
The Blackhawks have assigned defenseman Isaak Phillips to AHL Rockford, per Mario Tirabassi of CHGO Sports. His roster spot is expected to go to Alec Martinez, who’s almost ready to come off injured reserve after missing the last 12 games with a groin injury, relays Charlie Roumeliotis of WGN Radio 720.
Phillips, 23, has had a bit of a roller-coaster season. Chicago placed the defender on waivers the day before opening night rosters were due but didn’t assign him to the minors after clearing. He stuck around for a few days, serving as a healthy scratch for their season opener against Utah before being demoted to Rockford to begin the season. He was recalled again for a brief stretch in mid-October without playing before heading back down to Rockford.
The Blackhawks then summoned Phillips for a second time on Oct. 29, which yielded his first three NHL appearances of the season earlier this month. The 2020 fifth-round pick scored a goal, just his second in the NHL, and averaged 11:54 per game while recording four blocks, three hits and two giveaways. Phillips struggled to make a positive possession impact at even strength, posting a career-worst 35.4 CF% and 31.8 xGF%.
Phillips, an Ontario native, played a career-high 33 games last season, recording six assists and a -26 rating. The stay-at-home defender has been solid overall in Rockford over the past four seasons since turning pro during the COVID-19 pandemic, including a 10-goal, 25-point campaign in 64 games in the 2021-22 season. Last year also saw him log four goals and 10 assists in 29 appearances for the AHL club with a +7 rating. This year, he’s yet to record a point in two appearances for Rockford.
Phillips will be an arbitration-eligible restricted free agent at the end of the season. He was an RFA for the first time this past summer, eventually coming to terms with Chicago on a two-way deal ($775K/$350K) in late July. He’d been a healthy scratch in two straight before today’s demotion.
Meanwhile, Martinez will practice in full on Wednesday before traveling with the team on their road trip, head coach Luke Richardson told Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times. The Blackhawks don’t play again until Thursday in Seattle, so Martinez still has a few days to complete his recovery before returning to game action.
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The New York Rangers have stumbled out of the gate under new head coach Mike Sullivan, opening the season 5-5-2 and struggling to find consistency on offense. The slow start has renewed speculation around the futures of several veterans, including star winger Artemi Panarin. According to The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun, the Rangers have not begun formal negotiations on a contract extension for Panarin, who is in the final season of his seven-year, $81.5 million deal and eligible for unrestricted free agency next July. LeBrun reported that while the Rangers have “a ton of respect and appreciation” for what Panarin has done, the front office plans to wait before engaging in serious talks. “For the moment, my sense of the situation is that it’s very early in the season,” LeBrun wrote. “The Rangers want to see how things go and therefore are not in a hurry to get going more seriously on talks to extend the pending UFA winger.” According to LeBrun, the term of Panarin's next contract is expected to be a key factor in talks for an extension, as Panarin is unlikely to consider a short-term deal, while the Rangers would prefer a shorter commitment because of his age. "If and when those talks get going again in a meaningful way, term may be the issue. Panarin turned 34 on Thursday,” LeBrun wrote. “I don’t think he’ll be open to a short-term deal, which would probably be the Rangers’ preference." Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman has also discussed Panarin’s situation of late, noting that his performance this season will likely determine his chances of staying in New York. “If he’s gonna stay in New York, at what he wants, he’s gonna have to have the kind of year that makes them say we got to do this,” Friedman said. Through 12 games, Panarin has scored two goals and assisted on five more for seven total points, and it looks like his production and the Rangers’ results could shape whether the two sides explore an extension or part ways before free agency.
