Showing posts with label Ryan Ellis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ryan Ellis. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Philadelphia Flyers' Chuck Fletcher Speaks As John Tortorella Leads

The Philadelphia Flyers have opened the 2022-23 season with a new outlook. The off-season hiring of head coach John Tortorella was significant, in that it signaled that the organization intends to enforce on-ice accountability. 

Torts, as he has long been known, is not expected to work a miracle on ice with what was an injury-riddled roster. Instead, the veteran coach, whose Tampa Bay Lightning team beat a stacked Flyers team in 2003-04 in a memorable seven-game Eastern Conference Semi-Finals series and then won what remains his first and only Stanley Cup, enters the fray as an all-eyes evaluator. 

This two-time Jack Adams' winner (2003-04, and 2016-17 in Columbus) is an instant fan favorite, a Philly fit, and may be the right guy for this rebuilding team. But he may need the full four years of his contract to lead this franchise to being able to make a deep playoff run toward its ever elusive (1973-74, 1974-75) third Cup.

The following transcript was provided courtesy of the Philadelphia Flyers Media Relations Department:

Philadelphia Flyers President of Hockey Operations & General Manager Chuck Fletcher

Last year we dealt with a lot of adversity on and off the ice. Clearly, we didn’t meet the challenges that we faced, there’s no ducking that. It was an extremely disappointing season, one that we lived with all summer, and certainly one that drove us to make the changes that we did both on and off the ice. 

 

But this year is a clean slate for everybody, John has made that very clear to the players. We know there’s a lot of skeptics, a lot of people that don’t believe we are a good hockey team. I know our players are eager to prove them wrong, we all are.

 

There’s a lot of hard work ahead of us, but we’re excited about camp. In particular, I think this year this is probably the best opportunity since I’ve been here for young players to step up and either earn a bigger role on the National Hockey League team or even to make the team. 

 

We have a big wave of young talent coming into our system this year. Some will play in Lehigh, some will play here, but it’s an exciting opportunity for a lot of young players. Depending on how camp goes, we could have up to 10 players on our roster 25 years old and younger. So clearly, particularly up front, there’s a lot of opportunity for some young players to step up and show what they can do and see if they're a part of the solution going forward. 

 

In terms of injuries, I’ll start off with Sean Couturier. He has not been cleared to play as you all know. This morning he will see a specialist to get a second opinion. Based on that appointment, we will try to come up with a plan of attack, and as we have more information, we will let you know. 

 

Ryan Ellis is out indefinitely. There is no timetable on his return to play. I’ll just say that my assumption is that he will not play this season if he does it will be a bonus. That is how we have prepared this offseason by making the additions we did on the blue line.   

 

Patrick Brown had offseason back surgery, he is continuing to rehab. The timeline is a little murky, I would call it week to week. He is skating but he has not been cleared for contact. 

 

Joel Farabee has been cleared to participate, but non-contact participation. I think we saw him this morning in the skating test, he is making good progress. In terms of when he will be cleared for contact, that will probably depend a little bit on how he feels in the skating portion and the practice portion of camp. I think we’re still looking week to week with Joel. 

 

Bobby Brink is in the building rehabbing, rehabbing is going well, he is nine weeks post-op. Return to play I believe will still be in that December-January timeframe. The next step for him is to progress to on-ice rehab which we hope to have him do in the next week or two. 

 

Ryan Fitzgerald has a lower body injury he suffered while skating in Boston a couple of weeks ago. He is one to two weeks away. 

 

With that, I will take your questions. 

 

How surprised are you with Ryan Ellis? Because last year it seemed like he was improving and there was a decent chance he would play this year… 

There’s been ebbs and flows, I think he made progress earlier in the summer. I would say the last two months there hasn't been any visible signs of progress. It’s been a frustrating injury, nobody is more frustrated than Ryan, nobody wants to play more than Ryan, but we’re dealing with reality now. He’s not skating, so clearly, he is a long way from playing. 

 

So, he’ll go on long term? 

Potentially, that’s certainly an option for us. 

 

When did Joel Farabee return to being able to skate? 

Joel’s been skating with the group for over a month now, he just has not had some contact yet. He had a little inadvertent contact in a couple scrimmages when the players were conducting their own practices, but he feels great. I think we want to be careful here, let the injury heal. 

