Jeff Skinner, Buffalo Sabres Agree To Long-Term Extension
9:27 PM: It is official now and McKenzie was right on the mark with the terms. The Buffalo Sabres have announced an eight-year, $72MM extension with leading goal scorer Jeff Skinner. Skinner’s eight-year term is the NHL maximum and one only the Sabres could have awarded him. His new $9MM AAV is one that only 13 other forwards have topped, including teammate Jack Eichel. The Sabres hope that this investment can keep those two stars playing together on the team’s top line and dominating the competition en route to a return to the postseason.
8:46 PM: It was widely assumed that the Buffalo Sabres and star forward Jeff Skinner would eventually come to terms on a contract extension. After all, both sides benefited from the partnership in year one. Skinner enjoyed one of his best seasons to date, including potting a career-high 40 goals, while the Sabres landed a surefire top-line forward, who finished third on the team in scoring and found chemistry with young centerpieces Jack Eichel and Sam Reinhart. Now, it appears that this speculation is about to pay off. TSN’s venerable insider, Bob McKenzie, reports that Buffalo is closing in on signing Skinner to an eight-year extension, thought to be in the realm of $9MM AAV.
If this $72MM deal comes together, Skinner could wind up in the upper echelon of NHL players when it comes to contract value. P.K. Subban, the only other player in the league with a $9MM cap hit, is currently ranked 16th in the league in AAV. The next players on the list are at $9.5MM, likely outside of the projected ranger for Skinner, but anything between a $9MM and $8.7MM AAV would put Skinner right there with Subban. Among those Subban would pass up include Sidney Crosby, Leon Draisaitl, Steven Stamkos, Claude Giroux, and Logan Couture. Obviously, the salary cap ceiling is increasing and Skinner’s cost is a function of that, but this is still a considerable leap for a player whose last contract was a six-year deal with a $5.75MM AAV with the Carolina Hurricanes.
Whether or not Skinner’s reported new value is a fair representation of his ability is up for debate. What’s not up for debate is that Buffalo can afford to offer this contract and possibly overpaying is better than the alternative. The Sabres are currently ranked 25th in committed salary cap entering the off-season with more than $29MM in space and Skinner is arguably their only priority free agent. Buffalo is a team that desperately want to improve, especially after a hot start was followed by an embarrassing second half and would up in yet another disappointing finish. Letting Skinner walk in free agency would be a nightmare for the team and GM Jason Botterill would rather gamble with his job down the line than almost surely lose it in the present if he failed to retain or somehow substantially replace Skinner. Will the 27-year-old be worth $9MM when he’s 35 years old? Almost certainly not, but that’s the trade-off of every long-term UFA contract. In the short-term this would be a great deal to hold on to a talented player who has been a great fit.
Islanders Re-Sign Brock Nelson To Six-Year Extension
The New York Islanders had four key players approaching unrestricted free agency this off-season, but they have cut that number down to three. The Islanders have announced that they have signed center Brock Nelson to a long-term contract extension. The new deal is six years at $6MM per season for Nelson, who becomes both the highest-paid and longest-signed player on New York’s roster (for now). The full deal breaks down as follows:
- 2019-20: $8.0MM + full no-trade
- 2020-21: $5.2MM + full no-trade
- 2021-22: $8.0MM + partial no-trade
- 2022-23: $5.2MM + partial no-trade
- 2023-24: $5.6MM + partial no-trade
- 2024-25: $4.0MM + partial no-trade
Nelson, 27, bet on himself last summer by signing a one-year, $4.25MM extension with the Islanders in hopes that a breakout season would earn him the long-term, high-paying deal he was seeking. That gamble worked out perfectly, as Nelson enjoyed the best season of his career and had been set to hit the market as likely the third-best center and a top-15 or so free agent. The Islanders knew they had to pay, perhaps even slightly over market value, to keep Nelson and did just that. The six-year term is less of a concern, as Nelson will be just 33 when the contract expires.
New head coach Barry Trotz took an immediate liking to Nelson this season, giving him more than three minutes of extra ice time per night compared to last year, as well as an increased role on special teams. Nelson responded with a career-high 53 points this season and finished third on the Islanders in scoring. He was also New York’s best five-on-five forward, leading the team in even strength goals and points. The team clearly trusts Nelson to continue playing a well-rounded game and growing his offensive ability.
