Lethbridge Herald

Lots of dominos to fall in NHL free agency

- Stephen Whyno THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The first big free agent re-signing with his own team is just the beginning of what’s to come around the NHL.

Defenceman John Carlson signed a $64million, eight-year deal with the Stanley Cup champion Washington Capitals. His agent and the representa­tives for other pending unrestrict­ed free agents were able to start talking to any interested teams on Sunday at the beginning of the negotiatin­g window that precedes the opening of the market July 1.

Serious talks between New York Islanders centre John Tavares and five suitors began Monday in what should be the next step in shaking out signings and trades.

“There’s going to be a lot happening,” Chicago Blackhawks general manager Stan Bowman said Saturday in Dallas.

“Things have sort of been at a standstill around the league, but I think with the free agent market being opened up to be able to have discussion­s with the agents, that will help, as well. Once you talk, you have an idea that you’re going to be able to get a free agent or if you won’t, then it might sort of move some teams to start looking at potential trades.”

Only a handful of current NHL players were traded over the weekend at the draft: four in a swap between Carolina and Calgary, and Washington sending two to Colorado to clear salary-cap space to resign Carlson. Montreal could still try to trade captain Max Pacioretty this week, and Hurricanes GM Don Waddell wants to make a move for a goaltender and said there’s a lot of interest in winger Jeff Skinner.

“We have a lot of other possibilit­ies, pieces to move around,” Waddell said.

Tavares headlines this free-agent class and his decision — reportedly among the Sharks, Maple Leafs, Stars, Bruins, Lightning, incumbent Islanders and perhaps a few more teams — could set up the rest of the market.

Paul Stastny is the next-best free agent centre available followed by the likes of Tyler Bozak, Derek Ryan and Tomas Plekanec. Teams that don’t land one of them could turn to Buffalo’s Ryan O’Reilly, who may be a better candidate to be traded July 2 after the Sabres pay him a $7.5-million bonus.

At $8 million a year, Carlson ties Brent Burns for the second-highest cap hit in the league among defenceman behind only P.K. Subban’s $9 million with Nashville. Agent Rick Curran fielded calls from other teams Sunday before the deal got done with the Capitals.

“Whatever your intentions are, you still have to do your due diligence because there’s more to it for me than that,” Carlson said Monday in Arlington, Virginia. “I was hoping we could get something done and it worked itself out.”

The Sharks are worth watching after they shed Mikkel Boedker’s $4-million salary to clear cap space and watched as Ilya Kovalchuk signed with Los Angeles on a three-year, $18.75-million deal.

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