game means to him and what he brings every single day. But after that, it wasn't really much."
On the final day of the Winter Meetings, the Rule 5 Draft wrapped up in Orlando.
As expected, the Phillies lost Griff McGarry — who they chose not to add to the 40-man roster on Nov. 18 — to the Nationals. Washington took the 26-year-old right-hander with the third pick in the Major League phase.
McGarry, a fifth-round pick out of the University of Virginia in 2021, is coming off one of his best pro seasons. He posted a 3.44 ERA across 21 starts, primarily at Double-A, and struck out 124 batters in 83 2/3 innings. According to MLB.com, his 13.3 strikeouts per nine innings ranked fourth in the Minors.
The Phillies were also active. With the 12th pick in the Major League phase, they selected another 26-year-old righty, Adam McCambley.
The New Jersey native spent five seasons in the Marlins’ system, bouncing between the rotation and bullpen. In his first two years as a starter, the 2020 third-rounder logged a 4.99 ERA over 39 starts. Since shifting primarily to relief, he’s posted a 3.23 ERA over 94 appearances across the past three seasons.
Like McGarry, McCambley is coming off a career year. He recorded a 2.90 ERA between Double-A and Triple-A in 2025, racking up 83 strikeouts over 62 innings. After walking 18 batters in 22 2/3 frames in 2024, he cut his walk rate by more than half to 3.2 walks per nine this past season.
His fastball sits 92–94 mph, and he generates heavy spin and movement on his slider, curveball and cutter, each eclipsing 3,000 rpm.
McCambley is now on the Phillies’ 40-man roster, as the 34th member.
In the Minor League phase, the Phillies added a pair of prospects. With the 24th selection, they took outfielder Austin Murr from the Tigers’ system. With the 42nd pick, they grabbed right-hander Evan Gates from the Giants.
Murr is coming off a strong year. In 72 games at High-A West Michigan, the 26-year-old slashed .280/.386/.451 with 26 extra-base hits and 43 RBIs. Power hasn’t been his calling card, but the former sixth-round pick has shown consistent plate discipline over five pro seasons, carrying a 192-to-275 walk-to-strikeout ratio.
Austin Murr – Credit: Jeff Lange (USA TODAY NETWORK)
Gates, 27, has worked exclusively out of the bullpen for San Francisco. Over 260 2/3 innings in five seasons, he owns a 3.52 ERA with 307 strikeouts and 113 walks.
The lone Phillie lost in the Minor League phase was catcher Carson Taylor, who went to Seattle. The Phillies originally selected Taylor two winters ago in the Rule 5 Draft from the Dodgers. He hit 16 homers in his first season with the organization in 2024 before a right labrum tear ended his 2025 campaign.
One notable name who will be staying put is 6-foot-4 outfielder Felix Reyes. The 24-year-old returns after winning the Eastern League batting title, hitting .335 in 95 games for Double-A Reading.
The Bell
Center is one of the noisiest buildings in the NHL. Opponents love to play
there because it gets absolutely electric. So far this season, however, it
seems the Montreal Canadiens do not like to play there. When you compare the
team’s record on the road and at home, you realize that Martin St-Louis’ men
are much better when they are the visiting side.
The Habs
are 7-8-1 at home, while they are 8-3-2 on the road. In other words, they’ve
won 62% of their games when playing away from the Bell Centre and just 44% of
their tilts in Montreal. Worst still, on the road they’ve allowed 40 goals and
scored 42, giving them a plus-2 differential, but at home they have allowed 63
goals (the most in the league) and scored only 49, for a minus-14 differential.
Those
numbers are troubling. Playing at home is meant to give you an advantage, not
just because of how electric the building is, but also because you control the
matchups with the last change. Is St-Louis struggling to find the right
matchups? Or are the players struggling with the man-to-man defensive system?
It seems to be a bit of both, but if it’s the defensive system, how can they apply
it on the road but not at home?
There is no
better proof of the team’s inability to play the system than Nikita Kutcherov’s
goal in Tuesday evening’s game. Ivan Demidov, Joe Veleno, Jared Davidson, and
Mike Matheson are all standing in a perfect line in front of Jakub Dobes. At
the same time, Maxwell Crozier feeds the puck to the Lightning sniper, who is
all alone on the wing, as if Tampa was on the man-advantage, but they weren’t. He
unleashed a cannon of a shot and, of course, found the back of the net.
St-Louis
said last night that what worries him the most is his team’s tendency to give
up goals early in periods, and he’s right to be concerned about that, but the
man-to-man defensive system should also be right up there on his list of
concerns.
