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NHL notebook: Sabres draft Swedish D Dahlin with top pick

ByReuters

Published 23/06/2018 at 01:11 GMT

The Buffalo Sabres selected Swedish defenseman Rasmus Dahlin with the No.

Eurosport

Image credit: Eurosport

1
overall pick of the NHL draft on Friday night at American Airlines Center in
Dallas.
Dahlin, 18, is the reigning Swedish Junior Hockey Player of the Year after
playing last season for Frolunda of the Swedish Hockey League. He helped his
country earn a silver medal at this year's World Junior Championship, where he
was named Best Defenseman in the tournament.
The 6-foot-2, 181-pound blue-liner became the second Swedish-born player to be
selected with the first overall pick. The first was Mats Sundin, who was taken
by the Quebec Nordiques with the first pick in 1989 and went on to enjoy a
Hall of Fame career.
Dahlin has drawn comparisons to Erik Karlsson, a five-time All-Star and
two-time Norris Trophy winner with the Ottawa Senators. Like Dahlin, Karlsson
played for Frolunda in Sweden before reaching the NHL as a 19-year-old.
--After three seasons with the Sabres, Robin Lehner will not be brought back
for a fourth as general manager Jason Botterill announced that the team will
not extend Lehner a one-year qualifying offer, making the eight-year veteran a
free agent July 1.
"It's a scenario where you finish 31st you have to make some difficult
choices," Botterill told reporters in Dallas, hours before the NHL draft
began.
Lehner, who turns 27 next month, was 14-26-9 last season, capping a
three-season run in which he went 42-61-22 with just six shutout wins. He
posted a 2.77 goals-against average and .916 save percentage in that time. The
GAA and save percentage are better than the figures he posted in his first
five seasons in the league, spent with Ottawa.
--In a move to create salary-cap room to retain key free agents, the
Washington Capitals traded defenseman Brooks Orpik and backup goaltender
Philipp Grubauer to the Colorado Avalanche for a second-round pick (No. 47
overall) in the draft.
The loss of Orpik, who turns 38 before the start of next season, opens up $5.5
million in cap space for next season based on the final annual salary in his
current contract. Dealing away Grubauer, 26, potentially frees up as much $20
million overall in possible earnings before he hits restricted free agency.
Room in the budget is needed to help avoid losing defensemen John Carlson and
Michal Kempny to unrestricted free agency, which begins on July 1. Restricted
free agents Devante Smith-Pelly and Tom Wilson are up for big raises after big
contributions to a title-winning season.
--The NHL is being sued by two former players, Daniel Carcillo and Nick
Boynton, who allege the league withheld information about the long-term health
dangers from concussion-related injuries.
The lawsuit was filed by attorneys Thomas A. Demetrio and William T. Gibbs in
U.S. District Court in Minnesota and claims the NHL did not adequately warn
and inform players about brain damage risks caused by contact to the head.
Carcillo and Boynton charge the league with allowing and encouraging players
to rush back to action while recovering from concussions.
Both Carcillo, nicknamed "Car Bomb" for his violent style of play for five
teams over nine seasons, and Boynton, who played for six teams in 11 seasons,
suffer from long-term, degenerative brain damage.
--The San Jose Sharks have placed defenseman Paul Martin on unconditional
waivers with the intention of buying out his contract.
Martin, 37, joined the Sharks as a free agent in 2015 and has one year
remaining on his contract at $4.25 million. He was limited to 14 games last
regular season because of both injury and his play.
Originally drafted in the second round by the New Jersey Devils in 2000,
Martin has 50 goals and 270 assists in 870 career games.
--Field Level Media
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