 

We also want to make sure Joel can do the off-ice training he needs to get stronger so he cannot just survive but play well this season. We’re going to do what’s in the best interest of Joel, but I think it’s very encouraging. You saw he skated as hard as everybody, so the good thing is he’s been handling the puck skating. His timing will be great, so now it’s just a question of getting him back into contact and making sure he’s strong enough. 

 

Regarding Ryan, when things broke up last season, you said a surgical option wasn’t something that was going to be considered. Has that changed, is there going to be a surgical option to fix whatever his issue is? 

I know we have been vague with describing the injury. I think we call it multifaceted, which it is, there's a psoas component, there’s a hip component, there’s an abductor component, so I’m not sure if you go in and repair one part that it’s going to fix everything. I’ve never heard of an injury like this, it’s very complicated. Torn psoas is a very serious injury for a hockey player, a very rare injury, so we’re doing the best we can, but we will leave it up to the medical experts. 

 

Regarding Sean Couturier, can you speak to the details of the location of the injury and whether this is the same injury happening again? 

I know it’s in the same area as the last injury. He has been following the medical guidance of the doctors and our medical staff. Over the course of the summer he was improving, but from time to time he had some nerve irritation in his glutes He was told it was a normal part of the process, continued to train, and at some point, over the last week things deteriorated. It got to the point that he was not sleeping as well and was experiencing some pain. What triggered that I don’t know, there’s a whole host of components that impact your back. We’ll try to get to the bottom of it and we’ll do what’s best for Sean. 

 

He’s going for a second opinion, if it comes back in a negative way is this potentially a season ending issue? Is this something that could threaten his career? 

I think we’re a long way from knowing that. He feels much better than he did last year, he can walk around, he can sit comfortably,  he feels he can even go out and skate right now. To suggest its career ending or season ending is a long way away. We’ll leave it up to the specialists, see what his opinion is, and then we’ll get together and get a plan.        

 

Is Ellis’s injury threatening his career?     

Certainly, that’s a possibility.

 

How is Ellis holding up mentally? 

It is extremely frustrating for him; I think he thought he would be a Predator forever. He got over the initial shock of being traded, he came here, he dove right and was a great teammate, he took Ivan Provorov under his wing - they were inseparable trying to build that chemistry. He was so excited to start the season, when he played, he played well. Nobody wants to play more than Ryan Ellis. I know people in this market haven’t had a great chance to see him, but he is a high-end competitor, a very good player. It has been very difficult on Ryan as a human trying to get healthy and trying to be a part of what we are building here. But we’ll hope for the best, and things can turn quickly as we have seen for the good and for the bad, but we’ll keep working. 

 

Have you entered contract negotiations with Travis Sanheim?  

We have, we’ve had conversations with his agent. Our goal is to resign Travis, he’s a big part of our team. He is probably the one and only player that played to their capabilities last year. I think he continues to improve. We continue to work to find a resolution, but if we don’t, I don’t think it will be a distraction. Everything has been professional and amicable, and we will continue to work away. 

 

What was the back injury Couturier was dealing with and what kind of surgery did he have? 

He did have back surgery, that’s the best I can characterize. 

 

Do you see any moves coming down the middle or do you feel someone within can step-up? 

This is a really important training camp. We brought John in for a reason, not just to guide a change in culture and change standards and crack the whip but John has a proven track record of helping players reach their potential, of helping young players get better. I think we are excited to let John and his staff get to work and to see where some of these young players are, let's see where the health of our players is, and from there we can make decisions. It's a critical camp for a lot of players and again there is an unprecedented opportunity for some young players to take on bigger roles now that Giroux isn't here. Not every player is going to make our club, but all these kids are important parts of our future.


Do you think someone can change to center because… (inaudible)?

Scott Laughton can play center; he can play wing. Lycksell played some center before in his past, but I think we’re going to start him on the wing here that’s the position he’s played most at. We do have some depth at center still and again we’ll see what the situation is with respect to Couturier and Brown and see how some of these players do and we’ll make decisions from there.

 

Have you been able to determine whether Hart is a subject of the Hockey Canada investigation and is there a concern regarding that on your part? 

This is a really serious matter; I think we all understand that. The NHL is conducting an investigation. They've been pretty adamant that at this point we should refrain from making comments - we should direct all questions to them. The question is a serious matter but at this point I’ll refrain from speaking until the NHL releases their investigation. 

 

Have you been told how long the investigation is going? 

I haven’t. 

 

Is Hart cooperating with the investigation? 

