Newsday’s Arthur Staple anticipates the New York Islanders protecting Ryan Pulock in the upcoming expansion draft.

On Tuesday, Arthur Staple of Newsday conducted an Islanders mailbag, where he addressed fans’ questions about a multitude of topics.

Some asked about the assistant coaches; others about far-fetched signings. But perhaps the most consequential question, and answer, pertained to Ryan Pulock’s future with the team — specifically, the upcoming expansion draft.

In Staple’s view, the Isles will either trade him — assuming that the price is right — or protect him. It seems very unlikely that he’ll be exposed, the beat writer states.

So how will the Isles do this? As you’ll likely recall from previous columns, Johnny Boychuk has a no-movement clause that will require the team to protect him. Nick Leddy has too high of a ceiling to leave him unprotected. And despite a down season, Travis Hamonic is simply too valuable not to retain.

The likely route is protecting eight skaters (comprised of both F’s and D’s) instead of seven F’s and three D’s. While this approach would likely cost the Isles a forward, it would likely spare a defenseman.

Utilizing the 4-4-1 approach, Staple believes the Isles will protect the following players:

John Tavares
Andrew Ladd (NMC)
Anders Lee
Brock Nelson
Nick Leddy
Johnny Boychuk (NMC)
Travis Hamonic
Ryan Pulock
Thomas Greiss

NOTES

Pulock’s future isn’t the only thing Staple discussed. Mikhail Grabovski’s (remember him?) status also came up. So did the possibility of Ladd and/or Boychuk waiving their NMC’s. Fortunately, there was no mention of the shootout format.

The Senators responded with a compelling 2-1 victory over the Penguins on Tuesday night, forcing Game 7 on Thursday. Although the Canadian Tire Center wasn’t completely full, a 14-year-old boy delivered an outstandingly beautiful rendition of the National Anthem:

So… while everyone was focusing on the Pens-Sens game, I was thinking about how the Isles dropped the ball — like they did so often with Mike Milbury — with Peter Laviolette. Apparently, Peter Botte of the NY Daily News was thinking the same thing.