Rangers Re-Sign Brady Skjei To A Six-Year Contract
7:04 p.m.: CapFriendly released a breakdown of Skjei’s new six-year, $31.5MM contract, which will have a $28.5MM base salary as well as $3MM in signing bonus money. Here is the breakdown:
2018-19: $4.7M Base + $1M SB
2019-20: $4.4M Base + $1M SB
2020-21: $4.2M Base
2021-22: $4.4M Base + $1M SB
2022-23: $5.4M Base
2023-24: $5.4M Base
11:33 a.m.: The Rangers have locked up a key part of their back end, announcing that they have re-signed defenseman Brady Skjei to a six-year contract, avoiding salary arbitration. Larry Brooks of the New York Post reports (Twitter link) that the deal carries a $5.25MM cap hit.
The 24-year-old was the only Ranger to play in all 82 games last season. While his production dipped from 39 points to 25 (4-21-25), he took on a lot larger of a role on New York’s back end, jumping from 17:28 of playing time per game to 21:02. Skjei was also only one of eight NHL players to record at least 150 shots, 125 hits, and 115 blocks.
With Ryan McDonagh now in Tampa Bay, it’s likely that the Rangers will be relying on Skjei even more next season and beyond. New York still has Kevin Shattenkirk and Marc Staal as veterans on their blueline but with their stated goal of rebuilding around their younger nucleus, there’s a good chance that Skjei could be tasked with the number one role in 2018-19 and for several years after that.
The signing now gives the Rangers just two remaining restricted free agents to re-sign in centers Kevin Hayes and Ryan Spooner. Both are slated for arbitration hearings next week with Hayes scheduled for August 2nd and Spooner for August 4th.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
Jason Zucker Agrees To Terms On Five-Year Contract With Minnesota Wild
The Minnesota Wild and Jason Zucker have finally found some common ground, agreeing to terms on a five-year contract worth $27.5MM. Zucker was scheduled for arbitration on July 28th, but instead will be locked up at a $5.5MM cap hit for the next five seasons. The year-by-year breakdown is as follows:
- 2018-19: $5.0MM
- 2019-20: $6.25MM
- 2020-21: $4.8MM
- 2021-22: $6.25MM
- 2022-23: $5.2MM
Zucker, 26, experienced a breakout season at exactly the right time in his career to maximize his earning potential. After three strong but not outstanding campaigns, Zucker exploded for 33 goals and 64 points in 2017-18 while playing in all 82 games for the Minnesota Wild. Though some of that had to do with the success he found on the powerplay, Zucker still scored 25 goals at even-strength which tied him for 14th in the entire league alongside players like Tyler Seguin, Taylor Hall and Claude Giroux. With just one year remaining as a restricted free agent, the Wild needed to pay up to keep Zucker around or face a one-year arbitration decision and potentially losing him next summer to unrestricted free agency.
What they’ve accomplished by keeping Zucker’s cap hit to $5.5MM is potentially quite a bargain for the Wild, who could have one of the better even-strength producers in the league for a discounted price should he continue to play as well as he did last year. The five years at $5.5MM per season compares well with contracts like the ones given to Mika Zibanejad, J.T. Miller and even teammate Nino Niederreiter, none of whom have cracked 30 goals or 60 points in any season of their careers. While obviously each brings other talents to the table, Zucker should be able to easily produce enough to make the contract palatable as long as he doesn’t take a huge step backwards in the next few seasons.
That’s unlikely to really happen at any point in the contract given that the Wild have mostly locked up his late-twenties instead of early-thirties, giving them a chance to get out of the contract when a decline should be expected to start. Though they have other examples right in front of them like the continued brilliance of Eric Staal, the Wild haven’t taken on a ton of risk in this contract for Zucker, other than the fact they’re handing it out after a career season.