From what I’ve been told every player has cooperated. 

 

(Inaudible) Can you talk about that change and also is Harry back with the team or not, and if not why?

We feel that in order to be successful on the ice we have to have the right support crew off the ice, and we spent the bulk of summer really analyzing our staff but also conducting exhaustive job searches for people to come in whether is John Tortorella and his coaching staff or Ian McEwen and the athlete performance and wellness staff. We’re very excited with where we landed with not only John but Ian, and Ian’s only been on the ground a couple weeks. He’s been focused on rounding out the staff and we announced the hiring of Tommy Alva to be our head athletic trainer, Jeff Taylor to come into a newly created PT type of position, a rehab position, we’re looking into soft tissue experts to come in and work with our players so Ian’s been hard at work with Barry Hanrahan trying to build out the staff. It’s really important that we look at different ways of taking care of our players. It’s not enough just to help out players when they’re hurt, I think the whole emphasis here is in trying to build out a program where we can prevent injuries from happening by using data, best practices, and having experts in the field. It’s going to be a process, it’s going to take some time, but we brought some good people in, and we’re excited with where we’re going to take the program.

 

Is Harry back or not?

Harry’s not back, no. We’ve made some changes to our equipment staff. 

 

 Who is the new equipment manager? 

John Peters. 

 

Are you comfortable with the prospect of having competition between Felix and Troy? Is that something you’ll evaluate at the end of camp? Might it come to a point where you bring in a goalie from the outside? 

Yeah you know it’s a great question, Bill. We have spoke about this a lot the last two or three summers when we’ve been looking at backup goaltenders and who would have come in to work with Carter and you know it seems to be the same names every summer. The same types of goalies that are free agents. We just really feel that we need to start developing more talent internally. The goal going in was to have Ivan Fedotov, with Felix Sandstrom, and a goalie like Troy Grosenick and hopefully Samuel Ersson depending on he came back from injury last season. Let them compete. Let’s what we have. Let’s give them opportunities for these young goalies, to not only provide depth in the NHL, but hopefully take a step and reach their potential instead of bringing in sort of career backup goaltenders. I’m not sure if that is the proper term but obviously a little bit of a curveball with Fedetov. But Sandstrom, I thought played very well down the stretch. He played well here. Grosenick has had a long career with remarkably consistent numbers in the American Hockey League. Actually he has phenomenal numbers in the NHL and has never really been given that opportunity. So we feel these guys can compete. Samuel Ersson I thought would need maybe a half a season or maybe a season in the American League and maybe that’ll prove to be true. But he is coming off a successful rookie camp. Small sample size, I get it. But the fact that he’s healthy and was able to compete at that level at rookie camp, I think bodes well for the future. So look we will have to see, but at some point we will have to give some young players a chance to grab a job if they can earn it. And believe me, with Torts they have to earn it. But if you don’t give them a chance, you never know.

 

Regarding Fedetov, do you have any more clarity on that situation?

No. Just he has to fulfill a commitment back in Russia. It’s obviously a sensitive situation but there is a commitment he has to fill and really there’s not much influence we can have in this situation.

 

What is your expectation after he fulfills his year in Russia?

Look it’s a sensitive situation. I think I will just leave it at that he will have to fulfill his commitment in Russia. Obviously he has a contract with us and we’ll just let things play out.

 

Chuck, you mentioned about the possibility of up to 10 players 25 or younger making this team. With the issues with Couturier obviously it’s still unclear how long he’s going to be out but does that change the possibility of Couturier missing a set of time, missing the season, does that change the organizational approach to the season and pivot a little more towards playing young players and using this more as a future focused year?

