Carolina Hurricanes Sign Jack LaFontaine
It’s not often that you see an NHL team sign a college prospect during the season, but with the Carolina Hurricanes desperately searching for goaltending depth that’s exactly what has happened. Jack LaFontaine, the reigning Mike Richter Award winner and current starting goaltender for the University of Minnesota, has signed his one-year entry-level contract, leaving the college level behind.
Hurricanes GM Don Waddell released a statement:
As the reigning Mike Richter Award recipient, Jack has proven he’s ready to take the next steps in his career. We love his athleticism and consistency and can’t wait for him to start his professional career.
LaFontaine is no longer eligible to play in the NCAA and will join the Hurricanes organization immediately. His entry-level deal comes with a prorated NHL salary of $750K, an AHL salary of $70K, and a signing bonus of $88.5K (the release originally indicated LaFontaine had received a $250K bonus, but entry-level signing bonuses are capped at $92.5K).
Already 24, it’s been nearly six years since LaFontaine was selected 75th overall by the Hurricanes in 2016. The 6’3″ netminder debuted for the University of Michigan the following season, but after two years in a rotating goaltending platoon, he left the Wolverines and played a year with the Penticton Vees of the BCHL, winning the league’s top goaltender award. He joined Minnesota in 2019-20 and posted a .919 save percentage in 25 starts, but it was 2020-21 when he really excelled.
Last season he posted a 22-7 record with a .934 save percentage, winning the NCAA top goaltender award and finishing as a finalist for the Hobey Baker. He was a first-team All-American, won the Big Ten tournament MVP, and looked poised to make the jump to professional hockey. Instead, he used the additional year of availability offered because of COVID to return to Minnesota for this season and was named a co-captain of the Golden Gophers.
His departure after 20 games is somewhat shocking, though things hadn’t been going quite as well this time around. LaFontaine has a .900 save percentage through 20 games with a 12-8 record. That’s where his college career will end, leaving Minnesota with Justen Close and Brennan Boynton in net. Of course, the Gophers would have had Jared Moe, a Winnipeg Jets sixth-round pick, but he transferred to Wisconsin (where he has a .922 in 17 games) when LaFontaine decided to return.
With Antti Raanta injured, the Hurricanes went with Alex Lyon in net last night against the Florida Panthers but have organizational depth issues into the low minors as well. Eetu Makiniemi and Beck Warm are both currently injured, leaving the Chicago Wolves scrambling to sign goaltenders to professional tryouts just to ice a roster. LaFontaine will help ease those issues, whether he ends up at the AHL or NHL level. He’ll also get to burn through his entry-level deal this season, making him a restricted free agent in the summer.
Los Angeles Kings Hire Marc Bergevin
The Los Angeles Kings have hired Marc Bergevin as senior advisor to the general manager, a role that will represent the next step for the former Montreal Canadiens executive. Rob Blake, general manager of the Kings, released this statement about the hire:
Marc brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to our hockey operations staff and will be a valuable addition to our group. We look forward to his contributions.
Bergevin, 56, spent nearly a decade at the helm of the Canadiens but was let go in November after a brutal start to the season. He previously worked with the Chicago Blackhawks in various roles, including scout, director of player personnel, and assistant general manager. His playing career, which included nearly 1,200 regular season games, spanned basically the same period as Kings’ president Luc Robitaille and all three–Blake included–were teammates at the 1994 World Championship, where they earned a gold medal.
It’s his time in Montreal’s front office that will color this hire, however, as Bergevin’s tenure with the Canadiens was at best a rollercoaster of success and failure. The team did reach the Stanley Cup Final last year under his watch, but returned this season with a roster that has won just seven of 34 games, sits 31st in the NHL, and has long-term commitments to several underperforming players. Overall, the Canadiens reached the playoffs in six of the nine full seasons that Bergevin was in charge.
In an advisory role, Bergevin can help a Kings team loaded with youthful potential build into a contender while also keeping his eyes open for a new opportunity. Unemployed for just over a month, it’s obvious that his perceived public relations mistakes–which include selecting Logan Mailloux in the first round despite the young defenseman trying to renounce himself from the draft–will not keep him from landing another high profile job in an NHL front office.