Still, there are some who might struggle to accept the offseason as a whole for Minnesota. After bringing in a new front office and GM with Paul Fenton, the team was expected to make some big changes to the core in order to try and go further in the playoffs and finally really compete for the Stanley Cup. Instead, they’ve handed out long-term contracts to Zucker and Mathew Dumba while failing to sign any real impact free agents outside of Greg Pateryn. With two big, long contracts still on the books with Ryan Suter and Zach Parise, the Wild will need some exceptional performances from some of their younger players while relying on repeat performances from Zucker and others.
Full 2018 Arbitration Hearing Schedule
Almost four dozen players decided to file for salary arbitration this summer, and while some of them have already been signed to contracts many others now know when their hearing will take place. The NHLPA released the full schedule of hearings, spread out from July 20th to August 4th. Remember that players can sign up until an arbitrator awards a contract, including in the short window after the hearing.
July 20
Jacob Trouba – Team filing: $4.0MM, Player filing: $7.0MM. Awarded one-year, $5.5MM contract.
July 23
Brett Kulak – Team filing: $650K, two-way contract, Player filing: $1.15MM, one-way contract. Awarded one-year, $850K contract.
July 24
Brandon Montour – Team filing: $1.5MM, Player filing: $4.5MM Settled before hearing, two years $6.775MM
July 30
Garnet Hathaway – Team filing: $650K, Player filing: $975K Settled before hearing, one-year $850K
August 1
Cody Ceci – Team filing: $3.35MM, Player filing $6.0MM. Awarded one-year, $4.3MM contract.
Gemel Smith – Team filing: two-way contract, Player filing: $900K. Awarded one-year one-way, $720K contract.
August 3
Mark Stone – Team filing: $5.0MM, Player filing $9.0MM Settled before hearing, one-year, $7.35MM
August 4
William Karlsson – Team filing: $3.5MM, Player filing $6.5MM
Minnesota Re-Signs Mathew Dumba To A Five-Year Deal
The Wild and defenseman Mathew Dumba have reached an agreement on a long-term contract just hours before they were set to exchange arbitration figures as the team announced that he has agreed to a five-year, $30MM contract. The deal breaks down as follows:
2018-19: $5.2MM
2019-20: $7.4MM
2020-21: $4.8MM
2021-22: $7.4MM
2022-23: $5.2MM
Michael Russo of The Athletic reports (subscription required) adds that the deal carries a modified no-trade clause in the final two years of the contract; he is ineligible for one in the first three.
The deal more than doubles his $2.75MM salary from last season that also represented his qualifying offer last month. It also makes him the third highest paid player on the team behind blueliner Ryan Suter and winger Zach Parise.
It would be tough to argue that he didn’t earn it, however, as he is coming off a stellar performance last season. Dumba played in all 82 games in 2017-18 and posted career highs in goals (14), assists (36), points (50), and average time on ice (23:49), numbers that are reflective of a legitimate top pairing defender. He followed that up with a pair of points in their opening round loss to Winnipeg although his playing time jumped to nearly 27 minutes a night.
Dumba, Minnesota’s first-round pick in 2012 (seventh overall), has been prone to some untimely giveaways over his first few NHL seasons but if he can maintain close to that level of production throughout the life of this deal, the Wild will certainly be willing to live with some of those mistakes as he is their best offensive threat from the back end.
The contract buys out the remainder of Dumba’s RFA years as well as a pair of UFA seasons but will also allow the soon-to-be 24-year-old hit the open market while still being in the prime of his career five years from now. In the meantime, the team now has their top pairing of Suter and Dumba locked up for the next five years.
With the signing, Minnesota now has just over $5.6MM in cap space to work with per CapFriendly. Most, if not all of that will be heading to RFA winger Jason Zucker who is coming off a career season that saw him record 33 goals and 31 assists. His arbitration hearing is scheduled for July 28th.
Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman was first to report (Twitter link) that the contract had been agreed upon. Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
Marc-Andre Fleury Signs Three-Year Extension With Vegas Golden Knights
Saturday: CapFriendly (via Twitter) provides a breakdown of the no-trade clause, noting that Fleury will be able to block a trade to ten teams each season.
Friday: The Vegas Golden Knights have locked up their goaltender, signing Marc-Andre Fleury to a three-year contract extension. Fleury still had one year remaining on his current contract, meaning this extension will kick in for the 2019-20 season. The deal will pay Fleury $21MM, and carry a cap hit of $7MM per season. It also includes a no-trade clause, though notably not a no-movement clause which was part of the reason Fleury ended up in Vegas in the first place. In the expansion draft process, teams were forced to protect players with no-movement clauses unless they agreed to waive it, something that Fleury did to help the Pittsburgh Penguins retain Matt Murray who would have been otherwise exposed. The Golden Knights won’t be in that same situation when the next expansion team comes around.
Instead, Fleury will continue to be the face of the NHL’s 31st franchise for a few more years. The 33-year old goaltender registered arguably the best season of his NHL career in 2017-18, when he fought through injury to lead the Golden Knights on a deep playoff run. In the regular season Fleury posted a .927 save percentage, the best full-season number of his career, and followed it up with the same number in the playoffs. That 20-game playoff run included four shutouts and just 47 goals allowed en route to a Stanley Cup Finals appearance in the franchise’ first season. Fleury is earning $5.75MM in the final year of his current contract but will get a healthy raise next year. Frank Seravalli of TSN gives us the yearly breakdown of the three-year extension:
- 2019-20: $8.5MM
- 2020-21: $6.5MM
- 2021-22: $6.0MM
Indeed there is more to Fleury than his on-ice performance. He, James Neal and Deryk Engelland were immediately raised up as the new faces of the Golden Knights organization, the first two for their star power and the latter for his ties to the community. Though that moniker may now be shifting to younger stars like William Karlsson, Jonathan Marchessault and Nate Schmidt, who broke out as legitimate stars this season, Fleury remains a big part of the marketing strategy for Vegas. His personality and charm have been raised up as something to celebrate for the Golden Knights, and with his healthy on-ice performance backing it up he has become an even bigger star than he was in Pittsburgh—despite having won three Stanley Cups with the Penguins.
That explains some of why the team gave him a huge raise, but this contract doesn’t come without concerns. The fact that Fleury had a career year for the Golden Knights helped them find great success, but it also likely means he won’t be able to replicate or improve on his numbers going forward. He’ll turn 34 before the first year of the extension kicks in, and 35 soon after it does. Goaltenders—especially elite ones—can often hold on to their peak performance longer than the average player, but with Fleury’s history of injury and already relatively long career there could be a big drop off coming. Fleury of course broke into the NHL at the age of 18 after being selected first overall and has already played in 737 regular season NHL games, good for 22nd all-time. Add in his 135 playoff contests (which rank sixth all-time) and he’s already played more than an entire career’s worth for many goaltenders.
The question then becomes does Vegas actually suffer financially if Fleury’s on-ice performance drops even somewhat. The $7MM cap hit would be incredibly difficult to swallow for many teams, but the Golden Knights are starting from nothing and have room to spare going forward. They’re still not close to reaching the salary cap ceiling in 2019-20, and can easily fit in an extension for Karlsson without trouble. The issue though comes on whether this is a model for sustained success. For all the Golden Knights accomplished this season, their prospect pipeline is still shallow despite some top-end names from the 2017 draft. After trading away several picks to add Tomas Tatar, they found themselves waiting until #61 to make a selection in 2018 and again until #99 to step up to the podium for a second time. Though they still have plenty of selections going forward, cap space and financial might was their biggest weapon in trade negotiations.