Well part of our, I think I mentioned to you guys at the draft and free agency, part of our main focus this year is to provide opportunity for young players to get better. And we’ve added a lot of young talent over the last couple of years. And I think it’s really important to find out what we have. Last year, as I mentioned, a lot of adversity. Again, we didn’t handle the challenges well but it was also a difficult year to fairly evaluate some younger players. Particularly at the end when we traded some players and we had some players out. You’re throwing rosters together every night and on of John Tortorella’s strengths, and I don’t think he gets nearly enough credit for this, he’s got a proven track record of making players better. Pushing players to be better. Developing young players and that’s a critical part of what we want to do. We want to find out what we have. Even take a player like Travis Konecny. He is a 50 point guys or a 70 point guy. Let’s push him here a little bit let’s see what we have. Ivan Provorov, Sanheim I think took a step last year, but Ivan Provorov is a good hockey player. Let’s give him a chance to get better. Never mind the Yorks and the Attards and the Zamulas on the blue line. Some of these are young players and there’s going to be ups and down but we have to demand more out of some of these players. They’re not just our future anymore. Some of these kids are our present. So, it’s always been a critical part of what we wanted to do. If Sean is out for an extended period of time that clearly makes things a little more difficult because he’s arguably our best player. Our number one centerman. But with that there’s opportunity for other players to step up. There’s opportunity for Morgan Frost to step forward. There’s opportunity for Scott Laughton play at center. There’s opportunity maybe for a Tanner Laczynski to take a step. He’s 25 years old. We need to find out about Tanner Laczynski. He’s not a kid anymore but yet he’s missed a lot of time. Looks great so far from the little bit I’ve seen. But to me, that’s the main storyline of this camp. Let’s see what we have. Let’s see how good these kids are.

 

In regard to some of these younger players, obviously camp performance is the first barometer, but if things are close do waiver considerations factor in at all?

They do because you want to make sure you have enough depth. So that will be something that we sit with the coaching staff about. John has been pretty adamant that he doesn’t care what the name on the back of your jersey is. You’ll hear more from him today but whoever earns it will earn it but there’s obviously some practical considerations of time that we will have to look into. But there’s also health issues. How healthy are we? Sometimes you think you have decisions to make and they are made for you by virtue of things you can’t control. But look we’re, I guess I’ll just say in closing, we understand there’s a lot of questions about our team. We understand there are skeptics. But we are excited. We are excited to go out and prove people wrong. The energy around this building is the best I’ve seen. There is a little bit of fear. But just a lot of genuine excitement from the players about getting back out there. Let’s get some stability here. Let’s function as a team. Let’s rebuild some things we need to rebuild. So we are excited. 

Thursday, March 3, 2022

Philadelphia Flyers Look To the Future

General Manager Chuck Fletcher and his staff continue assessing his team's roster along with those of various other potential trade partners.

Claude Giroux, Derick Brassard, Justin Braun, Keith Yandle, Martin Jones, and potentially, Rasmus Ristolainen, if he does not agree to a new deal before the National Hockey League's trade deadline on March 21, could be moved due to their contract status. 

A cited need for high-end talent, increased team speed, and more assertive, if not aggressive play in all zones means that the roster adjustments that began last off-season will continue. That, along with the development of current and obtained prospects, will be geared toward putting the team back in playoff position by next season. 

It is a tall order. But there are enough pieces on the Philadelphia Flyers' roster, which include players (Sean Couturier, Kevin Hayes, and Ryan Ellis) who have missed significant time this season due to injury, to make a drive toward postseason access next season plausible if other efforts payoff between now and then. 

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Philadelphia Flyers - Injuries and Lack Of Offense Concerning


The recent reinjuries to Ryan Ellis and Kevin Hayes undercut team depth significantly.

Derick Brassard's injury in the Tampa Bay Lightning road game is also troubling, as he is one of the team's top scorers.

So, Morgan Frost is teased as the next man up.

While replacements have played decently, the roster needs its full contingent, or as close to it as possible, to realistically remain in the playoff chase.

Monday, November 15, 2021

Philadelphia Flyers - Loss of Ryan Ellis Is Problematic

 

Ryan Ellis' lower-body injury appeared to have healed. But an apparent reinjury (speculated as being in the hip or groin area) is believed to have happened in the road game against the Dallas Stars. So, his status is week-to-week for now.


Hopefully, this is not becoming a chronic issue, as Ellis was the key off-season defensive addition. His absence from the Philadelphia Flyers d-core is noticeable, as the reworked regular-strength pairings do not flow nearly as smoothly. Ellis' absence from special teams also weakens those units.


Philadelphia has a good .615 winning percentage through its first 13 games (7-4-2). It is clear that far more consistent goal-tending, as compared to last season, has allowed the squad to stay in most games.


Ellis' consistent presence is needed for this team to win consistently. Otherwise, a young defenseman, who is not on the current NHL roster, would need to make a dramatic impact, or an impact veteran replacement would need to be acquired at some point, with Cap issues affecting trade considerations.

Friday, July 30, 2021

Inside Access: The Philadelphia Flyers' Summer of Change

A promising summer for the Flyers where trades and free agency is concerned. Chuck Fletcher has changed the roster and dynamics of the team. Both were necessary. 