As the first major UFA forward to sign a long-term extension this off-season, Nelson sets the bar for not only his fellow Islanders teammates but for the market as a whole. After signing Nelson, the Islanders still have over $29.2MM in cap space per CapFriendly. The team still hopes to sign forwards Anders Lee and Jordan Eberle, as well as goaltender Robin Lehner. Although Nelson outscored Lee and Eberle this season, the unsigned duo are around the same age as Nelson but have more experience, more scoring history, and simply more talent. The 6×6 deal agreed to by Nelson is unlikely to do the trick for either Lee or Eberle, meaning signing both would chew up more than $12MM of the Islanders’ remaining cap space. It’s still very possible for them to sign all of their key free agents, but not as easy now that Nelson’s deal is in place. Elsewhere on the market, Nelson’s $6MM AAV will likely raise the price tag for the likes of Kevin Hayes, Ryan Dzingel, Gustav Nyquist, and Brett Connolly among others, as each are close in age and platform production to Nelson, albeit Hayes is the only center in the group. This is just the first of what are likely to be several big-name extensions prior to July 1st, but Nelson’s deal will certainly have ramifications in the current marketplace.
Ottawa Senators Name D.J. Smith As Head Coach
So much for those rumors linking Patrick Roy to the Ottawa Senators’ head coaching vacancy. The Senators announced this morning that former Toronto Maple Leafs assistant D.J. Smith has been named the team’s new head coach. Smith has agreed to a three-year contract to lead Ottawa, his first head coaching position in the NHL.
Smith, 42, may be a surprise pick to be the next bench boss of the Senators, but he is certainly as qualified as any first-time NHL head coach. Smith played eight seasons of pro hockey, suiting up for 45 NHL games but more memorably manning the blue line for the former St. John Maple Leafs of the AHL for parts of seven season. Smith retired from playing hockey in 2004 and immediately stepped into a role as an assistant coach for the OHL’s Windsor Spitfires, his hometown team with whom he had played his own junior hockey. Smith spent eight years in Windsor, two of which ended in Memorial Cup championships, before taking the head coach job for the rival Oshawa Generals in 2012. Smith’s time in Oshawa was short, but definitely effective. He compiled a record of 135-53-3-13 over three seasons with the Generals, won a Memorial Cup, and was named the OHL’s Coach of the Year. In 2015, Smith joined Toronto to begin his NHL coaching career as an assistant to Mike Babcock. Babcock made it known early on that he saw the potential in Smith and was grooming him to be a head coach and would not stand in the way of any move. Smith surely learned a lot from Babcock, but also contributed much to the team himself on the defensive side of the game.
Now, as he takes his talents to Ottawa, the Senators feel he can continue his upward trajectory. Smith’s history of winning, experience with young players, and focus on competent defense will all serve to benefit Ottawa greatly as they continue through a difficult rebuilding process. In the team’s release, GM Pierre Dorion states the following:
D.J. Smith is a winner. We believe he is the best person to drive the development and success of the Ottawa Senators. D.J is a great communicator and an exceptional strategist. His passionate approach, coupled with his ability to teach the game, is exactly what we were looking for throughout the process. We’re thrilled to welcome D.J. and his family to Ottawa.
Circling back to those Roy rumors, don’t close the door on the Hall of Fame goaltender joining the Senators just yet. The team is still in the hunt for a President of Hockey Operations and Roy would fit that description as well. One of the main reasons he left his last NHL post with the Colorado Avalanche was due to a lack of input in player personnel decisions, so he very well may be intrigued by a front office position. There’s also the slim but possible chance that the Senators would like to bring Roy in as an assistant to Smith, to help guide him through his start as a head coach. There is sure to be more movement in Ottawa this off-season, but their biggest move is completed with the hiring of a rival assistant to be their new head coach.