2021 Year In Review: August
2021 was certainly another eventful year, both on and off the rink. Over the coming days, PHR will take a look back at the top stories from around the game on a month-by-month basis. Next up is a look at August, an extremely busy month on the NHL calendar last year.
Going Home: After announcing at the very end of July that he wouldn’t be returning to the Boston Bruins, David Krejci finalized a new contract with HC Olomouc in the Czech Extraliga, confirming his departure from the NHL. The veteran forward explained that he wanted his children to live in Czechia around his extended family, even if he still did have some hockey left in him. The 35-year-old left the NHL after 962 games, every single one of them with the Bruins. In 35 games overseas, he has 34 points.
Arbitration Season: More than two dozen players ended up filing for arbitration, creating deadlines for the ongoing negotiations. Every single one of them ended up settling with their respective teams before a hearing took place, with some like Neal Pionk and Juuse Saros even landing long-term deals. In a season without any salary cap growth, teams were obviously loath to leave final terms in the hands of an arbitrator.
Flat Cap Society: Speaking of the salary cap, in early August Daily Faceoff published a comprehensive report on the situation facing the league with regards to hockey-related revenue. That report accurately predicted that there would be a $1MM increase from 2021-22 to 2022-23, and suggested that substantial increases wouldn’t happen until 2026. With rebounding revenues in the early part of this season it appeared as though the escrow debt could be paid down a bit earlier, but recent attendance restrictions could very well move things back to the original timeline suggested in August.
Coots Is Rewarded: The Philadelphia Flyers weren’t going to wait around with Sean Couturier or get anywhere near unrestricted free agency. In late August the team locked up their two-way star by signing him to an eight-year extension that will keep him under contract until 2030. Things have gone downhill quickly in Philadelphia this season but Couturier remains a huge part of their future. It remains to be seen whether the same can be said about captain Claude Giroux, who has also been eligible for an extension since last summer and is now just a few months from unrestricted free agency.
Eichel Changes Reps: In a move that eventually did result in his departure from Buffalo, Jack Eichel changed representation by hiring superagent Pat Brisson of CAA Sports. The move immediately sparked talks between the two sides on how to get him off the Sabres roster, but it would still be several months before he was traded to the Vegas Golden Knights and allowed to have his preferred surgery.
The College Experience: Despite being the first overall selection in 2021, Owen Power officially announced that he would be returning to the University of Michigan to try and experience what he’d missed as a freshman. The Wolverines had been removed from the NCAA tournament because of COVID issues in 2021 and with Matty Beniers, Kent Johnson, Brendan Brisson, Thomas Bordeleau, and others all returning, Power certainly couldn’t pass up a chance to compete for the national championship. He’ll be a Sabre before long, but Power’s decision ultimately could have an added benefit–he’s now also eligible to play for Canada at the Olympics.
Offer Sheet Revenge: Two years after the Montreal Canadiens signed Sebastian Aho to an offer sheet, the Carolina Hurricanes finally got their revenge. They agreed to a deal with RFA Jesperi Kotkaniemi, one that would ultimately bring him to Carolina when the Canadiens decided not to match. Manufactured for social media or not, the Hurricanes made it quite obvious that the Kotkaniemi contract was a direct response to the Aho signing. While he started slow, the 21-year-old Kotkaneimi has begun to find his game in Carolina and now has 16 points through 33 games.
Tragedy, Again: After the hockey world mourned the loss of Matiss Kivlenieks in July, more tragedy struck in August as Jimmy Hayes passed away unexpectedly at the age of 31. The older brother of Philadelphia Flyers forward Kevin Hayes and a veteran of more than 300 NHL games himself, Jimmy Hayes was a beloved teammate that received an outpouring of heartfelt memories from legions of friends, family, and fans all across the hockey landscape. Months later, Hayes’ family told The Boston Globe that fentanyl had contributed to his sudden death and hoped by sharing his story others can avoid his fate.