The following transcript is courtesy of the Philadelphia Flyers media department.

Philadelphia Flyers President of Hockey Ops. & General Manager Chuck Fletcher

 

You signed Jones for two million. That’s the same amount Dallas signed Holtby for. What did you like about Jones over Holtby?

It was a really fast-moving market. There's a lot of teams looking for goaltenders. You look at as many situations as you can and find as many situations where the player has the same interest in you that you have in him. You make quick decisions. Martin Jones is a guy that has played really well in this league for a long time. The last couple seasons in San Jose haven't gone as well as he hoped, or the team had hoped. He has over 60 games of playoff experience. Again won 30 games in this league multiple times. He's only 31 years of age and perhaps as importantly as all of those points, he's very familiar with Kim Dillabaugh. He and Kim have a strong relationship. I think they both feel strongly that they can do the things they need to do to get Martin’s game going the way everybody would like to see it go.

 

Do you feel like you are done for the summer for the Flyers? Are there any other moves that you would like to make?

I'm not sure at this point. We're just going to take a deep breath. We’re going to engage a little bit more assertively in negotiations with Travis Sanheim’s camp and with Carter Hart’s camp. They're obviously two very important parts of our team. We'd like to lock those guys up, and then we'll see. I think it's important that there's some opportunity for young players to come in and compete for spots. The cap is always an ever-present challenge. We have a little bit of flexibility now to sign the players we need to sign and have a little bit of room left over. Maybe an opportunity presents itself that we can then pounce on.

 

What is the reason that you think Jones can turn it around this season? Is it mainly the relationship that he has with Dillabaugh?

I know he has a strong relationship with Kim. I think Kim knows his game and feels that he can work with him and help him get them back to where he was. This is a guy that's used to playing 60 games a year, so he's coming into a tandem situation now. I think there'll be opportunities here to get practice time and to work on things. Sometimes a chance to reset and recharge in a new environment is a good thing, too.

 

What went into the decision to bring Nate Thompson back this season?

Just some of the things we've felt we needed to address. He brings size and grit to our team. He is a good penalty killer. He's good on face-offs. He can play left wing or center and just provides us with more experience, more leadership, and more depth up front. It seems like every year if you don't add this type of player now, then you have to add it at the deadline. We just thought we'd get ahead of it and bring him in. We had a good experience with them before. We are excited to bring him back and Nate is excited to come back.

 

Adding guys like Yandle and Thompson and even Jones to an extent, these are players who’ve served in leadership roles in the past. Is this part of almost a culture change with your locker room?

The culture changes. I'm sure that that's part of it. Anytime you can add good quality people, good, experienced players who have been leaders on other teams, it's only going to enhance your leadership group. I think we needed a little bit more experience last year. I think we were a little young in certain areas and it really impacted our performance on the ice. First and foremost, I think these guys are players that can help us win games. They're good hockey players. We also do have a number of young players that are still developing their game and growing into bigger roles. When you surround them with good, experienced quality people, it will help in their development as well. I think just helps organization in general, not just the culture, but the talent, the development of our young players, the work ethic. These guys check a lot of boxes in a lot of areas.

 

Can you dive into Keith Yandle and how he fits into the D-corps?

I think he's perfectly complements our existing D corps. A left shot was something we felt we needed. Somebody to help with the powerplay. Keith is very good at moving the puck up the ice. He's got a lot of experience. Look, neither one of our special teams were great last year. We think we've added some things to help the PK. I think Keith in particular is somebody that can help quarterback the power play and bring another option for our coaches for the power play. I think we have several defensemen that can play on the power play. Keith has a pretty good skill set.

 

With you look at a goaltender struggling, and this applies to Carter last season too, when Jones had a bit of a downturn in San Jose, they had other quality goalies there too that seemed to struggle as well. How do you break down what is the team, what is the goalie and what is a combination between the two?

Well, it's a hard thing to do, but we saw it here last year too. Our goaltending numbers weren't very good. Our team defense wasn't very good. Really, it started up the ice. It was a full team effort, as I've mentioned several times. We didn't manage the puck well. We lost the third guy, lost our third forward all the time. We gave up too many odd-man rushes. We didn't defend well in-zone. We didn't kill well, and we didn't get enough saves. It was a combination. When you don't play well in front of your goaltenders, it makes life very hard on them. You can lose confidence. You start compensating and cheating in different ways. It’s hard to know. I can only speak to our situation. I can't speak to what happened in San Jose. I do know that if we defend better in front of our goaltenders, they in turn will play well and allow our players to be more confident too.

