Would it surprise anybody if the Anaheim Ducks made substantial offers to both Mitch Marner and John Tavares?
Ducks GM Pat Verbeek already shook up the hockey barking chain with the Chris Kreider deal, and nobody believes for a second Verbeek is close to done. This is a team that thinks it has a shot at the playoffs next season, and you can start to see how Verbeek is addressing the areas that will help the team get there.
The Ducks were dead last on the power play last season, firing at a paltry 11.8%, and part of the solution here is bringing in Kreider, one of the finest on the man advantage. Marner helps here too, as well as on the PK, so this is an easy one to see coming. Would the Ducks interest Marner? No doubt they’ll be better, but how much? Does he want to be on a team that is close to the playoffs or close to a Stanley Cup? Does playing for Joel Quenneville move the needle for Marner?
As for Tavares, it sounds like he’ll have several teams interested in his services. He’s a talented, productive veteran who plays a power position, and if the reports and whispers out there have weight, and I believe they do, then come July 1 look for the Ducks to be one of the many calls should he make it to market. Sounds like he has a lot of fans in Orange County.
Speaking of Tavares, his camp already received a gift from the Colorado Avalanche with the Brock Nelson three-year, $22.5 million deal, and there won’t be a shortage of teams calling about his services. We wonder about teams like the Utah Mammoth, who have a slew of young forwards who would benefit from having a thoroughly respected pro around the group.
One final note about the Ducks: if he still wants to play – he said so before the Final – what are the chances Corey Perry finishes his career where it started?
Some food for thought about a debate that’s long over.
As much as the Florida Panthers look and play like an old-school team, they are more driven by their analytics department than most people give them credit for. On the surface, the story about the Panthers is hard work, grit, tenacity, compete and, make no mistake, they are all that, but pull back a layer and what you notice is a sea of numbers that justify each decision Bill Zito makes. None of this is done frivolously.
I asked a manager last week which teams rely on their analytics department most when it comes to roster construction and how much importance they put on the department. Number one should be obvious – the Carolina Hurricanes. But coming in at number two were the Panthers, who have demonstrated the ability to find players whose potential hasn’t yet been actualized based on underlying numbers. Think about everyone from Gustav Forsling to Seth Jones, Sam Bennett to Carter Verhaeghe. Do you think these players were acquired either by trade or waivers or free agent signing just on gut feeling? Or ‘eye test’? Not a chance.
If the Dallas Stars do end up moving Jason Robertson to recoup the capital they gave up in the Mikko Rantanen trade, what are the chances they try to bring in Brad Marchand to take that open roster spot? They did try to trade for Marchand at deadline, but it was never going to happen since the winger had decided on Florida. I don’t think Dallas revisiting their interest this offseason is out of the realm of possibility. Also, on Marchand – how many 37-year-old players get raises in today’s game? Marchand is about to, big time.
If you’re a Boston Bruins fan wondering what kind of coach Marco Sturm will be, I had a long talk last week with one of his former players with the Ontario Reign. The first thing out of his mouth – consistency. And for anyone who saw him on the ice, that is exactly the kind of player Sturm was: always giving an honest effort game in, game out. Sturm doesn’t expect excellence from every player every night, but he expects a consistent effort every night. He has a hard time understanding why players can’t hit that note day after day.
Sturm was also known to stay after practice on the ice to help certain players with individual skills no matter how tiny. Normally that’s an assistant coach’s role, but Sturm would often go the extra mile to get a player to another level of their game. Alex Turcotte and Samuel Helenius were two guys this former Reign player pointed to as being helped greatly by Sturm.
Asked about Sturm’s work with Quinton Byfield, the player said the coach gave him freedom and confidence, always making sure he knew Byfield was an NHL player.
Great text I got about Leon Draisaitl after he scored the overtime game winner in Game 4 of the Final from one of his former teammates with the Edmonton Oilers: “Admire 29’s ability to sneeze and score at the same time. The hand of God guides this man’s stick. And he’s so sassy doing it. The guy just sneezes a puck at the net. Everything on his banana blade just is a magnet to hell for goalies. He’s incredible.”
A magnet to hell for goalies. What a line.
One of the smartest things I saw at the NHL Draft Combine the week before last was Brady Martin consistently going out of his way to compare his game with Sam Bennett and Tom Wilson. First off, he’s not wrong, but most importantly this guy knows how to stick a wet finger in the wind and read what every GM wants right now.
Sticking with the combine, I had a few people wonder about changing how combine week is done. As it stands now, the week starts with player interviews and some of the top prospects going out to dinners every night with different suitors all the while thinking and stressing about the actual combine later in the week. A few people I spoke with wondered if it would be a better alternative if this was flipped with the prospects getting put through their tests early in the week when they’re at their freshest (and not full of steak + lobster), then spend the rest of the week talking to teams in a more relaxed atmosphere.
