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Kyle Turris, Paul Byron put on waivers
Montreal Canadiens right wing Paul Byron Jean-Yves Ahern-USA TODAY Sports

The Ottawa Senators placed Clark Bishop on waivers in order to be able to place him on the taxi squad once again. He’s not the only one on the wire. The Edmonton Oilers placed veteran forward Kyle Turris and the Montreal Canadiens placed Paul Byron on waivers. The New York Islanders also signed Kenneth Appleby to an NHL contract, meaning he has to clear waivers to remain in the AHL.

For Bishop and the Senators, this is a simple move to regain the roster flexibility they have had for most of the season. After clearing waivers before the season began, Bishop was able to move freely between the active roster and taxi squad depending on need, saving the Senators some cash on off days. His exempt status expired earlier this month, meaning he needed to clear again to be assigned to the taxi squad. With just three points in 12 games, Bishop is likely to clear again.

Byron too should be used to this by now, given he has cleared waivers twice this season and is part of a near-daily rotation through the taxi squad. The 31-year-old forward was once an important part of the Montreal attack but is limited to mostly fourth-line duties these days. Given his contract carries a $3.4M cap hit through the end of the 2022-23 season, he will clear again.

Turris hasn’t cleared this season, but it won’t be a surprise if he does. The 31-year-old forward is a shadow of the player who once scored 64 points for the Senators and is overpaid even at $1.65M this season. Turris signed a two-year deal with the Oilers in the offseason that the team is probably already regretting after he registered just five points in his first 25 games this season. Moving his deal to the taxi squad could bury $1.075M of it, giving the Oilers some added flexibility.

Appleby, the biggest unknown of the bunch, is a 25-year-old minor league goaltender who would need an NHL deal in order to serve as the taxi squad netminder. In two appearances with Bridgeport this season he has an .896 save percentage, and there is no suggestion that he’ll ever see time in the Islanders net.

This article first appeared on Pro Hockey Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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