Fleury alone doesn’t remove that weapon, and in fact Vegas will still be able to hold some cap-pressed teams hostage if they want to. But with several of the moves over the last few months the team has come from one with almost no long-term money on the books, to one with quite a bit. A long-term deal for Karlsson, which will be buying out almost entirely free agent seasons will only increase the amount of future finances that are wrapped up, and limit their ability to weaponize that immense freedom and space.
Still, no one in Vegas is complaining today as they lock up one of their top performers. Without Fleury the Golden Knights may have been swept out of the playoffs early, and he certainly can provide plenty of experience and leadership during any potential struggles. The deal’s front-loaded nature would actually make it easier to move down the line if someone like Malcolm Subban takes a big step forward and assumes the starting role, and the team has more than enough room to handle it themselves. Still, Vegas has to be careful where they make their next few bets, or risk losing their house advantage.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Winnipeg Jets Sign Connor Hellebuyck To Six-Year Contract
One of the most important restricted free agents this summer for the Winnipeg Jets was goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, who broke out last season and helped carry the team deep into the playoffs. Hellebuyck has been signed to a six-year, $37MM contract ($6.167MM AAV) that will keep him in Winnipeg through the 2023-24 season.
The 25-year old goaltender completely revamped his offseason training a year ago, and it paid off with huge dividends for the Jets in the 2017-18 season. Registering a .924 save percentage and finishing second in Vezina voting as the league’s best goaltender, Hellebuyck’s play changed the entire plan in net for Winnipeg going forward. Last summer they had signed Steve Mason to a two-year $8.2MM contract in order to help solidify a position that they’d struggled with for years, and still had Michael Hutchinson waiting in the minor leagues for another opportunity. Now Hutchinson is off in Florida, Mason’s deal was traded and then bought out, and Hellebuyck is the goaltender of the present and the future for Winnipeg.
Hellebuyck’s success may not come as a surprise to those who have watched him for years. Unranked among North American goaltenders heading into the 2012 draft he was selected in the fifth round by the Jets as the first of two goaltenders they picked that year—Jamie Phillips, who recently signed an AHL contract with the Charlotte Checkers followed two rounds later. Hellebuyck immediately found success at the NCAA level, posting a 20-3 record for UMass-Lowell with a .952 save percentage. Despite his outstanding season the Jets still reached for a goaltender early in the 2013 draft, selecting Eric Comrie in the second round. Hellebuyck was still raw after all, and though he had all the size needed there were some that questioned whether his ability would continue at the next level.
After another great season in college, Hellebuyck jumped to the minor league ranks and again showed that he could dominate at that level. In two seasons in the AHL, he posted .921 and .922 save percentages and forced his way onto the NHL roster. Even then he’d start quickly, posting a .932 save percentage in his first ten NHL games including a shutout against the Pittsburgh Penguins in start #9. He looked like a future star even then, though perception swung on him in 2016-17.
Hellebuyck struggled for the Jets in that season, posting a .907 in 56 games and being a big part of why the team failed to reach the postseason. He faced real inconsistency for the first time and it wasn’t clear where his future was heading in Winnipeg. The Jets had never been able to find very reliable goaltending, and Hellebuyck looked like another candidate to disappoint. Not so fast though, as he bounced back and became one of the league’s elite starters this past season and is now being rewarded for his work. His new contract puts him among the upper group in the NHL goaltending fraternity, though still well behind established stars like Carey Price ($10.5MM AAV) and Henrik Lundqvist ($8.5MM AAV). Sergei Bobrovsky, who already carries a $7.425MM cap hit will likely push Price as the highest paid goaltender in the league on his upcoming contract, making Hellebuyck look like an even bigger bargain if he can continue to play like he did this season.
That’s the question for the Jets as they look to go deep in the playoffs once again. Without Mason or Hutchinson in the fold, the team brought in Laurent Brossoit as a potential backup for Hutchinson next year. Brossoit is not at a level where he can be expected to carry a contending team, meaning any struggles or injury from Hellebuyck would be devastating for the team. Comrie is still in the system but hasn’t developed as quickly as Hellebuyck, and can’t be relied upon at this point to make an impact at the NHL level.
