NHL Thread Because There Isn't An NHL Thread

The New York Islanders agreed to terms with goaltender Cory Schneider on a one-year deal Monday, according to The Athletic's Craig Custance.

The New Jersey Devils recently bought out the final two years of Schneider's contract. The 34-year-old split time during the 2019-20 season between the Devils and the AHL. He finished with a .887 save percentage and a 3.53 goals-against average in 13 NHL games.

The Islanders already have goaltenders Semyon Varlamov and rookie Ilya Sorokin under contract for 2020-21. The 24-year-old Sorokin signed with the Islanders in April and agreed to join the team for the upcoming season after spending the last eight seasons in the KHL.


Schneider has appeared in 409 career games split between the Vancouver Canucks and the Devils. He's earned a 170-159-58 record with a .918 save percentage and a 2.43 goals-against average.
 
Marc-Andre Fleury isn't going anywhere.

Vegas Golden Knights general manager Kelly McCrimmon said the team won't be trading the veteran netminder, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman. The club will roll with the tandem of Fleury and Robin Lehner next season.

Fleury started to show signs of decline at age 35 last year. He sported a 2.77 goals-against average and a .905 save percentage (his worst in a decade) in 49 games during the 2019-20 campaign.


He's signed for two more seasons with an annual cap hit of $7 million, which would be difficult to move in the flat cap world. Furthermore, most goaltender-needy teams already addressed their issues between the pipes during free agency.

Vegas traded for Lehner at the deadline and he became their primary goaltender in the playoffs, starting 16 games compared to Fleury's four. Lehner, 29, then signed a five-year, $25-million contract prior to free agency, which created rumors that Fleury could potentially be on his way out.

McCrimmon also added Lehner will undergo a cleanup surgery on his shoulder this week, but the goaltender will be ready for training camp.
 
The San Jose Sharks have signed veteran forward Patrick Marleau to a one-year contract, the team announced Tuesday.

Marleau's deal is worth $700,000, according to Sportsnet's Chris Johnston.

The 41-year-old will skate in his 23rd NHL season and is the oldest player currently under contract, with Joe Thornton and Zdeno Chara remaining free agents.


San Jose dealt Marleau to the Pittsburgh Penguins at the trade deadline last February. He tallied 11 goals and 11 assists across 65 games between the two clubs in 2019-20.

The Sharks also signed free-agent forward Matt Nieto to a one-year deal on Tuesday. San Jose drafted the 27-year-old in 2011 and he spent parts of his first four NHL seasons with the squad.
 
The Toronto Maple Leafs and future Hall of Famer Joe Thornton have "some mutual interest" in reaching an agreement, according to The Athletic's James Mirtle.

Discussions between the two sides are in the infancy stages, Mirtle notes.

At least some of the Leafs' star players have reportedly tried to sell Thornton on the team's upside following the offseason additions of TJ Brodie, Zach Bogosian, Wayne Simmonds, and Jimmy Vesey.


Thornton, 41, is coming off his worst statistical output since he was 18 years old, as he tallied 31 points in 70 games with the San Jose Sharks. Though Thornton had hoped for a move from the Sharks to a contender at the trade deadline, nothing materialized.

The Leafs reportedly tried to persuade Thornton to come to Toronto in the 2017 offseason when the club signed Patrick Marleau, but Jumbo Joe re-signed in San Jose.

The addition of Thornton would give the Leafs some added depth down the middle of the ice and potentially allow Alexander Kerfoot to play on the wing in the top six instead of centering the third line.

Thornton, who sits 14th on the NHL's all-time points list, would undoubtedly provide some quality veteran leadership, too.

The Leafs are tight against the cap, but they could likely afford Thornton without moving anyone off their roster if he's willing to take $1 million or less.

The St. Thomas, Ontario, native is still without a Stanley Cup in his decorated career. Toronto has not won a playoff series since 2004, however.
 
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