Mason McTavish Traded In OHL
He’s already played professional hockey for the Anaheim Ducks, San Diego Gulls, and Olten EHC, but now Mason McTavish is heading to Hamilton. The Peterborough Petes have traded the Ducks’ top prospect to the Hamilton Bulldogs of the OHL, where he will spend the rest of the season and likely close out his junior career. Jeff Marek of Sportsnet was among the first to report a deal was likely for McTavish, with Scott Wheeler of The Athletic confirming it. The Petes will receive:
- Jonathan Melee
- Alex Pharand
- 2nd round pick 2022 (North Bay)
- 2nd round pick 2022 (Sarnia)
- 3rd round pick 2023 (Kitchener)
- 3rd round pick 2023 (Sarnia)
- 3rd round pick 2024 (Hamilton
- conditional 4th round pick 2025 (Hamilton)
McTavish, 18, technically could return to the OHL again next season, but after showing well at every level it seems unlikely he’ll be anywhere but on the Anaheim roster at the start of 2022-23. If this is his last kick of the can in the OHL, he’s going to certainly get a lot of playing time on a Hamilton team built to contend in the Eastern Conference. McTavish will join undrafted center Logan Morrison and Montreal Canadiens prospect Jan Mysak to create a trio of elite offensive options down the middle of the ice, though obviously one of them could shift to the wing to accommodate their new star.
Selected third overall in 2021, McTavish scored three points in nine games with the Ducks at the beginning of the season and another two in three games with the San Diego Gulls on a short conditioning stint. He had five points in two games for Canada at the World Juniors before the tournament was shut down, and has dominated since returning to Peterborough. In five games he has scored six times, using his strong frame and ability around the net to consistently drive pucks into the back of the net.
Notably, McTavish’s entry-level contract won’t kick in this season unless he plays in another NHL game, but that’s not actually out of the question at this point. He would be eligible to return to the Ducks after Hamilton’s season ends, and with Anaheim looking at a potential playoff run there could be a decision to be made whether to insert him into the lineup to help that Stanley Cup chase.
There is also the upcoming Olympics to think about, as McTavish’s name has been linked to Team Canada in recent days given the NHL’s withdrawal. It appears as though despite technically being signed to an NHL contract, McTavish could participate because he was assigned back to junior. What a year it could be for the young forward if he fails to get a World Junior medal but instead gets an Olympic one.
Asking Price Clear On Jakob Chychrun
The Arizona Coyotes were always going to be at the middle of the trade deadline hot stove as they continue their scorched earth rebuild, but it was originally assumed that Jakob Chychrun wouldn’t be included in that teardown. The 23-year-old defenseman is signed to a long-term, reasonable contract and is still obviously young enough to help the club when they’re ready to compete for the playoffs again.
It turned heads when Chychrun’s name hit the rumor mill last month, but the ask was called “massive” by multiple reports. There’s now some clarity on what massive means, as Sportsnet’s Jeff Marek explained on Hockey Night In Canada:
What the Coyotes are looking for is a young player, a high-end prospect plus a first-round pick. Teams we believe that have the assets who could do that and might be interested, include the Los Angeles Kings, perhaps the St. Louis Blues and certainly the Anaheim Ducks–who might be losing Hampus Lindholm to unrestricted free agency at the end of the year.
Marek also indicated that as many as ten teams have already reached out on Chychrun and likened the potential return to the one that the Minnesota Wild received for Brent Burns in 2011. That deal saw Devin Setoguchi (then a 24-year-old coming off his third straight 20+ goal season), Charlie Coyle (the 28th overall pick a year earlier), and a 2011 first-round pick go to Minnesota from the San Jose Sharks.
Chychrun is averaging nearly 25 minutes a night for the last-place Coyotes this season, and though he is obviously not having a good year there is a lot to like about the left-shot defenseman. Selected 16th overall in 2016 he has already racked up 128 points in 316 career games and possesses the kind of size-skating combination that teams fall in love with.
Even with the defense market potentially getting a name like John Klingberg added in the coming months, Chychrun is a prize that almost every team in the league could be interested in, even those out of this year’s playoff race. Signed through the 2024-25 season he carries a cap hit of just $4.6MM and would step into almost any top-four with ease.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
What Your Team Is Thankful For: Seattle Kraken
In the spirit of the holiday season, PHR will take a look at what teams are thankful for as the season approaches the midway mark. There also might be a few things your team would like down the road. We’ll examine what’s gone well in the early going and what could improve as the season rolls on for the Seattle Kraken.
What are the Kraken thankful for?
NHL expansion.
This certainly hasn’t been a very successful inaugural season for the Kraken on the ice, but getting a team at all wasn’t always a guarantee. The city of Seattle had lots of momentum toward expansion many times in the past, including serious bids in 1974 and 1990 that failed to come to fruition.