The Jets have plenty of deals to work out as they lead the league in restricted free agents, but moving forward they should be expected to find a more stable backup for their star goaltender. Perhaps they believe Comrie or Brossoit can be that, but after investing so much in Hellebuyck with this contract they need to find some protection for him and a netminder they can reliably use to give him some rest. Hellebuyck played in 84 games (regular season and playoffs combined) last year, and may have to suit up a similar number in 2018-19.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Montreal Canadiens To Trade Max Pacioretty “As Soon As Possible”
There has been speculation around Montreal Canadiens captain Max Pacioretty for months, with a trade out of town being the most likely final scenario for the scoring winger. Recently though there had been some who wondered if the Canadiens would re-open talks for an extension, something that now appears completely off the table. Marc Antoine Godin of The Athletic (subscription required) has been told that the Canadiens will not negotiate a new contract with Pacioretty, and in fact intend to work out a trade “as soon as possible.” GM Marc Bergevin has in fact communicated that to his captain, though Pacioretty does not have any trade protection in his current contract.
That contract expires at the end of next season, and has vastly underpaid Pacioretty over its duration. Carrying a $4.5MM cap hit this year, the 29-year old forward would be welcome on almost any team in the league. Still, the Canadiens know that their best chance at a big return is if Pacioretty works out an extension right away with the acquiring team. That reportedly almost happened at the June draft, but a contract couldn’t be worked out with the Los Angeles Kings and instead Pacioretty changed agencies and signed with Allan Walsh of Octagon Hockey.
Walsh is the one who now will negotiate any extension, and one would have to believe that several teams who missed out on some of the bigger free agents will be inquiring on the five-time 30-goal scorer. San Jose, Dallas, Tampa Bay and Boston were all given the opportunity to sit down with John Tavares, and though Pacioretty is obviously a different talent there would likely be some crossover. It’s not just those squads that could use some added scoring punch though, something that the Montreal captain can still provide even despite his down season in 2017-18.
Pacioretty scored just 17 goals in 64 contests last season, but can be expected to improve on that number going forward. While a long-term deal may not turn out to be an exceptional value, it’s definitely a worthwhile risk for a player with his track record. The question now becomes what Montreal is looking for in return, and how an extension would change that ask. The Canadiens are still trying to compete right away as Carey Price enters his eight-year $84MM contract, but will have to seriously consider a package of young or future assets in exchange for their captain.
Nikita Kucherov Signs Eight-Year Extension
The Tampa Bay Lightning continue to lock up their stars, this time inking Nikita Kucherov to an eight-year extension. The deal was announced by Kucherov’s agent Dan Milstein of Gold Star Hockey on Twitter. The team then officially released the signing, announcing that the deal comes with an average annual value of $9.5MM. Stephen Whyno of the Associated Press has the full breakdown:
- 2019-20: $1.0MM salary + $11.0MM signing bonus
- 2020-21: $4.0MM salary + $5.0MM signing bonus
- 2021-22: $3.5MM salary + $8.5MM signing bonus
- 2022-23: $4.0MM salary + $5.0MM signing bonus
- 2023-24: $5.0MM salary + $5.0MM signing bonus
- 2024-25: $5.0MM salary + $4.0MM signing bonus
- 2025-26: $5.0MM salary + $3.0MM signing bonus
- 2026-27: $4.0MM salary + $3.0MM signing bonus
Kucherov, 25, is heading into the final year of his current contract and was scheduled to become a restricted free agent for the final time next summer. Instead, he’ll stay with the Lightning at a price that lets the team retain the rest of their core. Though $9.5MM will make Kucherov the highest-paid player on the Tampa Bay roster, it doesn’t cripple their ability to add more talent going forward. In fact, Chris Johnston of Sportsnet and Joe Smith of The Athletic both tweet that a Kucherov extension does not take the team out of the running for Erik Karlsson who is expected to sign a massive long-term extension with whichever team acquires him from the Ottawa Senators. The Lightning would need to move money out, but the team always expected to sign Kucherov to an expensive extension.
