
There were three pretty significant injuries in the NHL over the past week, as
Francois Beauchemin (Ducks),
Andrew Ference (Bruins) and
Andy McDonald (Blues) all suffered major leg injuries that will keep them out of their respective lineups for extended periods of time.
A quick look at each injury, and the impact they will have on each team.
First, for the Ducks, Beauchemin suffered a torn ACL in Anaheim's 4-3 loss to Nashville on Thursday night, and is expected to miss the next six months. The 28-year old defenseman has been a steady 25-minute per game player for the Ducks since being acquired in a trade with Columbus during the 2005-06 campaign.
Aside from being second on the team in ice-time, Beauchemin was also one of the team's best shot blockers and penalty killers. His injury, combined with the early season trade of
Mathieu Schneider to Atlanta (for salary cap purposes) has left the Ducks once vaunted defensive unit rather depleted. Let's face it, no disrespect to
Kent Huskins and
Bret Hedican intended, but it's not exactly the unit that hoisted the Stanley Cup two years ago.
If you're looking for a positive for the Ducks, Beauchemin's injury and ensuing placement on the long-term injury list has cleared enough space under the league's salary cap for the team to bring up top prospect
Bobby Ryan. Ryan, a former No. 2 overall pick, had registered 19 points in 14 games for the Iowa Chops of the American Hockey League.