John Davidson Resigns As President Of Blue Jackets, Named President Of Rangers
The Columbus Blue Jackets have a tough offseason in front of them after going all-in at the trade deadline, and will now have to do it without their top hockey executive. John Davidson, President of Hockey Operations and alternate governor for the Blue Jackets has resigned his post and has taken the same position with the New York Rangers, signing a five-year deal with the team per Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic. Davidson had been immediately rumored to be an option for New York after it was announced that Glen Sather would be stepping down from the presidency. Blue Jackets GM Jarmo Kekalainen will now serve as alternate governor in addition to his current duties.
It is difficult to overstate how important Davidson has been to the Blue Jackets organization over the last seven years. After leaving the St. Louis Blues, Davidson came to a franchise that was floundering on and off the ice, never finding much success since entering the league in 2000. The team had made the playoffs just a single time, and were routinely seeing changes in the coaching staff and management group. Roster turnover is inevitable but the Blue Jackets hadn’t been able to build any sort of consistency in their group and had recently traded their captain and face of the franchise, Rick Nash to the Rangers.
One of the first big changes Davidson enacted was firing general manager Scott Howson a few months after taking control of the team. He replaced Howsen with Kekalainen who he knew from his days in St. Louis, a move that is still paying off despite the gamble of this season. The Blue Jackets have grown into one of the most consistent organizations in the NHL, recording at least 89 points in five of the last six seasons and making the playoffs on four of those occasions. This year saw the team win the first playoff round in franchise history, when they shocked the hockey world by sweeping the Presidents Trophy-winning Tampa Bay Lightning.
New York though was always a dream for Davidson. Blue Jackets owner John P. McConnell said as much in his statement today:
When we hired John Davidson in October 2012, I said I thought he was the perfect person to lead our hockey operations efforts. Nearly seven years later, I believe I was right. He joined our team at a very difficult time and led a transformation that has resulted in consistent winning and appearances in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. J.D. is a man of great character and compassion and I completely understand his interest in the unique opportunity before him. I know leaving Columbus is a difficult decision for him as he has a genuine love of our community and organization, but the possibility of returning to his roots in New York, where he spent three decades as a player and broadcaster, is an extraordinary circumstance for him and his family.
Davidson was originally drafted fifth overall by the Blues in 1973, but would end up playing most of his career with the Rangers before retirement took him into the broadcasting ring. A generation of fans in New York grew up with “J.D.” as the color commentator for Rangers’ games, making this quite a homecoming for the respected executive. In the Rangers’ release, Davidson explained his excitement:
I am excited and humbled to be named the President of the New York Rangers. The opportunity of rejoining the Rangers organization and returning home to New York, where my family and I have spent so many wonderful years, was one I simply could not pass up. I want to thank James Dolan for offering me this chance to come home.
Esa Lindell Signs Six-Year Extension
The Dallas Stars have locked up a big part of their defense, signing Esa Lindell to a six-year contract extension worth $34.8MM. The deal carries a $5.8MM average annual value, and keeps Lindell in Dallas through the 2024-25 season. The deal also includes a full no-movement clause in the final four seasons. CapFriendly gives us the full breakdown:
- 2019-20: $6MM salary, $1MM signing bonus
- 2020-21: $4.8MM salary
- 2021-22: $5MM salary, $2MM signing bonus
- 2022-23: $5MM salary, $1MM signing bonus
- 2023-24: $5MM salary
- 2024-25: $5MM salary
GM Jim Nill explained why the team committed to Lindell:
Esa is a consummate professional who has proven himself dependable in every situation and is just an absolute workhorse. When you combine his strength, conditioning, hockey IQ and skill, he has become an integral part of this team. Along with John Klingberg and Miro Heiskanen, the three make up the foundation of a blueline that will not only be a strength for our club, but one that will be as good as any in the NHL for the foreseeable future.
Lindell, 24, was scheduled to become a restricted free agent this summer but instead will be giving up several UFA years in his new deal. That is part of the reason why the contract’s cap hit is such a big raise on the $2.2MM Lindell earned this season, but the Stars obviously feel comfortable committing that amount of money to him. They have good reason, as the young defenseman has turned into one of the premiere two-way players in the league and averaged more than 24 minutes a night this season for the Stars.