Here’s one of the more interesting interview moments at the combine. One of the teams painted an interesting scenario for the prospects holding up a picture of a person sitting on a chair in the middle of a field and asking the player to make up a story around how this person found themselves in this situation. Think about how you would answer that….as a 17-year-old.
With a Canadian team in the Stanley Cup final, I wish montage creator Tim Thompson was still involved in the broadcast…Just me or could you see Aaron Ekblad in a Mammoth uniform next season?…As I mentioned on Twitter Sunday night, expect the Niagara IceDogs to name former NHLer Krys Barch as their next head coach.
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The Hurricanes announced Thursday night that they’ve signed winger Jackson Blake to an eight-year, $45M extension that will kick in for the 2026-27. While that would normally mean an average annual value and cap hit of $5.625M, the actual cap hit of the contract will fall in the $5.1M range due to deferred compensation, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. The contract buys out the extent of Blake’s RFA eligibility and will make him a UFA following the 2033-34 season. Blake’s stock has been on the rise since immediately after Carolina selected him in the fourth round in 2021. He was a USHL All-Star in his post-draft season with the Chicago Steel before making the jump to NCAA hockey with North Dakota, where he totaled 102 points in 79 games in two seasons — earning a Hobey Baker finalist nod in his sophomore year. He signed his entry-level contract with the Hurricanes in April 2024 and joined them for the brief remainder of the regular season. In his first full pro season, Blake hit the ground running. He made the Canes out of camp and had five points through his first nine games despite seeing less than 12 minutes of ice time per night. That offense didn’t quite hold up the rest of the way, though. While he ended up seeing significant deployment alongside Sebastian Aho at even strength, he ended up finishing the year with a 17-17–34 scoring line in 80 games, finishing ninth on the team in scoring and ninth in Calder Trophy voting as the league’s Rookie of the Year. That’s fine production, especially considering he averaged under 14 minutes per game on the year. He’ll need to build on it to justify that cap hit, though, especially with so much risk attached to a max-term deal. The good news is that Blake has another year left on his entry-level contract to continue his development before he’ll need to start justifying that cap hit. The son of former NHLer Jason Blake turns 22 next month, yet with this deal, he’s guaranteed to surpass his dad’s career earnings. The Hurricanes have historically opted to sign their young players for as long and as early as possible, a trend that continues here. Sometimes, it’s paid off — their eight-year, $59.4M commitment to Seth Jarvis last offseason looks like a steal after he put up a repeat 67-point performance in 2024-25. There’s also the glaring example of where that strategy has failed regarding center Jesperi Kotkaniemi, whose $4.82M cap hit looks more stomachable now with a rising ceiling but is still well above his market value four years into the deal. The jury is still out on newly acquired Logan Stankoven, who they inked to an eight-year, $48M extension at the beginning of the month. Blake’s deal will be one of the last of its kind. It contains two elements — deferred compensation and an eight-year term — that will be outlawed when the new CBA Memorandum of Understanding takes effect on Sep. 15, 2026. If he waited until reaching RFA status next summer to sign, a lengthy negotiation could have lost him that eighth year if the two sides didn’t come to terms until the beginning of training camp. With the salary cap’s upper limit projected to reach $104M in 2026-27, the Hurricanes have around $16M in projected space with Blake’s and Stankoven’s deals taken care of. While they’re projected to be Carolina’s 11th- and 12th-highest-paid forwards on their opening night roster this season, they’ll be their fifth- and sixth-highest-paid forwards in 2026-27.
While the Seattle Mariners landed an impact bat on Thursday night, their trade for Josh Naylor has also likely impacted the entire upcoming MLB trade deadline. On Thursday, Seattle sent a pair of top pitching prospects to the Arizona Diamondbacks in exchange for Naylor, with left-hander Brandyn Garcia (ranked as Seattle's 13th-best prospect by MLB.com) and right-hander Ashton Izzi (ranked as Seattle's 16th-best prospect by the same rankings) heading to the desert. Knowing what the Diamondbacks received in exchange for Naylor could well set the market for what is to come between now and the conclusion of the 2025 MLB trade deadline, set for 6 p.m. (Eastern) on July 31. The 28-year-old first baseman was ranked by The Athletic as the 17th-best trade candidate likely to be available, but ranked behind just one other first baseman (Baltimore's Ryan O'Hearn, who was slotted in at 16th). If Naylor brought in a pair of pitching prospects, including Garcia, who has appeared in two games this season for Seattle, the Diamondbacks could be salivating over what third baseman Eugenio Suarez and his 36 home runs could bring in return. All MLB teams who will be buying or selling at this year's trade deadline have had the first price bar set for them with the Naylor deal. Now it will be fascinating to see what comes next, especially knowing that Naylor will be a free agent at the end of this season. If Seattle gave up two pitching prospects for a player who could be a late-season rental only, imagine what the Minnesota Twins may be able to recoup for starting pitcher Joe Ryan (under team control through the 2027 season) or the Boston Red Sox might get back for outfielder Jarren Duran, who won't be a free agent until the 2029 campaign. While Naylor may not be the biggest move to come during this span before the trade deadline comes to a close, his deal could be the one that establishes selling prices for the trades that are to come. With so few MLB teams expected to be outright sellers, the price for available talent was expected to be high. We learned on Thursday night with the Naylor swap just how high those prices may go.