The immediate success that the Vegas Golden Knights experienced by going straight to the Stanley Cup Finals was abnormal, and perhaps set the expectations a little higher for Seattle than they should have been. Getting into the club–especially as further expansion seems unlikely, at least for a while–was the important part here.
Who are the Kraken thankful for?
It’s been a bit of a frustrating season for Beniers, who missed his chance for a second World Junior gold medal when the tournament was canceled early on. But make no mistake, the second overall pick from 2021 is going to be a core piece for the Kraken before long.
In 21 games for Michigan, the do-it-all centerman has 24 points (including two tonight in a big win against UMass) and could soon suit up at the Olympics for Team USA. If he decides to turn pro and sign after his college season ends, there’s little doubt that he’ll be one of the most exciting players in the lineup for Seattle most nights. Having that presence down the middle is a good start.
What would the Kraken be even more thankful for?
A few saves.
It’s not that the only problem with the Kraken this season has been the goaltending, but it’s certainly been the biggest. The duo of Philipp Grubauer and Chris Driedger–one that combines for a $9.4MM cap hit–has been dreadful, leading to a league-worst .883 team save percentage on the season. If you are more analytically inclined, Grubauer’s -17.8 goals saved above average leads all netminders by a wide margin. The next worst, if you can call it that, is Joonas Korpisalo at -8.65.
The worry here is that Grubauer signed a six-year, $35.4MM deal with Seattle in the offseason, one that already seemed odd at the time but now appears downright dangerous. If the 30-year-old netminder can’t find his game, it could be a boat anchor for the Kraken to deal with through the first part of their history.
What should be on the Kraken wish list?
Draft picks.
This team isn’t as bad as their 10-19-4 record suggests, but they also aren’t anywhere near a playoff contender at this point. The draft picks that everyone though they would acquire through the expansion process should be the target at the deadline, with basically no roster players off the table, even ones with term left on their contracts.
If someone wants to pay up to add Yanni Gourde, the Kraken should consider moving the 30-year-old center. Adam Larsson a relatively inexpensive defense target for a contender? Why not entertain the offer?
The issue for Seattle is that they also handed out several no-trade clauses in their first round of free agency, for whatever reason. Larsson, Grubauer, Jaden Schwartz, and Jamie Oleksiak, were all given full trade protection in their new deals. That kind of early spending is only going to make it more difficult to strip the roster back if that investment proves to be a premature one and the Kraken continue to struggle in the years to come.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Panthers, Ducks Announce More COVID Protocol Additions
The Florida Panthers will not have Patric Hornqvist in the lineup this evening when they take on the Carolina Hurricanes, as he has entered the COVID protocol. Hornqvist joins Mason Marchment, Sam Reinhart, and Spencer Knight, stealing quite a few important names from the team’s regular roster.
The Panthers, among the league’s elite teams so far this season, lost their last game against the Dallas Stars in a shootout and have now called two points behind the Tampa Bay Lightning for first place in the Atlantic Division. The team is not only without these key players due to COVID-related absences, but also names like Sam Bennett due to a suspension and Markus Nutivaara due to injury. Despite that, they will need to try to take down the red hot Metropolitan-leading Hurricanes.
Lucas Carlsson and Aleksi Heponiemi will both enter the lineup tonight, while Sergei Bobrovsky will take the net again, his fifth start since returning from the holiday break.
In Anaheim, the Ducks are facing their own COVID absences. Vinni Lettieri is the latest addition to the protocol, where he will join John Gibson, Hampus Lindholm, Derek Grant, and Sam Carrick. Ryan Getzlaf has technically left the protocol, but he’ll also miss tonight’s game against the New York Rangers as the team gets him back up to speed.
The Ducks have recalled five players ahead of the game. Benoit-Olivier Groulx, Jacob Perreault, Buddy Robinson, Greg Pateryn, and Lukas Dostal are all up from the San Diego Gulls. Perreault, still just 19, would be making his NHL debut when he hits the ice tonight (he is expected to play with Trevor Zegras and Sonny Milano). Selected 27th overall in 2020, Perreault has 18 points in 23 games for the Gulls this season as one of the few junior-aged players eligible to play in the minor leagues. That’s thanks to the number of games he played last season–27–during the OHL’s postponed campaign. The son of longtime NHL forward Yanic Perreault, he would be the 16th player from the 2020 first round to make his debut–the second for Anaheim, after Jamie Drysdale.
