Utah Hockey Club defenseman Michael Kesselring Brett Holmes-USA TODAY Sports

The Utah Hockey Club has agreed to terms with defenseman Michael Kesselring on a two-year contract, the team announced Friday. Per Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff, the contract is worth $2.8M, which is good for a $1.4M cap hit.

Kesselring, 24, is coming off a strong rookie season that saw him post five goals, 16 assists, 21 points and a +11 rating with 66 PIMs on the Coyotes blue line. A sixth-round pick of the Oilers in 2018, Edmonton traded Kesselring to Arizona at the 2023 deadline as part of a deal for center Nick Bjugstad.

He was having a strong season with AHL Bakersfield at the time, racking up 13 goals and 22 points in 49 games. After his acquisition, he made his NHL debut with the Yotes. The South Carolina native played in nine games to close out 2022-23, recording his first three major league assists.

Kesselring checks a lot of boxes as a right-shot defender with physicality and size, as well as some offensive upside. He’s one of the bigger bodies on the Utah roster at 6-foot-4 and 190 lbs and was one of many pending restricted free agents who general manager Bill Armstrong needs to re-up this summer. NHL regulars Sean Durzi, J.J. Moser and Juuso Valimaki all still need new deals.

After producing at a 26-point pace with good possession metrics, $1.4M seems like a steal for his services, especially on a multi-year deal. Without much NHL experience to his name and virtually no special teams usage last season, though, he likely couldn’t have commanded much more. Evolving Hockey’s contract projection was in line with what Kesselring received in the end (two years, $1.353M AAV).

With Utah looking to add multiple defensemen on the UFA market this summer, Kesselring will likely slot into a third-pairing role again next season after averaging 15:48 per game in 2023-24. While his effectiveness higher up in the lineup is a question mark, he’s already shown the ability to crush bottom-pairing minutes.

Kesselring’s contract expires in 2026, but he will still have another year of team control and will be an arbitration-eligible RFA.

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