Hockey

N/A

Tag Type
Slug
hockey
Short Name
Hockey
Visible in Content Tool
On
Visible in Programming Tool
On
Auto create Channel for this Tag
Off

Penguins' Evgeni Malkin Placed on IR After Lower-Body Injury vs. Kraken

Jan 27, 2025
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JANUARY 25: Evgeni Malkin #71 of the Pittsburgh Penguins looks on against the Seattle Kraken during the first period at Climate Pledge Arena on January 25, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JANUARY 25: Evgeni Malkin #71 of the Pittsburgh Penguins looks on against the Seattle Kraken during the first period at Climate Pledge Arena on January 25, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

The Pittsburgh Penguins announced Monday they placed star forward Evgeni Malkin on injured reserve with a lower-body injury.

The Athletic's Rob Rossi reported Malkin is expected to miss a few weeks.

"If that early word holds up—and to be clear, with all knee injuries, things can change after the swelling goes down and doctors get clearer images—Malkin would probably not play again until after the Penguins return from the break for the upcoming 4 Nations tournament next month," Rossi said. "They have six games before that break begins."

In this his 19th NHL season, the 38-year-old veteran has registered nine goals and 25 assists in 47 appearances.

Ever since going No. 2 overall to the Pens in the 2004 NHL draft, Malkin has been among the best and most dynamic players in the league.

Malkin has three seasons with 40 or more goals and three seasons with 100 or more points to his credit, and few active NHL players are more decorated than he is in terms of awards and accolades.

The Russian center is a seven-time All-Star, plus he won the 2007 Calder Trophy as NHL Rookie of the Year, the Art Ross Trophy as the NHL's leading scorer in both 2009 and 2012, and the Hart Memorial Trophy as NHL MVP in 2012.

Malkin also helped lead the Penguins to three Stanley Cup victories in 2009, 2016 and 2017, and he was named playoff MVP in 2009 as the winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy.

Prior to the 2020-21 season, Malkin had produced at a point-per-game or better clip in nine consecutive seasons. That included 74 points in just 55 games in 2019-20.

Injuries limited Malkin to just 33 games in 2020-21 and 41 games in 2021-22, but he was productive when healthy, recording 42 points in those 41 contests.

Malkin bounced back to appear in all 82 games in both the 2022-23 and 2023-24 campaigns, finishing with 83 points and 67 points, respectively.

Despite his past durability issues and the fact that he is no longer an elite point producer, Malkin is still of the utmost importance to the Penguins' success, as evidenced by his more than 1,300 career points, and he will be missed now that he's back on the shelf.

Avalanche GM: 'Tough Business Decision' to Trade Mikko Rantanen in NHL Blockbuster

Jan 25, 2025
DENVER, COLORADO - JANUARY 20: Mikko Rantanen #96 of the Colorado Avalanche plays the Minnesota Wild in the third period at Ball Arena on January 20, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
DENVER, COLORADO - JANUARY 20: Mikko Rantanen #96 of the Colorado Avalanche plays the Minnesota Wild in the third period at Ball Arena on January 20, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

Colorado Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland said it was a "tough business decision" to trade star winger Mikko Rantanen to the Carolina Hurricanes in the final year of his contract.

"It's a bittersweet day," MacFarland told reporters Saturday (h/t DNVR Avalanche.) "Mikko is a decorated player for us. He's an elite winger in this league. So, it was a tough few days, but we just felt the timing was right, and when the last few days it kind of came together— we decided to act yesterday, but it wasn't without a lot of serious thought, I can assure you of that."

MacFarland continued: "It was just a tough business decision here for us, and we just felt the pieces we got, it made sense to strike now."

The Avalanche acquired former Hurricanes forwards Jack Drury and Martin Nečas, along with a 2025 second-rounder and 2026 fourth-rounder, in a three-team trade on Friday that also involved the Chicago Blackhawks.

Rantanen, who had played parts of 10 seasons with the Avalanche, was a key part of the team's run to the 2022 Stanley Cup as a formidable offensive duo with Nathan MacKinnon.

He is coming off of back-to-back 40-goal, 100-point seasons, and at the time of the trade ranked sixth in the NHL with 64 points in 49 games.

But Rantanen is also playing in the final year of the six-year, $9.25 million AAV contract he signed with the Avs ahead of the 2019-20 season.

According to ESPN's Greg Wyshynski, Rantanen was seeking an extension "in the neighborhood" of the eight-year, $14 million AAV deal Leon Draisaitl inked with the Edmonton Oilers last September.

Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman wrote after the trade that Draisaitl's deal "altered the negotiations" between the Avs and Rantanen.

According to Friedman, the Avalanche "just weren't willing to go in that area" in part because of their commitments to MacKinnon and Cale Makar. MacKinnon is signed through the 2030-31 season at a $12.6 million AAV. Cale Makar is locked in at $9 million per year for two more seasons, but will need a raise by 2027-28.

Rantanen is represented by the same agent as Draisaitl. Falling short of his camp's expectations could have meant the Avs risked losing him for nothing in free agency this summer.

Instead, the Avs will take on Hall's expiring deal alongside a pair of two-year contracts with Nečas ($6.5 million AAV) and Drury ($1.725 million AAV) in exchange for parting with Rantanen.

"Mikko earned the right to be an unrestricted free agent, and he's five months away from that," MacFarland told reporters. "You've got to make these hard decisions, the player has to make them, and the club has to make them. And that's what we did."

"And getting two cost-controlled assets was important. We felt we got a top-six guy, and a good bottom-six guy, and away we go."

The Hurricanes, on the other hand, are apparently hoping to convince Rantanen to sign his next deal in Carolina.

Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky described the team's extension talks with Rantanen on Saturday as "more of a recruiting pitch than a negotiation," according to ESPN's Greg Wyshynski.

"If he gets to free agency, I'm sure there will be teams that will pay him a lot of money, and so our job in the next weeks and months is to make it so he wants to be here," Tulsky said, per Wyshynski. "He has the right as a free agent to decide where to sign and it may not come down to the money for him.

"It may come down to where he wants to be. So our goal is to make him want to be here and then offer enough money that he doesn't have to think twice about it."

Meanwhile, MacFarland indicated the Avalanche may not be done making trades ahead of the March 7 trade deadline.

"There's a little more bullets in the draft pick cupboards, and some cap space... we'll continue to look, and if something makes sense, then we'll certainly strike," MacFarland said.

The Avs saved just over $1 million in cap space with the trade, PuckPedia reports. The team has about $5.6 million remaining in LTIR space, although that number will decrease when Avalanche winger Miles Wood returns from the back injury that has sidelined him since November, per PuckPedia.