导出博客文章The nickname for the new Las Vegas franchise will be announced on Tuesday, so its as good a time as any to look at some of the decisions ahead for other teams as they strategize for Junes expansion draft.
Swell Bottle Sale Canada .Teams can either protect 7-3-1 (seven forwards, three defensemen and one goalie) or eight skaters and a goalie. Teams also must expose a minimum of four players (two forwards, one defenseman, one goalie) who meet the games-played and contractual requirement.I looked at four teams that will likely have to make decisions, both in terms of where things stand today as well as what might have to happen before the expansion draft. Keep in mind that there will be lots of moving parts between today and June. But lets have some fun with this now:Anaheim DucksMany rival executives point to the Ducks as having to make some interesting decisions before the expansion draft. Thats a compliment, in part because it means they have drafted and developed players so well that they just cant keep everyone.Four Ducks have full no-movement clauses who must be protected: Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry, Ryan Kesler and Kevin Bieksa. The contract of the veteran Bieksas could be an issue. I think the Ducks are going to need to do something with him in order to protect all the defensemen they want for the expansion draft.If Anaheim protects eight skaters and a goalie, its protection list would look like this: Getzlaf, Perry, Kesler, Rickard Rakell,?Hampus Lindholm, Sami Vatanen, Cam Fowler, Josh Manson and John Gibson. (Promising young defensemen Shea Theodore and Brandon Montour are exempt from the expansion draft because they are second-year players on entry-level contracts.)First, the 4-4-1 list I picked would mean the Ducks found a way to get Bieksa to waive his no-move for a trade or to be exposed in the expansion draft. The other option would be to buy out Bieksa, who has one more year left on his deal, at $4 million next season. (Some league executives werent sure if buyouts would be allowed before the expansion draft, but a league source confirmed on Monday that they would be. So that could be interesting on several fronts.)Theres also the Fowler factor. The top-four blue-liner will be one year away from unrestricted free agent status. If the Ducks cant sign him to an extension, I wonder if they wont once again listen to trade offers for him after the season. That would either allow Bieksa to be kept on board in Anaheim or for the Ducks to go 7-3-1 on their protection list.Going with the 4-4-1 plan would mean that good forwards?Jakob Silfverberg and Andrew Cogliano are among those left exposed for Vegas.No matter how you spin it, the Ducks have some juggling to do between now and next June.Chicago BlackhawksNo team will likely have more players on the leagues protected list than Chicago. Artem Anisimov, Marian Hossa, Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews, Niklas Hjalmarsson, Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook and Corey Crawford?-- count them, eight! -- all have no-movement clauses.Of course, its pretty likely the Blackhawks would have protected those players anyway, right? The reality is that Chicago is in pretty good shape in terms of the expansion draft. And heres a nice break for the Blackhawks: Scoring winger Artemi Panarin is exempt from the expansion draft as a second-year pro, so Chicago doesnt even have to add him to its list. First-year blue-liners Gustav Forsling and Michal Kempny are also exempt, as are all the Blackhawks rookie forwards.The big question mark will be forward Marcus Kruger, who has two more years on his deal after this season at a $3.08 million cap hit. Kruger is a very good penalty killer, yes, but is he a guy Chicago would really protect? Because remember, they have to come up with at least four players to expose who meet the criteria, and Kruger would perhaps fit the bill as one of their two forwards. As it stands, I think?Trevor van Riemsdyk?will be the defenseman left exposed.Regardless of the Kruger decision, the Blackhawks will need to sign and/or trade for another forward or two who meets the exposure criteria (or extend some of their own expiring unrestricted free agents, such as?Andrew Desjardins and/or Jordin Tootoo). They cant currently fill the exposure requirements.Same goes for goalies. Scott Darling doesnt qualify because he will be a UFA on July 1. So either Chicago signs him expressly for that purpose or goes elsewhere to find that exposable goalie. Lots of teams are in the same boat, in terms of not having four players who meet the criteria that they can exposure in the draft. And since there is plenty of time between now and June, and these arent difficult moves, its really just housekeeping for the Blackhawks.Detroit Red WingsThe Red Wings have only one player with a full no-move, and thats Frans Nielsen?