In fact, Tampa Bay looks like they’re in fine shape even with their newest extension. The team currently projects to have around $14MM in cap space next summer without factoring in any increase in the ceiling, and have only Brayden Point left as a key restricted free agent. Several names on the blue line will be expiring, but with the new deal for Ryan McDonagh the team has solidified their blue line without even addressing the Karlsson situation. In the 2020 offseason, when Andrei Vasilevskiy and Mikhail Sergachev will be looking for big raises, Ryan Callahan‘s $5.8MM contract will be coming off the books—provided it hasn’t already been traded away.
While handing out long-term extensions like this does put quite a bit of risk on the team’s shoulders, Kucherov is worth every ounce. The Russian winger has gotten off to a Hall of Fame-level start to his NHL career, scoring 334 points in 365 games including cracking 100 (exactly) in the 2017-18 season. An exceptional goal scorer and exquisite passer, Kucherov can create offense by himself or pair with Steven Stamkos as one of the most dynamic duos in the league. Not only does he have the ability to lead the league in scoring at any time, but he’s also received Selke votes twice as one of the league’s best defensive forwards. That’s not his calling card, but Kucherov is capable in nearly every facet of the game.
Kucherov only just turned 25 last month, meaning he’ll finish this extension at age-33. Even as he enters the middle of the deal and no longer provides excess value, the Lightning have players to pick up the slack. Despite trading two top prospects away for McDonagh at the deadline and not selecting in this year’s first round, Tampa Bay still has plenty of young names that will be graduating to the NHL in the coming seasons. Those players will become key if the Lightning and GM Steve Yzerman pursue Karlsson or any other big tickets, as they’ll have to move out some salary to make everyone fit. Fortunately for the club, other than Callahan there are few undesirable deals on the books for the Lightning. J.T. Miller, Tyler Johnson, Ondrej Palat and Alex Killorn all have their warts, but would likely all have suitors on the trade market if made available. That flexibility allows Yzerman to go after even bigger names, while retaining his homegrown stars for the prime of their careers.
Photo courtesy of USA today Sports Images
2018 Arbitration Tracker
The deadline to file for player-elected salary arbitration comes in at 4pm today, while the next day brings the deadline for team-elected filings. To understand the entire arbitration process, make sure you read Mike Furlano’s Capology 101 posts from 2016 on the process (part 1, part 2). Filing for arbitration also removes the opportunity for other teams to sign a player to an offer sheet.
Below, you can find a complete list of unsigned arbitration eligible players broken down by team, and their decisions as they come in. Refresh this page often as new information will be added as it comes in.
Anaheim Ducks
F Kalle Kossila
F Kevin Roy
D Andy Welinski
D Brandon Montour – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Arizona Coyotes
(none)
Boston Bruins
(none)
Buffalo Sabres
Calgary Flames
F Garnet Hathaway – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Mark Jankowski – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Elias Lindholm – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Brett Kulak – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
G David Rittich – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Carolina Hurricanes
F Greg McKegg
D Trevor van Riemsdyk – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration. Re-signed – two-years, $4.6MM
Chicago Blackhawks
(none)
Colorado Avalanche
F Matthew Nieto – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Patrik Nemeth – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Columbus Blue Jackets
Dallas Stars
F Gemel Smith – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Devin Shore – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Mattias Janmark – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Detroit Red Wings
F Andreas Athanasiou – Re-signed, two-years $6MM
F Matt Puempel
Edmonton Oilers
F Anton Slepyshev – Will not file, playing in KHL.