While Klingberg and Heiskanen are often asked to carry much of the offensive load, Lindell serves as a perfect complement that is able to compete at both ends of the rink. He was leaned on heavily in the defensive zone by head coach Jim Montgomery this season and easily led the club in penalty killing time, averaging more than three minutes a game shorthanded. Even with all that responsibility, Lindell still managed to set career highs in goals (11) and points (32) while suiting up in all 82 contests.
In the playoffs Lindell continued to shine, recording four points in 13 games for the Stars while averaging nearly 27 minutes a night. The 6’3″ defenseman is an elite shot blocker, is willing to engage physically and still can move the puck effectively to his more offensive teammates. That package sums up to an excellent player for the Stars, who have found their way back to Stanley Cup contention.
Lindell’s deal though doesn’t come without some risk. His $5.8MM cap hit puts him 26th in the entire league among defenseman and well ahead of Klingberg, who comes in at $4.25MM through 2021-22. Only Jamie Benn and Tyler Seguin are signed longer for the Stars, meaning any step backwards by the young defenseman could make his contract into a troubling one for the team. Still, that seems unlikely at this point for a player who has consistently improved since being drafted 74th overall in 2012.
Not only will he provide a legitimate top-4 counterweight to the right-handed Klingberg, Lindell also serves as a more experienced veteran for Heiskanen to look up to and rely on as he takes the next steps of his professional career. The two Finnish defenders will be manning the left side of the Stars’ blue line for years to come, a luxury in today’s NHL.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Sabres Hire Ralph Krueger As Their New Head Coach
Buffalo’s coaching search has come to an end. Ralph Krueger will be the next head coach of the Sabres.
Krueger has largely been out of hockey for the last few years as he had served as the Director and Chairman of Southhampton FC since 2014. His only coaching during that time was with Team World at the 2016 World Cup of Hockey where they surprisingly reached the Gold Medal game.
The 59-year-old has three years of NHL coaching experience with Edmonton. He spent two years with them as an Associate Coach after being hired in 2010 following more than a decade with Switzerland’s national team. Krueger was then promoted to head coach for the lockout-shortened 2012-13 campaign but was dismissed following the season. Interestingly, he’s already familiar with one of Buffalo’s assistants as Steve Smith was part of the staff during his time with the Oilers.
Krueger will be taking the place of Phil Housley who was let go at the end of the season. The Sabres have had a bit of a coaching carousel in recent years; this is the fifth new bench boss Buffalo has had since 2013.
As was the case during his time with Edmonton, Krueger will be tasked with trying to instil some structure to the Sabres. Despite changing their goaltending tandem over the summer, they still struggled to keep the puck out of the net as they ranked 23rd in the league in that category and their back end was prone to some untimely lapses in their own zone.
The heat will likely be on pretty quickly as Buffalo has now missed the playoffs for the last eight years and there isn’t much patience remaining from ownership to turn things around. However, GM Jason Botterill clearly feels that Krueger is the right one for the job; Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic notes (Twitter link) that the interview process was a thorough one with seven coaches getting considered.
Detroit Red Wings Hire Steve Yzerman
2:20pm: The team has officially announced Yzerman as general manager, but also explained that Holland has agreed to a multi-year extension to stay on in his new role as Senior VP. The two will work together for the time being.
8:00am: The Detroit Red Wings are bringing back their boy. The team has set a press conference for this afternoon to introduce Steve Yzerman as the next general manager of the team. Ken Holland, who is currently working in that role, will move to a position called Senior Vice President according to Gord Miller of TSN.
It’s hard to state just how momentous a situation this is for the Red Wings. Not only does the team get to welcome back one of the greatest figures in the history of their franchise, a player who exemplified leadership and success through his 22-year career on the ice, but they also bring in the mastermind behind one of the greatest regular season teams in NHL history. Though Yzerman stepped down from his role as GM of the Tampa Bay Lightning in September, his fingerprints are still all over the roster that just went 62-16-4 to match the NHL record for wins in a single season—one set by Yzerman’s Red Wings in 1995-96.
Obviously things didn’t go the way Tampa Bay had hoped in the playoffs, but Red Wings fans will be more focused on how Yzerman acquired and kept oodles of talent on the NHL roster through various means, building a powerhouse franchise even without the financial might an organization like Detroit brings.