The Boston Red Sox entered the offseason in need of at least one middle-of-the-order bat. Nothing they’ve done so far this winter suggests they’re serious about addressing that void.
The real gut punch came Wednesday. Not only did the Red Sox miss out on slugging first baseman Pete Alonso, but they will also have to see him in the American League East for the foreseeable future. The biggest bat on the market joined the Orioles on a five-year, $155 million deal, and the Red Sox’ offer reportedly wasn’t in the same stratosphere.
Boston whiffed on Alonso two days after chief baseball officer Craig Breslow made this remark at the MLB Winter Meetings:
“I think that the true middle-of-the-order bat that can hit the ball out of the park, has probably an outsized impact on the rest of the lineup because of the way you have to attack someone — the on-base implications it can have,” he said. “And so, again, we’re going to consider all ways of improving the team, but finding someone in the middle of the order and who hits the ball out of the park is a really good place to start.”
Alonso was widely considered the perfect fit for Boston. The five-time All-Star has been one of the premier power hitters in baseball for the last seven years. His right-handed pop would have paired perfectly with Fenway Park, especially in a Red Sox lineup loaded with left-handed bats.
So, now what?
Turning to the trade market
With Schwarber and Alonso off the board, Boston must get creative to add legitimate power to the lineup. Re-signing Alex Bregman alone won’t cut it, and with an underwhelming free-agent class, Breslow and Co. will likely have to explore the trade market to add anyone worth getting excited about.
One intriguing possibility is Arizona Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte. The three-time All-Star has recently been linked to the Red Sox in trade rumors, though it will take a significant haul to land him. Arizona is reportedly looking for young, big-league-ready starting pitching in return. Marte signed a six-year, $116.5 million extension with the D’backs last April.
Another name that moves the needle? Corey Seager. Boston has had talks with the Texas Rangers about a potential deal for the five-time All-Star shortstop, according to The Boston Globe. Acquiring Seager seems less likely than Marte, given that the two-time World Series MVP is owed $31 million in each of the next six seasons. Plus, Seager has almost exclusively played shortstop throughout his 11-year career, so either Trevor Story would have to move to second base, or Seager would have to adjust to second or third.
Houston Astros infielder Isaac Paredes and St. Louis Cardinals utility man Brendan Donovan are also on the Red Sox’ reported list of trade targets. While both would be solid additions, neither would be enough to say Boston made the necessary upgrades to its lackluster offense.
Free-agent alternatives
There’s still a chance for Breslow to add power via free agency. Shortstop Bo Bichette and third baseman/DH Eugenio Suarez are the two most appealing options, though both come with caveats.
Bichette is largely considered an alternative to Bregman; otherwise, he’d have to move to second base. Suarez will turn 35 in July and is a defensive liability at third base, though he could move to first or serve as the Red Sox’ designated hitter.
In conclusion
Boston can still salvage what already feels like a disappointing offseason. The most likely path involves parting ways with promising young pitchers, such as left-handers Connelly Early or Payton Tolle, when all principal owner John Henry really had to do was open his wallet.
Boston’s unwillingness to offer competitive deals for Schwarber or Alonso proves that returning to the postseason wasn’t enough to convince Red Sox brass to act like a big-market organization. That’s a discouraging sign for the team’s 2026 chances, and it should infuriate fans who bought back in on the club during the 2025 campaign.
With Kyle Schwarber coming off the board on Tuesday when he signed a five-year deal to stay with the Philadelphia Phillies, the industry expectation became that the position player market would start to move.
Former Houston Astro and Chicago Cub Kyle Tucker is the biggest name still the open market, and both New York teams have reportedly checked in on the outfielder.
Tucker, 28, was an All-Star for the Cubs in 2025 (his fourth straight All-Star selection), posting a 143 OPS+ with 22 home runs, 73 RBI, and 25 stolen bases. He has a career OPS of .865 and would provide an elite, left-handed bat to whichever teams he signs with.
From a Mets perspective, Tucker would have provided some needed thump in the lineup, but they’d likely need to do some outfield shuffling, as Tucker has almost exclusively been a right fielder in his career (639 games in right, 72 games in left). The Mets would likely move Juan Soto to left field if they were to sign Tucker.
The Yankees have a similar situation in the outfield. Trent Grisham is likely locked in to center field, meaning Aaron Judge would stick in right. Tucker would likely need to play left field for the Bombers, as moving Judge to left doesn’t seem to be on the table.
Yankees GM Brian Cashman has said that the team would "love" to bring back outfielder Cody Bellinger, who has proven he can perform in the Bronx and is a more natural fit in left field (plus has the versatility to play first base). But Tucker would certainly be an enticing option as well.