-- so hes automatically on their protection list. As a second-year player, forward Dylan Larkin is exempt from the expansion draft.I see the Wings going with a 7-3-1 protection list because they have so many forwards eligible for the expansion draft, even with Larkin exempt. Forward?Anthony Mantha and Andreas Athanasiou, for example, are eligible for the expansion draft as third-year pros, so the Wings have to either protect them or expose them.Detroit has tough choices up front. Lets assume they protect Nielsen, Henrik Zetterberg, Gustav Nyquist, Justin Abdelkader, Tomas Tatar and Riley Sheahan.?That leaves them with one spot, for either Mantha, Athanasiou, Darren Helm or Luke Glendening. Three of those guys will have to be exposed.On defense, its more obvious, where the Wings will protect?Danny DeKeyser?and Niklas Kronwall and then one of the following:?Mike Green,?Alexei Marchenko, Jonathan Ericsson, Xavier Ouellet or?Ryan Sproul.Now, let me throw this out there: If youre the Red Wings, do you consider exposing aging stars Zetterberg or Kronwall? Zetterberg is 36, with four more years on his deal after this season at a $6.08 million cap hit. Kronwall, 35, has two more years at a $4.75 million cap hit. Would Vegas take them? And regardless of that decision, is it too delicate for the Wings to even consider, given what these two legends have done for the franchise??Either way, I predict the Wings will try to beef up their blueline before March 1 -- because thats been a goal for a while anyway -- and trade away a forward or two in doing so, which obviously will influence their expansion-draft decisions.In goal, the Wings must decide whether to protect?Jimmy Howard or Petr Mrazek. A year ago, that would have seemed like an easy choice, as Howard wasnt on top of his game. But Howard has been terrific this season, which has spiced up that decision. Detroit also has minor-league options, so trading one of its NHL goalies before the expansion draft is another potential route.Montreal CanadiensThe Canadiens have only two players on the NHLs protection list, I believe, in Carey Price and Jeff Petry. So the Habs arent too hamstrung at all by no-move clauses.But Montreal will still have very interesting decisions to make, and Im ready to be a little bold here. Im predicting that the Canadiens will go with a 7-3-1 protection list: pending UFA Alexander Radulov (whom I think theyll re-sign), Max Pacioretty, Andrew Shaw, Brendan Gallagher, Alex Galchenyuk, Paul Byron, Phillip Danault, Shea Weber, Nathan Beaulieu, Petry and Price.OK, theres lots to chew on here. First, these decisions mean they would expose two veterans in center:?Tomas Plekanec (one more year at $6 million) and defenseman Alexei Emelin (one more year at $4.1 million).I know it seems crazy to protect unheralded guys such as Danault and Byron over Plekanec, but I also think that teams are going to have to gamble a bit with this process. Would Vegas want to bring in a 34-year-old center in Plekanec making six bills when hes not really producing much offense anymore?Now, Vegas has a minimum cap floor total to reach, so maybe it would take Plekanec. And if so, that would create $6 million in cap room for Montreal, which the Canadiens can use moving forward, for sure.The debate on defense for me was between Beaulieu and Emelin -- and again, I went with the younger, cheaper guy, although Beaulieu will be a restricted free agent and will need a new contract. And who knows, really, what his future is long-term with Montreal? In the meantime, I think the Cup-contending Habs will try to upgrade their top four on defense before March 1. And if they do, it might be that the player acquired needs protecting for the expansion draft, which would mean exposure for both Emelin and Beaulieu. Again, who knows?It should be noted that youngsters Charles Hudon and Jacob De La Rose are among those who are not exempt for the expansion draft because theyre third-year pros. So the Habs must either protect them or expose them (or use them as trade chips this season).Montreal, by the way, doesnt currently have a goalie to expose in the expansion draft since backup Al Montoya will be a UFA on July 1, and minor-leaguers Charlie Lindgren and?Zachary Fucale?are exempt as second-year pros.So either the Habs will extend Montoya just for that reason or redo the contract of veteran farmhand Yann Danis, who is currently Montreals AHL backup but on a minor-league deal. It would be an option to sign him to an NHL deal and expose him.
Swell Water Bottle Marble . -- The Missouri Tigers might not have a roster full of superstars.