It’s not really like Yzerman ever left, as he kept his family and home in Michigan while working in Tampa Bay. Commuting regularly, wanting to spend more time with his family was one of the reasons he gave when stepping down from the job initially. It appeared likely then that he would find his way back to the Red Wings, though some believed it would have to be after Holland left town. Instead it sounds like the team will keep their long-time GM around in another role, though rumors are already surfacing on what Holland’s next career step may be.
There is already some speculation as well over whether Yzerman will bring some of the Tampa Bay front office with him. Bob McKenzie of TSN tweets that AGM Pat Verbeek‘s contract is up at the end of the year and could follow Yzerman back to Detroit, while chief amateur scout Al Murray is a candidate to do the same. None of that is official at this point, but you can bet there will be several names who want to get on board this new Red Wings ride.
Los Angeles Kings Hire Todd McLellan
Wednesday: At a press conference to introduce McLellan as coach, the the team announced that assistant coach Dave Lowry will not be part of the staff in 2018-19. The Kings have also agreed to buy out the remainder of McLellan’s contract with Edmonton, which according to Curtis Zupke of the Los Angeles Times was worth $3MM. Bill Ranford and Marco Sturm are expected to stay on as part of the coaching staff.
Tuesday: The Todd McLellan sweepstakes have finally come to an end, and the Los Angeles Kings will be his next employer after all. The team has announced a multi-year contract for the former Edmonton Oilers head coach. McLellan was rumored to be a candidate for the Buffalo Sabres coaching job until he was ruled out last week, and has been linked to the Kings for some time. The deal is expected to be five years in length and worth around $25MM (including bonuses) according to Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic. That makes McLellan one of the more expensive coaches in the league and rivals the deal that the Philadelphia Flyers recently gave to Alain Vigneault.
The Kings fired John Stevens just 13 games into the 2018-19 season and replaced him with Willie Desjardins, but found no change in results. The team struggled right out of the gate and ended up finishing with the second worst record in the entire league. That failure had a lot to do with goal scoring, as the Kings were one of only two teams (with the Anaheim Ducks being the other) to record fewer than 200 goals on the season. McLellan will be asked to turn things around in a hurry, given their long expensive commitments to players Anze Kopitar, Drew Doughty and Jonathan Quick.
McLellan does bring with him quite the resume of regular season success, despite things not ending well in Edmonton. Fired after 20 games this season, he had previously taken the Oilers and San Jose Sharks to the playoffs in seven of his ten years as an NHL head coach. In fact, his .637 winning percentage in San Jose put him among the best to have ever stood behind an NHL bench and had many expecting great things. Unfortunately, the Sharks were never able to get very deep in the playoffs with McLellan running things and he was let go after the 2014-15 season. The team would reach the Stanley Cup Final the following year.
In Edmonton there was always immense pressure, as McLellan inherited a team that was led by Connor McDavid and was expected to compete for the Stanley Cup. After an injury took McDavid off the ice for much of McLellan’s first season, he failed to make the playoffs and watched as Taylor Hall was jettisoned that summer. Despite losing his top scorer from 2015-16—who would go on to win a Hart Trophy in his second season in New Jersey—McLellan coached a healthy McDavid-led squad to the playoffs in 2017, finishing with 103 points, the club’s best total since 1987. That success, however, was short-lived.
Another playoff miss last season and a tough start to this year caused the Oilers to move on and bring in Ken Hitchcock to try and fix things, while McLellan watched from the sideline still under contract with the team. He’ll now get a brand new challenge in Los Angeles that will be difficult to master. The team’s core that brought them such success in the past has aged and cannot be relied upon to get them back to the playoffs by themselves, meaning other changes will need to occur. The team already started that process when they moved Jake Muzzin and Tanner Pearson, but could very well continue it this summer with other drastic moves.
At any rate, the Kings have found the man to try and lead them out of their recent struggles and shown full confidence in his ability. McLellan will be handsomely compensated as he looks to bring a championship to his third Pacific Division team.