Watson was selected sixth overall by the A’s on Wednesday in the MLB Rule 5 Draft from the San Francisco Giants.
Riemer, 23, was selected by the Red Sox in the fourth round of the 2023 draft. He played in 76 games with Boston’s High-A affiliate and six for the Double-A Portland Sea Dogs.
He plays multiple positions, but profiles long-term as a second baseman according to Cotillo.
The A’s acquired three other right-handed pitchers in the Rule 5 draft: Abel Mercedes, Darlin Pinales and Jorge Marcheco.
The A’s, however, lost two catchers to the draft: 2022 first-round pick Daniel Susac and Abrahan Gutierrez.
General manager David Forst thinks highly of Susac, but with catchers Shea Langeliers and Austin Wynns with firmly cemented roles on the major league team, the A’s left their former first-round pick unprotected for the Rule 5 draft.
“The catch-and-throw skills have gotten a lot better,” Forst said. “He may be challenged offensively. Vegas has a way of helping some guys’ numbers, but that’s the case with anybody in this situation. The bat will determine probably if he’s able to stick or not.
“He has a chance to be in a good situation and they can get him good matchups and that’s when it does work out for guys, is when they have a specific role and fill it.”
Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Dakota Mermis is going on injured reserve, retroactive to Dec. 8, the day he took a knee from Tampa Bay Lightning forward Gage Goncalves.
The Maple Leafs have placed D Dakota Mermis (lower body) on injured reserve retroactive to December 8.
D Henry Thrun has been recalled from the Toronto Marlies (AHL).
A scrum ensued at center ice, with Dakota Joshua fighting Max Crozier and Bobby McMann high-sticking Oliver Bjorkstrand, which resulted in a one-game suspension. While this was going on, Mermis was getting assistance to the Maple Leafs' dressing room.
Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube said that Mermis could be out a month at least.
In a corresponding move, the Maple Leafs have recalled Henry Thrun from the Toronto Marlies. Thrun has three goals and nine points through 19 AHL games this season.
Berube said after practice that there's a good chance that Thrun, who was on the third pairing with Simon Benoit, could make his Maple Leafs debut vs. his former club on Thursday night.
On Monday in Seattle, Kraken defenseman hit Mats Zuccarello up high. Zuccarello was pulled from the game and did not return. He is now out.
Dunn received a fighting minor on the play after Danila Yurov came in to the defense of Zuccarello. The rest of the game, Wild players tried to get Dunn to drop the gloves but he didn't give in.
On Tuesday the NHL said nothing about the hit and Dunn did not receive and discipline from it other than the roughing minor on Yurov.
The only difference was Pitlick was ejected from that game for the hit. Dunn didn't even get a penalty for the hit on Zuccarello who is likely going to be out for some time. The Wild still don't know yet how long.
We should get an update from Wild head coach John Hynes after morning skate on Thursday about Zuccarello's status. But it is safe to say he probably won't play against the Dallas Stars on Thursday.
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There was universal shock on Tuesday after news broke that Edwin Diaz was leaving the Mets to sign a three-year deal with the Dodgers.
And that shock was not only felt by blindsided Mets fans, but by those in the industry who didn't see this coming and spent all afternoon trying to make sense of it in print and on video.
It was one thing that the Mets had lost Diaz, which was always a possibility, even though it felt remote. That they lost him on a three-year deal was bewildering. That they lost him on a three-year deal to the team they'll have to go through if they want to win a World Series was almost impossible to believe.
But here we are.
As far as what happened at the end of the process between the Mets and Diaz, that doesn't really matter. What matters is that they lost a negotiation for a player they wanted and needed, and also happened to be beloved by the fans.
With there being no indication that Diaz did not want to be a Met -- as alluring as the Dodgers are -- him leaving was truly puzzling.
The Mets needed to get it done, and didn't.
The loss of Diaz understandably dismayed and disoriented a fan base that was already reeling from the slow collapse that was the 2025 season -- one that resulted in an apology from owner Steve Cohen and candid self-reflection from president of baseball operations David Stearns.
With the backdrop of Diaz leaving amid a so-far-underwhelming offseason, I thought back to this quote that Stearns gave on Sept. 29 in his end-of-season news conference:
"I think on a number of levels there are areas where we can probably be a little more proactive," he said. "And I can be a little more proactive. I think some of these lessons we're still investigating and still fully understanding various aspects of our team. But there are clearly times in the season, times over the offseason, where I can be a little bit more proactive."
David Stearns and Steve Cohen / Imagn Images / SNY treated art
You can say the Mets were proactive earlier this offseason while signing Devin Williams to give themselves cover in the event Diaz left. Aside from that? Not so much.