John Klingberg Clarifies Trade Rumors
The Dallas Stars had a brilliant comeback to topple the Pittsburgh Penguins today, with goals from Denis Gurianov, Joe Pavelski, and Roope Hintz to take the team to 17-12-2 on the season. One of the assists on Pavelski’s game-tying goal went to John Klingberg, a player who has been in the news lately due to a report that he requested a trade out of Dallas recently.
Klingberg was asked specifically about that report and the trade rumors that have surrounded him all season, and explained his side of the story (video via Bally Sports Southwest):
Yeah I don’t think it’s entirely true. It’s not like I’ve been going up and asking ‘I want to get traded now.’ Nothing like that. It’s something that’s been going on with the [contract] negotiations and stuff like that.
I’m not going to lie, it’s been a few frustrating years individually. As a player it all ends up coming to your next contract, obviously. I’ve been a Dallas Star since day one. I’ve been pretty clear that I want to stay here. I grew up here. I had my daughter here. At the end of the day it’s a business, but it’s a business on both sides. I have to take care of my part as well. It’s been standing still.
After last season I was pretty clear that I wanted to start negotiating right away and see where we were at. They wanted some time with free agency, the draft, and stuff like that. I understand that, but at the same time I’ve been here proving the kind of player I’ve been for eight years now. Other guys have signed right before the season and I wanted to do that as well. Lately it’s just been going more quieter and quieter.
For me as a player, I don’t feel as though I’ve been appreciated in that way, when we don’t even negotiate. It’s quiet. So for me as a player, and with my agent, we talked with Jim [Nill] a couple months back, and he agreed we could start talking with other GMs to see where we were at. Negotiation wise with the Stars has been very quiet, so it’s been a little disappointing.
Klingberg, 29, is in the final season of a seven-year, $29.75MM contract signed in 2015. He currently carries a $4.25MM cap hit and is earning $6MM in actual salary this season. He has been eligible to sign an extension since the start of last offseason, with reports indicating that he was looking for a new eight-year contract in the range of $62-66MM. That would represent a substantial raise, but not one that would put him ahead of teammate Miro Heiskanen, who signed an eight-year, $67.6MM deal last July.
He’s not the only big-ticket player that is on an expiring deal in Dallas either. Pavelski and Alexander Radulov are both pending unrestricted free agents, while Gurianov and Jason Robertson are both set to become restricted free agents.
Even while these rumors have swirled around Klingberg, his play has remained relatively strong. Through 26 games he is averaging almost 22 minutes a night and has 17 points. While there has been an obvious shift to Heiskanen as the team’s lead defensemen, Klingberg is still an extremely important part of the Stars’ roster and a trade would certainly weaken them for any potential playoff push they have in mind.
With the win today, the team has now taken four in a row and climbed within one point of the Winnipeg Jets for fifth in the Central Division. They’re still six points behind the Minnesota Wild and Colorado Avalanche.
Coyotes Notes: Beagle, Capobianco, Ladd, Moser
The Arizona Coyotes have officially announced that Jay Beagle underwent successful core muscle surgery and will be out indefinitely. Yesterday, general manager Bill Armstrong indicated that the veteran forward could miss anywhere from eight weeks to the rest of the season, a disappointing result for someone just trying to stay active in the NHL.
Beagle, 36, has suited up 21 times for the Coyotes this season and has one goal. The four-year, $12MM contract he signed in 2018 with the Vancouver Canucks will expire at the end of this year, meaning if he does miss the rest of 2021-22 it could be the last we see of the undrafted forward in the NHL. If it is, he had quite the career, playing 634 regular season games to this point and winning the Stanley Cup with the Washington Capitals in 2018.
- The team also announced that Kyle Capobianco and assistant coach Mario Duhamel have entered the league’s COVID protocol. Capobianco, 24, has played in 15 games for the Coyotes this season and has five points. That takes his career totals to 29 games and six points, as he has received a rare opportunity during this Arizona rebuild to play at the NHL level more regularly. The third-round pick has spent the last several years in the minor leagues, putting up big point totals for the Tucson Roadrunners.
