Owen Power Eric Hartline-USA TODAY Sports

The Buffalo News' reporter Lance Lysowski relayed on Wednesday that Buffalo Sabres GM Kevyn Adams has expressed to the agents of Owen Power and Rasmus Dahlin that the team would like to sign both defensemen long term. The Sabres have been aggressive in locking up their young core to long term deals and this development would keep in line with that gameplan. Both players have a year left on their respective contracts and would be restricted free agents in 2024, albeit with much different degrees of bargaining power.

Dahlin will be completing a three-year bridge contract. Since his contract was backloaded, he will carry a qualifying offer of $7.2M. The former first overall pick could simply accept the one-year deal and march into unrestricted free agency in the summer of 2025.

For his part, Power will have just completed his two-year entry-level contract and would only be due a qualifying offer just under $875K. He would also be ineligible for an offer sheet since he wouldn’t have enough service time to qualify as a Group 2 RFA. This could make for an interesting negotiation, one which might keep the average annual value down.

Dahlin is coming off a career season in which he put up 15 goals and 58 assists in 78 games. He had teased his offensive prowess in recent seasons but this was the first in which he was finally able to break through and produce like an elite offensive defenseman. The 23-year-old Swede -- along with Power -- led a defensive unit that backed the Sabres to their highest point total since 2010-11, also the last time the club made the playoffs.

Power just completed his first full NHL season and ranked second in 5-on-5 ice time per-game-played (19:46) among all NHL skaters. On the offensive side, he posted four goals and 31 assists in 79 games while helping to spark the Sabres second defensive pairing. He played a little over half of the power-play time of Dahlin and only managed eight assists on the man advantage. Should Power see more time on the power-play, he could see a large uptick on his point totals.

While there is an element of risk in any extension the Sabres have not shied away from taking the plunge. When Buffalo signed Tage Thompson to a seven year $50M contract extension last August, many felt that they had rushed to judgment and could end up with a bloated overpay. Thompson followed up his new contract with a second straight career year, though, finishing with 94 points in 78 games.

One could see similar risk upsides for Power, who has played just a single full NHL season. Meanwhile, Dahlin has demonstrated a half decade of impressive play and appears to only be getting better.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Historic NCAA settlement reached allowing schools to pay players
Celtics dominate Pacers in Game 2, take 2-0 ECF lead
Cavaliers fire head coach J.B. Bickerstaff
Connor McDavid's 2OT goal gives Oilers win over Stars in Game 1
Rob Manfred hints at big change coming to MLB
Scottie Scheffler arrest case takes another weird turn with new video
QB Russell Wilson believes Steelers can 'do something special'
Pacers star suffers injury in ugly Game 2 loss
Watch: Jaylen Brown's big second quarter lifts Celtics to halftime lead
Broncos HC Sean Payton raves about one QB's progress at OTAs
North Carolina basketball snags instant-impact player via transfer portal
Rams GM shares details about Stetson Bennett’s absence
Perpetual Bulls trade candidate once more hitting the rumor mill
MLB announces host venues for 2026 World Baseball Classic
Knicks marquee trade acquisition could bolt in free agency
Pistons make decision on new president of basketball operations
ESPN and longtime NFL reporter are parting ways
If Lions HC Dan Campbell's assessment of WR is accurate it could mean trouble for opponents
NBA closes investigation into embattled Thunder guard
NFL reporter predicts Cowboys' plan for QB Dak Prescott

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.