Since taking over as the general manager of the Las Vegas Raiders, John Spytek and Raiders Head Coach, Pete Carroll, have emphasized how critical it will be for them to establish a new culture for their team. After years of subpar play, the Raiders needed to improve their culture equally as much as they needed to improve their roster. Spytek wasted no time significantly improving the Raiders' roster, adding Geno Smith and Ashton Jeanty this offseason. Although a culture change usually takes more than offseason, the Raiders may have expedited the process by releasing veteran defensive tackle Christian Wilkins. The organization and Wilkins were not on the same page in regard to his rehab, pushing the Raiders to make a drastic move. While drastic, the move appears to align with Spytek's intended composition of the Raiders' roster. At the NFL Combine months before Wilkins' recent release, the Raiders' general manager explained what he would take into consideration when assembling the Raiders' roster. While Spytek likely figured Wilkins would be part of the team at the time, his words rang true following the veteran defensive tackle's release. “I think we're going to have a lot of positive energy. The guys that love to compete and play with passion are going to have a chance at our place. And the guys that maybe don't have that love of the game, they like it, it's a means to an end, there probably won't be as many places or spaces for them at our place," Spytek said. "I think we want to set the tone with our film. When people watch a week or two out for our games coming, like they want to know, like this is going to be a battle, this is going to be physical, this is going to be old-school football." It is challenging to maintain positive energy when a player who has only played five games with the Silver and Black fails to uphold their end of a contract worth over $100 million. Shortly after releasing Wilkins, the Raiders issued the following statement. "We have decided that it is in the best interests of the organization to move on from Christian Wilkins. This franchise has a Commitment to Excellence on and off the field. With no clear path or plan for future return to play from Christian, this transaction is necessary for the entire organization to move forward and prepare for the new season." The Raiders' words spoke loudly enough, but they did not say nearly as loudly as the actual move of releasing Wilkins. Full details of why the Raiders decided to move on from Wilkins after just one season remain unclear, but one thing is clear: the Raiders' new-look front office means business. Find us on X (formerly Twitter) @HondoCarpenter and Instagram @HondoSr and weigh in on this take. While here, check out our Facebook page WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE to discuss this take
Several of the high-profile names of the 2024 free-agent class are really struggling to justify the massive contacts they received through the early stages of the 2025 season. Despite the generous contracts, some players have been very underwhelming after getting the big payday. In particular, these players who signed major deals are now playing on new teams or in new roles: Christian Wilkins — four-years, $110M with Raiders, now a free agent Kirk Cousins — four-years, $180M with Falcons, now a backup Bryce Huff — three-years, $51.1M with Eagles, now with 49ers Jonah Jackson — three-years, $51M with Rams, now with Bears Gabe Davis — three-years, $39M with Jaguars, now a free agent Gardner Minshew — two-years, $25M with Raiders, now with Chiefs Chidobe Awuzie — three-years, $36M with Titans, now with Ravens While certain free agents such as Saquon Barkley and Danielle Hunter have delivered massive returns on their contracts to the Eagles and Texans, respectively, these other big signings have taken a completely different trajectory. Whether it is due to injuries, underperformance or not fitting the schemes, these players have not lived up to their deals. Wilkins is a case in point. The Raiders decided to cut him after signing him to a four-year, $110M deal. He struggled with injuries that held him out in 2024, leading to the team and Wilkins disagreeing on how the injury has been handled. Because of this, the two split ways only one year into his contract. Huff only played in 12 games and had a total of 2.5 sacks for Philadelphia after inking a three-year, $51.1M deal. He was traded to the 49ers in June for a 2026 mid-round pick. Cousins might be the most egregious of these deals. The former Vikings QB signed a four-year, $180M, with $100M fully guaranteed. Yet, he only started 14 games in 2024, and now is the backup to Michael Penix Jr. The Falcons now are essentially stuck paying their backup quarterback an annual average of $45M. These signings highlight the risk of free agency. Paying top dollar for past performance runs the risk of overlooking team fit and future value of contracts. Too often, these high-profile veterans who get massive paydays decline very fast or simply fail to mesh with new systems. So far, these investments in 2024 appear to have aged very poorly. Unless these players turn their performances around in 2025, many of the teams will view these moves as a cautionary tale of overspending in free agency.