Goalie Ben Bishop to be available in Seattle expansion draft

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FILE - Dallas Stars goaltender Ben Bishop is shown during an NHL hockey game against the Vancouver Canucks in Dallas, in this Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2019, file photo. Stars goaltender Ben Bishop has waived his no-movement clause to be exposed in the Seattle expansion draft next week after approaching his team with the idea. The move, which the team confirmed Thursday, July 15, 2021, allows Dallas to protect veteran goalie Anton Khudobin from the Kraken. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez, File)

Dallas Stars goaltender Ben Bishop has waived his no-movement clause to be exposed in the Seattle expansion draft next week after approaching his team with the idea.

The move, which the team confirmed Thursday, allows Dallas to protect veteran goalie Anton Khudobin from the Kraken. Jake Oettinger, the 22-year old who is considered the Stars' goalie of the future, is exempt from the expansion draft because he is still on his entry-level contract.

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Any player with a no-movement clause must be protected from the expansion draft unless he waives it. Buffalo's Jeff Skinner is among the players who have agreed to waive that clause and be exposed to Seattle, while Minnesota bought out Ryan Suter and Zach Parise and Florida bought out Keith Yandle — all players with no-movement protection in their contracts.

Each team's protected list — seven skaters, three defensemen and a goalie or eight skaters at any position plus a goalie — is due Saturday. The NHL is expected to release them to the Kraken, other teams and the public sometime this weekend.

Bishop, 34, will not be on Dallas' list and gives Seattle general manager Ron Francis something to think about when considering his options in net. Vancouver's Braden Holtby, who won the Vezina Trophy as the league's best goalie in 2016 and backstopped Washington to the Stanley Cup in 2018, is also expected to be among those available.

Taking Holtby from the soon-to-be-rival Canucks could give the Kraken a recognizable face of the franchise like Vegas had with three-time Cup-winning goalie Marc-Andre Fleury. Bishop, an American from Denver with a impressive resume, also fits that bill.

Bishop is signed for two more seasons at an annual salary cap hit of $4.9 million. He missed last season recovering from right knee surgery.

For the previous three seasons, Bishop was Dallas' No. 1 goaltender and one of the best in hockey. His 2.33 goals-against average ranks second and his .923 save percentage third among NHL goaltenders during that stretch.

Bishop helped Tampa Bay reach the 2015 Cup Final before going down with an injury, and his health could scare off Francis. But he has also only played three games since March 2020 and could be fresh in the fall after another brief NHL offseason.

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Follow AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SWhyno

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