 

Does Keith Yandle’s presence almost augment Cam York’s development, allowing him to have a few more games in the AHL and not rush him?

Again, I think Cam’s play will dictate when he arrives in the NHL. What this move does is just give us more depth. You need a lot of defenseman to get through a season and this goes to our goaltending tandem, too. I think two seasons ago, we played 69 games, last year 56, and are going back to 82. It's a compressed schedule. It's a difficult schedule. We have a five game in seven nights stretch. We have 16 or 17 back-to-backs. All kinds of three-in-fours. We’re crossing the continent again. We're going to need a lot of bodies, and it's going to be an adjustment for the players going back to 82 games and with this type of compressed schedule. I think what we're trying to do as much as anything is add as many quality players as we can, knowing that you're going to need a lot more than 22 or 23 players to survive the season.

 

With Rasmus Ristolainen and Martin Jones, you guys are kind of betting that those guys are going to perform better in a different environment. Why are you so confident that this is the environment they’ll perform better because you guys kind of were the environment where guys didn't perform as well as they have in the past?

Two years ago, we were in a really good environment where players seem to improve and were better. We defended well. We believe in the players we have in our room and believe in our coaches. In particular with Martin Jones, again, I think the relationship with Kim Dillabaugh is crucial. I think coming into a situation where you have Carter Hart here as well. We have two quality goalies that can help each other, that can push each other. We have a very good tandem. We believe in our group. Time will tell, but we think these are quality bets to make.

 

How do you explain so many moves happening and making trades in the flat salary caps?

Yeah, we are seeing more and more trades where teams are attaching assets to players to move the money or taken back dead cap space. You need somebody that's pretty sharp with numbers and understanding the cap to make all this work. There seems like there's been a lot of activity today. I haven't fully wrapped my arms around everything because we've been pretty busy. There's no question there's a lot of teams that think they have a chance to win and a lot of teams are making bold moves to try to get better. That speaks to the parity of the league, and to everyone's belief that if you can add a piece or two, you can be right there. There's always optimism this time of the year. That's what makes it so much fun. It's a tough league.

 

In your mind, do you have an idea how you want these goaltenders to split the time?

I don't. That'll be up to Kim and Alain to get together and figure out what makes sense. Obviously, how the player’s performance and health will come into that. I don't know if it's possible to play 60 games, for a goaltender to play 60 games this year. I'm not sure if it's 16 or 17 back-to-backs. Our schedule changed a little bit at the end. It's five games in seven nights and three time zones I think we have at one stretch. Obviously one guy is playing three and one guys playing two there. It's just the nature of it. I'm sure when we get to the ‘22-23 season without an Olympic break, the schedule may have a few more breaks in it, maybe spread out a little bit better. This year is going to be a tough schedule. It'll be the first time in three years that we played 82 games.

 

With Kevin Hayes knowing Keith Jones so well and Justin Braun knowing Martin Jones, did you reach out to those players to get more information about those guys?

Obviously with Kevin Hayes and Keith Yandle, teams have been really trying to recruit him since he was bought out from Florida. There was a lot of interest in Keith. Certainly, Kevin was an important part of selling the virtues of coming to the Philadelphia Flyers. We're very pleased that Keith chose to come here over many other competitive offers and teams. The Martin Jones situation is a little bit different. He was only bought out yesterday. Again, there's a lot of teams looking for goalies, so it's one of those situations where you rely on your scouts. We obviously have very good information on Martin from Dean Lombardi and Kim Dillabaugh. We relied on that.

 

It is being reported that you signed Adam Clendening to a two-way. Can you confirm that? Are you expecting other potential veteran signings for the Phantoms, but also NHL depth?

Yeah, Brent's been busy. I think we've signed five or six today. I was hoping the release would come out. Yes, we have. We’ve signed Adam Clendening. I did sign this contract. We've agreed to terms with a few other players. Adam’s a guy with 90 games of NHL experience, can move the puck. He has some skill. He’s obviously a star at the American Hockey League level, but he can certainly play games in the NHL. With the skill set and the right shot, we thought that would be a real valuable type of guy to add to our organization.

----End of transcript.

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