- With Andrew Ladd still finding regular ice time with the Coyotes, it certainly appears as though the team may not get the extra 2023 third-round pick that was included in last summer’s trade from the New York Islanders. Remember, CapFriendly reported an update on the conditions a few days after the trade, indicating that if Ladd plays in just a single professional game (assumed to mean NHL or AHL) in 2022-23 while under his current contract or if he retires prior to the end of that season, the pick would not be sent to Arizona. That basically means it would only transfer if Ladd ends up on LTIR for the entire season, or the team finds out another way around the condition (it is not clear, for instance, whether a buyout of this deal would secure the pick for them, should Ladd decide not to retire).
- Of course, that may not matter given how well the trade has paid off so far for the Coyotes. With the 2021 second-round pick they received in the deal, the team picked overaged defenseman Janis Moser, who has recently stepped into the NHL and made an impact as a 21-year-old. The Swiss defender has three points in his first five games while averaging close to 20 minutes and is one of just four players–and the only one from outside the first round–from the 2021 draft to play in the NHL so far.
What Your Team Is Thankful For: San Jose Sharks
In the spirit of the holiday season, PHR will take a look at what teams are thankful for as the season approaches the midway mark. There also might be a few things your team would like down the road. We’ll examine what’s gone well in the early going and what could improve as the season rolls on for the San Jose Sharks.
What are the Sharks thankful for?
A rebound from Erik Karlsson.
One of the more overlooked stories of this season has been the play of Karlsson, who has rebounded in a big way from his brutal 2020-21 campaign. Through 28 games he has eight goals and 22 points, is still playing more than 23 minutes a night, and has strong possession numbers once again. The 31-year-old isn’t the all-world player he was pre-ankle surgery and he’s not going to win the Norris Trophy, but his rebound is a big reason why the Sharks are competitive this season.
The worry at this point in his career is always injury, and Karlsson is currently on the shelf with an upper-body ailment. He could be back as soon as Tuesday though when the Sharks return for a five-game homestand.
Who are the Sharks thankful for?
Despite his performances in the last couple of games, there’s no real answer here other than the Sharks’ starter. Reimer’s numbers are coming back to earth, but it’s because of his goaltending that the team is still in the playoff race in the Western Conference.
In 2019-20, San Jose was ranked 30th in save percentage at .895. In 2020-21, that number actually dropped to .891. This season Reimer’s .916 is dragging them up to .910 overall, a respectable number that has them in games most nights.
What would the Sharks be even more thankful for?
Some roster consistency.
Between injuries, illnesses, and COVID-19 protocol, there have been barely any games this season when the Sharks were icing their best lineup possible. Only three players have suited up for all 35 games–Brent Burns, Tomas Hertl, and Nick Bonino–and several important ones have missed as many as seven, a good 20 percent of the season so far.
There have been some great stories in San Jose. Even looking past the likes of Karlsson and Reimer, Alexander Barabanov has become a legitimate top-six option, Logan Couture is having another strong two-way year, and Timo Meier has re-emerged as a premier power forward in the league. All three of those forwards have missed multiple games, forcing the club to shuffle people around into roles they aren’t really built for.
Every team has injuries, certainly, and this season’s battle with COVID has been a struggle for everyone. But with the Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames coming back to the pack, there’s a real opportunity in the Pacific Division playoff race. A consistent lineup could have the Sharks right in the mix.
What should be on the Sharks’ wish list?
A Tomas Hertl decision.
Despite everything above, there is a real argument to be made in support of trading Hertl–and others–at this year’s deadline, waving the white flag for this season and recouping a huge haul of future assets. It just doesn’t seem that likely while the team is paying Karlsson, Burns, and Marc-Edouard Vlasic a combined $26.5MM for each of the next three seasons. A true rebuild would be difficult and costly with those contracts on the books, meaning unless the Sharks want to see Hertl walk for nothing in the summer, an extension can seem like the only option.
The problem though is what kind of a contract would even keep the 28-year-old forward in San Jose. Can the team afford to lock in another player to a long-term deal that takes him well into his thirties? His cap hit right now is $5.625MM, but on the open market that would likely balloon quite a bit as a center that can score at a 30+ goal pace.
Does a Hertl extension get the Sharks closer to a Stanley Cup? That’s a difficult question to answer given the state of the franchise right now and the realistic outlook over the next few years. It’s one they must make anyway, and soon.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