Swell Water Bottle Clearance .ca looks back at the stories and moments that made the year memorable.
http://www.discountswellbottles.com/swell-water-bottle-canada.html . How great will be revealed in the next couple of days at the board of governors meeting in Pebble Beach, Calif. While Week 5 was without major fantasy injuries -- Jeremy Hill (chest), Eddie Lacy (ankle), Steve Smith (ankle), and Cody Kessler (chest/ribs) were the biggest names, and the severity of their injuries wont be known until later this week -- it still had the usual chaos and confusion. Backfield situations in Minnesota and Oakland remain confusing, Odell Beckham, Jr. had just four more receiving yards (56) than Giants teammate Bobby Rainey (52), 43-year-old Adam Vinatieri is kicking 54-yard field goals, and two second-year wideouts established themselves as legitimate fantasy assets.---COATES COMES INTO HIS OWNPittsburgh wide receiver Sammie Coates has 50 yards in each of this seasons five games. He followed up his Week 4 quasi-breakout (eight targets, six receptions, 79 yards) with a Week 5 legitimate breakout (11 targets, six catches, 139 yards, two touchdowns). And yet Coates dropped five passes in Week 5, including a sure-thing touchdown, continuing a trend that has haunted him all year. Coates is available in 33 percent of CBS leagues, 60.1 percent of ESPN leagues, and 64 percent of Yahoo leagues. Hes worth an aggressive bid in all formats, especially considering his spike in production has coincided with LeVeon Bells return, which has likely pulled even more attention off Coates.---CAMERON MEREDITH IS NEW KEVIN WHITEThe Bears were dealt a major blow last week when Kevin White (23 targets in his last two games) was put on injured reserve. However, Cameron Meredith stepped up in his absence, with nine receptions on 12 targets for 130 yards and a touchdown. Assuming Brian Hoyer continues to start at quarterback for the Bears -- hes averaged 339 passing yards in the three games hes started and has six touchdowns against zero interceptions in that span -- not only are there enough passes to go around in this Dowell Loggains offense, but Hoyer seems to be going out of his way to avoid Alshon Jeffery (who hasnt gone over seven targets in a game this season), meaning a bigger piece of the pie for Meredith even when Eddie Royal returns to full health.---MARCUS MARIOTA RUNS WILDTheres going to be a lot of talk this week about proceeding cautiously with Marcus Mariota, as the Titans quarterback has only thrown the ball an average of 33 times over five games this season, and has two games without any passing touchdowns.
Swell Bottle Elements Collection. But the counterargument is Mariotas work in the ground game Sunday, as he gained 60 yards on seven carries in Sundays win over Miami. For a fantasy player, those 60 rushing yards are worth six points, which would have taken 150 passing yards to achieve.Mariota has decent matchups against the Browns and Colts the next two weeks and will continue to benefit from a run game featuring a rejuvenated DeMarco Murray and talented Derrick Henry. Owned in 31.9 percent of ESPN leagues, 47 percent of Yahoo leagues, and 54 percent of CBS leagues, expect a sizable jump in ownership as Mariota enters Week 6.---MISCELLANY- Will Fuller had 211 yards in his first two games, but has been erratic in the last three, with 31, 81, and 4 receiving yards in Weeks 3, 4, and 5, respectively. As a deep play threat, Fuller has caught just half of his targets this season. With DeAndre Hopkins also disappointing (he has just one game with more than 56 receiving yards in 2016), approach your Texans cautiously, especially with Denvers tough defense looming on the schedule in Week 7.- When the waiver wire opens, dont forget about Jeremy Kerley, who has been in the Chip Kelly system for about a month and a half, yet has established himself as the clear No. 1 receiving option on the 49ers, with 22 targets, 190 yards, and two touchdowns in his last two games.- A few players on the rise in terms of snaps: Rishard Matthews (41), Breshad Perriman (36), Dorial Green-Beckham (32), and Cordarrelle Patterson (48). The best speculative plays of this group are Perriman, a talented wideout who lost all of 2015 to injury and could capitalize on a possible Steve Smith absence, and Matthews, whom the Titans pursued in free agency but has been unable to get into any kind of rhythm this season. Patterson is also an intriguing option -- a 2013 first round pick who has 12 total targets and a touchdown in the last two weeks.---BYE WEEKSRemember to replace and bench your Vikings and Buccaneers, who are off in Week 6.---This column was provided to The Associated Press by the Fantasy Sports Network,
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