LeBron James may be out due to sciatica, but Charles Barkley is not buying it. He thinks he knows what is really going on with the Los Angeles Lakers star. Barkley was goofing around during “Inside the NBA” on ESPN Wednesday and talked about the Lakers, who had several players out for their game at the Minnesota Timberwolves. James was listed as out due to sciatica, which is a nerve issue. Barkley thinks the sciatica injury is a cover for something else. “First of all, LeBron doesn’t have a sciatica. They just put ‘old.’ O-L-D, with an extra ‘D,’ too,” Barkley joked. An update on James’ condition came out this week, saying that the Lakers forward could return in a few weeks. The Lakers have seemed to suggest that there is no urgency to rush James into action. However, Luka Doncic also getting hurt recently may have changed things for the team. For now, the Lakers are 3-2 and have been relying on Austin Reaves to do plenty of scoring. He is averaging 34.2 points per game this season. James is 40 years old and entering his 23rd NBA season. He’s allowed to have “old” or sciatica as an injury issue. As Barkley knows and often says, Father Time is undefeated.
George Pickens is having an outstanding first season with the Dallas Cowboys, and the career-best pace has come at a time when he is preparing for potential free agency. Is it possible the star wide receiver could sign an extension before he gets to that point? Pickens says that is up to his boss. Pickens, who was drafted in the second round by the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2022, is in the final season of his rookie contract. He was asked on Thursday if he would consider signing a new deal with the Cowboys before he becomes a free agent after the season. He had a noteworthy response. "That’s kinda up to what (Jerry Jones) wants to do. All I can do is perform at my best," Pickens said. George Pickens has earned No. 1 wideout money Pickens has 685 receiving yards through the first eight weeks of the season, which ranks third in the NFL. His six touchdown catches are already the most of his four-year career. CeeDee Lamb missed several games this season with an ankle injury, and Pickens showed during that time that he is more than capable of being the featured wideout in a quality offense. That should go a long way toward setting his market, whether he re-signs with the Cowboys or becomes a free agent. With Lamb making an average of $34M per year, the Cowboys probably cannot afford to keep Pickens. For now, the 24-year-old is at least giving off the impression that he is open to the possibility. He also suggested recently that money is not the most important thing to him with his next contract, which could keep Dallas in the running.
A report earlier this week noted that Cincinnati Bengals starting quarterback Joe Flacco might miss Sunday's home game against the Chicago Bears (4-3). He suffered an AC joint sprain in his throwing shoulder during Cincinnati's Week 8 loss to the New York Jets. Flacco later practiced in full on Thursday, and he sounded confident about his availability while speaking with reporters on Friday. How is Joe Flacco feeling ahead of Bengals-Bears clash? "I've never really talked about injuries before, so I don't know what to say, but yeah, I feel good," Flacco explained, per Russ Heltman of Sports Illustrated. The Bengals are expected to be without Week 1 QB1 Joe Burrow until at least "mid-December" after he had surgery to repair the toe injury he suffered in Week 2. Temporary fill-in Jake Browning played poorly across three starts, all of which he lost, and the Bengals subsequently acquired Flacco from the Cleveland Browns on Oct. 7. Flacco likely would've led Cincinnati to consecutive wins if he and his offense hadn't been let down by the Bengals' defense during the Oct. 26 game against the Jets. On Friday, he indicated that the idea of skipping the Bears game to recover during Cincinnati's Week 10 bye never crossed his mind. "I didn't really give it much thought," Flacco said. "You're the quarterback, you know, and then you take it from there. So I think my initial instinct is always whatever we can do to get there and then adjust." Joe Flacco felt "obligation" to try to keep Bengals in playoff hunt Whispers suggest the Bengals might part ways with veteran pass-rusher Trey Hendrickson before the Nov. 4 trade deadline if they drop to 3-6 this weekend and get "exorbitant draft-pick compensation" in exchange for him. Understandably, Flacco had other things on his mind. "There's always a sense of obligation to go out there and be there for your team," Flacco added. "I missed my second son's birth (Sept. 2013) because I thought it was important for the quarterback to be out there. I didn't know I was going to miss it, like, it just so happened that he came on that day, but I do feel a sense of obligation being out there for the guys that you play with." Shortly after Flacco wrapped up his remarks, ESPN BET had the 3-5 Bengals as 2.5-point home underdogs against the Bears.
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