F Ryan Strome
Florida Panthers
F Curtis Valk
D MacKenzie Weegar – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Alexander Petrovic
Los Angeles Kings
Minnesota Wild
F Jason Zucker – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Mathew Dumba – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Montreal Canadiens
F Phillip Danault – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Joel Armia – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Nashville Predators
F Miikka Salomaki – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
New Jersey Devils
F Stefan Noesen – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Blake Coleman – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Nick Lappin
F Kevin Rooney
F Christoph Bertschy – Will not file, playing in NLA.
New York Islanders
F Ross Johnston
F Brock Nelson – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Devon Toews
New York Rangers
F Jimmy Vesey – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Ryan Spooner – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Boo Nieves
F Kevin Hayes – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Brady Skjei – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D John Gilmour
D Rob O’Gara
Ottawa Senators
F Mark Stone – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Cody Ceci – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Philadelphia Flyers
F Taylor Leier – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Tyrell Goulbourne
D Reece Willcox
G Alex Lyon – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration. Re-signed, two years, $1.5MM.
Pittsburgh Penguins
F Teddy Blueger
F Thomas DiPauli
D Jamie Oleksiak – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Ethan Prow
D Andrey Pedan – Will not file, playing in KHL.
San Jose Sharks
F Chris Tierney – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
St. Louis Blues
F Beau Bennett
F Dmitrij Jaskin – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration. Signed one-year, $1.1MM after deadline.
F Oskar Sundqvist – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration. Signed one-year, $700K after deadline.
D Joel Edmundson – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration.
D Jordan Schmaltz
D Petteri Lindbohm
G Jordan Binnington
Tampa Bay Lightning
F Cedric Paquette Re-signed one-year, $1MM contract.
Toronto Maple Leafs
F Miro Aaltonen – Will not file, playing in KHL.
Vancouver Canucks
D Troy Stecher – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Vegas Golden Knights
F Teemu Pulkkinen
F Tomas Nosek – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F William Karlsson – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Colin Miller – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Philip Holm
G Oscar Dansk
Washington Capitals
F Tom Wilson
F Liam O’Brien – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Winnipeg Jets
F Brandon Tanev – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F Adam Lowry – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
F J.C. Lipon
F Nicolas Kerdiles
F Marko Dano – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
D Tucker Poolman
D Jacob Trouba – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
G Connor Hellebuyck – Filed for player-elected salary arbitration
Carolina Hurricanes Sign Calvin De Haan
The Carolina Hurricanes, known for their depth and talent on defense, continue to surprisingly add top blue line names to the roster this off-season. After previously trading for right-handed scoring threat Dougie Hamilton, the team has reportedly agreed to a deal with arguably the top defender on the free agent market, left-landed shutdown defenseman Calvin de Haan. The Raleigh News & Observer’s Luck DeCock first reported that the team has signed de Haan to a four-year, $18.2MM contract – a $4.55MM AAV. The team confirmed the deal soon after.
De Haan, 27, was No. 9 on PHR’s Top 50 Free Agents List. Although he missed the majority of last season due to injury, de Haan has shown a high-end defensive ability in his pro career. The 12th overall pick in 2009 by the New York Islanders, de Haan has proven to be one of the best shot blockers in the NHL and an extremely reliable presence on the back end. Yet has has also improved his offensive production with each year, including a career-best scoring rate prior to his injury last season. While many may have balked at a $4.55MM value for de Haan in a vacuum, he is clearly superior to nearly every other defenseman in this free agent market.
Carolina is a surprise landing spot for the defensive standout though. De Haan’s arrival in Raleigh will only add to a formidable corps of rearguards that includes Hamilton, Justin Faulk, Jaccob Slavin, Brett Pesce, Trevor van Riemsdyk (an RFA), young pros Haydn Fleury and Roland McKeown, and elite prospects Jake Bean, Luke Martin, and Adam Fox. De Haan’s signing very well could be a sign of more changes coming in Carolina under new ownership and new GM Don Waddell.