Nazem Kadri Suspended For Rest Of First Round
The Toronto Maple Leafs will be without one of their most physical players for the rest of their first-round series against the Boston Bruins. The Department of Player Safety announced today that forward Nazem Kadri has been given a suspension of up to five games for his cross-check on Jake DeBrusk in Saturday night’s game. Kadri was responding to a hit on Patrick Marleau, and hit DeBrusk right in the face with his stick. Instead of giving the Maple Leafs forward a determined number of games, the league decided it was best to keep him out for the remainder of the series instead. As the accompanying video explains:
This is not a hockey play. Instead, this is a player retaliating against an opponent by using his stick as a weapon to make forceful and direct head contact. While we understand that Kadri took offense to DeBrusk’s hit against Marleau, players are simply not permitted to flagrantly violate league playing rules because they feel that retribution is justified. It is also important to note that Kadri has an extensive disciplinary track record that must be considered when issuing supplemental discipline.
This will be Kadri’s fifth suspension and one that is eerily similar to his last. Almost exactly a year ago the Maple Leafs center was suspended for a check on Boston’s Tommy Wingels in their first round series and was given a three-game ban. Toronto would eventually lose that series in seven games and many consider Kadri’s absence a contributing—if not ultimately determining—factor.
Though the league has not handed out many suspensions that can vary in length before, this is not entirely without precedent. In 2013, San Jose Sharks forward Raffi Torres was suspended for the rest of his series against the Los Angeles Kings after a hit to the head of Jarret Stoll. Torres similarly had a long history of discipline, which included at that point a 21-game suspension (reduced from the original 25) for another head shot. Torres would eventually receive an even longer suspension in 2015 when he was banned for half a season.
While Kadri doesn’t have quite the reputation that Torres built over his playing career, that is the kind of discipline he’ll have to be wary of in the future. The Department of Player Safety has been clear that they will not tolerate repeat offenders especially when incidents are similar in nature. In fact, the Kadri video today brought up a similar cross-checking incident from his past when he struck Luke Glendening in the face with his stick in retaliation. His discipline will only increase unless he finds a way to stop these retaliatory incidents from occurring.
Colorado Avalanche Sign Cale Makar To Entry-Level Contract
Despite some recent doubts, the Colorado Avalanche have indeed signed top prospect Cale Makar to an entry-level contract beginning this season, as had been expected all along. The team has announced a three-year contract with Makar, as well as indicating that he will join the team immediately in their first-round playoff series. Makar’s collegiate career came to an end last night when the University of Massachusetts failed to complete the storybook season with a loss to the University of Minnesota-Duluth in the National Championship Game. Makar wasted no time in moving to the next stage of his career though, turning pro about twelve hours later.
Makar, 20, was the fourth overall pick in 2017 and fans in Colorado have been excited for his arrival ever since. The dynamic defenseman is considered by many to be the best prospect in hockey, a title helped along by Makar being named the Hobey Baker Award winner on Friday night as the best player in college hockey. Makar finished second among all NCAA defensemen in both goals and assists and is third in scoring among all players this season. An elite play-maker with skating ability, vision, and awareness beyond his years, Makar is an offensive force. However, he is not afraid to play physical as well, as he showcased in the National Championship Game. Makar’s highlight-reel goals and assists may get the most attention, but he also breaks up plays with regularity and is a smart, instinctual defensive player. Makar led UMass with 49 points in 41 games this year, but also led the team with a +32 rating. While many Minutemen players had big seasons and were well coached by Greg Carvel, it is fair to say that Makar was the driving force behind the program’s best season ever.
UMass fans will certainly be sad to see Makar go, especially after just two years in Amherst, but it was inevitable for a player who is ready to make an impact in the NHL right away. In the Avalanche’s release, GM Joe Sakic called Makar “a game-changing type of player” and applauded his success at the college level. Colorado is so eager to get Makar into the lineup, that they will let him burn the first year of his contract for possibly just a few games and will also have to protect him in the 2021 NHL Expansion Draft. Yet, after defeating the Calgary Flames in Game Two to tie the series, the Avs may see Makar’s addition as a way to further strengthen their team as they look to pull off the 1-8 upset in the Western Conference. It is not clear if Makar will be in the lineup immediately on Monday night, but it would not be a surprise, as Colorado is eager to debut their new star.
