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Free-agent focus for Utah Mammoth
Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Free agency is now under a month away, and teams are looking ahead to when it opens. There will be several impact players set to hit the open market in July, while many teams also have key restricted free agents to re-sign. We continue our look around the NHL with an overview of the free agent situation for the Mammoth.

Key Restricted Free Agents

F Jack McBain – The sole season of the Utah Hockey Club’s existence will go down in NHL history – and near the top of the list of cult players will be Jack McBain. He continued to fill the important, impactful role in Utah’s bottom-six that he’s become known for over the last four seasons, but managed the best results yet. McBain scored a career-high 13 goals and 27 points while appearing in all 82 games of the season this year. The performance just narrowly usurps his 26 points career-high from each of the last two seasons. He also set a career-high in penalty minutes (78) and matched his personal-best plus-eight. McBain is only four seasons, and 241 games, into his NHL career – but it’s so far been marked by imposing, physical play and few costly mistakes. He’s likely on his way to earning a commendable deal, and stamping his place in the early days of Utah’s franchise, with a new contract this summer.

F Kailer Yamamoto – Utah’s only other RFA to play in NHL games this season is winger Kailer Yamamoto. He joined the Hockey Club on a one-year, two-way, league-minimum contract last summer, and earned an AHL assignment just a few weeks into the regular season. He went on to play in his first AHL games since the 2019-20 season and performed brilliantly. All of Yamamoto’s quick pace and jerky dekes translated to the minor flight. He led the Tucson Roadrunners in scoring for much of the season, and finished the year with 20 goals and 56 points in 54 games. That strong scoring earned Yamamoto 12 total appearances in the NHL before the year’s end, though he was only able to muster two goals and three points in those games. After a 2017 first-round selection, and years of questions, it seems Yamamoto’s style is set. He’s a dazzling minor-league scorer, who struggles to carry his flash to the top flight. A new contract should reward him as such, though Yamamoto is still a great asset to have in the pipeline.

Other RFA: D Montana Onyebuchi

Key Unrestricted Free Agents

F Nick Bjugstad – The 2023-24 season was the first of Bjugstad’s tenure in the Arizona, or Utah, pipeline – and it was marked by an incredible return to productivity. He scored 22 goals and 45 points in 76 games – the most he had scored since he potted 49 points in the 2017-18 season. It was an impressive performance that earned Bjugstad routine run with Utah’s second-line. But he fell back to Earth this year, and finished the season with just 19 points and 12 minutes of average ice time through 66 appearances. At a glance, it seems the curtains are beginning to close on Bjugstad’s fantastic, 12-year career through the NHL. But his veteran presence and potential to catch a scoring groove will still be coveted. Even 30 points would be enough to make him a worthwhile addition. Utah’s optimism that he can reach that mark will likely define whether he ends his career as a Mammoth, or with another move.

F Michael Carcone – Carcone played through his second full-time role in the NHL this season. He’s worked his way up through eight seasons in the minor leagues, where his hard-nosed presence and ability to drive a line was consistently challenged and proven. He’s carried those traits onto Utah’s fourth-line over the last two seasons. He scored 21 goals and 29 points in 74 games of last season, and a much more manageable seven goals and 19 points in 53 games this year. Those numbers don’t jump off the page – but they do equate to a yearly average of 18 goals and 31 points per season, when adjusted to a full 82-game pace. That’s a much more commendable mark, and there’s a good possibility that it earns Carcone a return to Utah’s fourth-line with a minimal-cost contract next season.

F Egor Sokolov – Sokolov will enter free agency as a Group 6 UFA this summer, earning the right to unrestricted negotiations after only appearing in 13 NHL games over the last four seasons. Every one of those appearances came in an Ottawa Senators jersey, and Sokolov only managed one goal and one assist to show for it. But he’s found a strong groove in the minors over the last two seasons – netting 46 goals in 71 games with the AHL’s Belleville Senators last year, and 44 points in 72 games with Tucson this year. He looked controlled and aggressive for mcuh of the year, but was also consistently planted as Tucson faced barrages from opponents. He’s in desperate need for a more defense-oriented style. At only 25 years old, he could still add those components in. If he does, he’ll have the size and scoring consistency to push for a hardy NHL role. That fact could make him worth locking up on a cheap, multi-year deal before July 1st.

D Robert Bortuzzo – While Bjugstad eyes retirement on the horizon, Bortuzzo could come face-to-face with it this summer. To say his role in Utah was minimal may be an understatement. He appeared in just 17 games on the season, and averaged fewer than 11 minutes of ice time. His absences were generally the result of a lower-body injury that held him out for all but two games after December 11th. But his on-ice impact is slowing down as well, and it seems Bortuzzo could soon be pushed to end his career at 577 games played, 76 points scored, and one Stanley Cup won. If he’s convinced to play for one more year, it will be in the role of seventh-defender for a team in need for a feisty and physical depth piece.

Other UFAs: F Travis Barron, F Sammy Walker, F Cameron Hebig, D Patrik Koch

Projected Salary Cap

Utah has absolutely minimal to worry about as the summer approaches. McBain stands as the only must-sign option among their pending free-agents, and the rest of the lot could be had for a very miniscule total. That means they’ll be able to dedicate the vast majority of their $20.36MM in projected cap space towards building the roster up this summer. The Mammoth finished the season just eight points out of a playoff spot, and could find the pieces needed to regain ground with one or two exciting additions this summer.

This article first appeared on Pro Hockey Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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