They are reportedly not inclined to offer what it takes to land any of the top free agent pitchers on the market.
As far as trades -- and this could very well change in the coming days -- they have yet to display the willingness to deal what it takes to land a difference-maker.
When it comes to Diaz, you can throw fan sentiment out the window regarding how the Mets were calculating this. That's because doing what it took to bring him back should've been an obvious baseball move. His return thrilling the fans would've been a bonus.
With Diaz gone, the attention now turns to Alonso.
And it can be argued that Alonso is an even more obvious baseball decision than Diaz should've been.
That's because, in the case of Diaz, the Mets protected themselves by signing Williams. And they can further bolster the bullpen by signing a late-inning arm like Robert Suarez or Pete Fairbanks, or trading for someone like Trevor Megill.
If Alonso leaves, where are the Mets turning for the power needed to protect Juan Soto?
New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso (20) rounds the bases after hitting a home run at Citi Field / Brad Penner - Imagn Images
It won't be Kyle Schwarber, whom the Mets were seriously interested in before he re-signed with the Phillies on Tuesday on a five-year deal.
You can talk about free agent outfielder Cody Bellinger as something of a replacement for Alonso in the lineup, but you won't be taken seriously if you do. That's because he doesn't come close to providing the power that Alonso does. And his offensive production has varied wildly from year to year.
As the Mets weigh how to proceed with Alonso, it's worth noting that In addition to Diaz, the club has also moved on from Brandon Nimmo this offseason. Trading Nimmo was reasonable, given his regression offensively and defensively, and the fact that there were five years remaining on his contract.
Losing Diaz was not understandable, and using the same tactic with Alonso that they used with Diaz is something the Mets can't afford to do.
That's not to say that they should hand Alonso a blank check.
If some team offers him six or seven years, it will be well within New York's right to walk away. But if this comes down to moving off their reported uncomfortability with extending to a fourth year, they should budge. And going to five years for Alonso -- if that's what the market bears -- would not be a crazy thing to do if needed.
You cannot let fan sentiment dictate what you do, but it has to be a factor. And if keeping a player is smart baseball-wise, the Mets should go the extra mile when those players want to stay and are loved by the fans. They should also make an effort to show those players how wanted they are, perhaps at times letting that break through the cold business of negotiations.
The Vancouver Canucks have dominated
the NHL rumor mill in recent days.
Most of the speculation is focused on
the future of Canucks captain Quinn Hughes. The 26-year-old superstar
defenseman has a year left on his contract, leading pundits to ponder
what might happen if he doesn't sign an extension next summer.
Over the weekend, Sportsnet's Elliotte
Friedman raised a stir when he said the Devils had contacted the
Canucks about Hughes. However, he stressed there was nothing imminent
and wasn't sure how far those discussions went.
On Monday, TSN's Darren Dreger reported
the Canucks received calls from rival clubs after they recently
circulated a memo indicating their willingness to entertain trade
offers for their pending UFAs. He said that some
teams, such as the Devils, also inquired about the Canucks' non-UFA
players like Hughes but indicated that things didn't get much
further than that.
Dreger's colleague, Chris Johnston,
said the Canucks didn't want to trade Hughes, but he thinks the
club's struggles this season could make it difficult for the former
Norris Trophy winner to stay. Johnston felt there was still time for
the Canucks to save their season, but that meant trying to boost
their roster instead of selling.
Pierre LeBrun suggested the Canucks
could face deciding whether to peddle Hughes at the March 6 trade
deadline, retain him for the summer and try to re-sign him or trade
him during the draft in June. He felt it would be cleaner to move
Hughes in March, as it wouldn't involve the defenseman's camp getting
involved in determining his destinations.
Meanwhile, Friedman said on Monday the Red Wings also spoke to the Canucks about Hughes. He didn't get
into specifics, but felt that a deal could be had if both sides
wanted it.
Another Canuck featuring prominently in
the rumor mill is Kiefer Sherwood. The feisty 30-year-old winger is
UFA-eligible in July and carries a very affordable $1.5-million cap
hit.
Michael Russo and Joe Smith of The
Athletic reported Monday that the Wild had "significant interest" in Sherwood, offering up a good young prospect. However, the Canucks
reportedly raised their asking price to a good roster player and a
first-round pick.
The Canucks reportedly remain
interested in Wild center Marco Rossi. However, Russo and Smith don't
see them parting with Rossi for Sherwood.
Friedman also mentioned Sherwood during
his Monday podcast, claiming the Canucks asked the Flyers about right winger Owen Tippett. However, the Flyers aren't interested in parting
with the 26-year-old, as they still believe he can take his
game to another level.
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