The Prince George Citizen

Nylander, Leafs beat deadline with deal

- John CHIDLEY-HILL

TORONTO — If William Nylander ever decides to give up his hockey career he might consider a move to Las Vegas.

“I haven’t played that much poker but maybe I should give it a try,” said Nylander with a laugh on Monday night, two days after the 22-year-old winger re-signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs, ending a months-long contract holdout that sometimes resembled a highstakes game of Texas hold ’em.

Nylander and Maple Leafs general manager Kyle Dubas agreed to a six-year deal that carries an annual average value of US$6.9 million less than an hour before Saturday’s 5 p.m. ET deadline. Dubas filed the official paperwork with the NHL and players’ associatio­n with minutes to spare, officially ending the impasse.

“If I’m sitting here right now saying that with 45 minutes left and he’s not signed that I had no concern, then I’m a liar,” said Dubas, laughing. “Yes, there was concern.”

Nylander’s entry-level contract expired on July 1 and negotiatio­ns stretched through the summer and into the season, ultimately forcing him to miss a third of Toronto’s 2018-19 campaign. Although the two sides had been in regular contact, things didn’t get moving until the 11th hour when Nylander called Dubas to get a deal done.

“It was getting into the last 40 minutes before the deadline and I was talking to my agent and I said ‘let’s just call him,’ and I think that phone call really got everything done,” said Nylander.

Nylander is coming off back-toback 61-point seasons, including 20 goals and 41 assists in 2017-18. The Calgary-born Swede has 48 goals and 87 assists for 135 points in 185 career games. He also has two goals and six assists in 13 post-season appearance­s.

Coming into this season, he was considered a top-six forward for the Maple Leafs. But Toronto has thrived without him, compiling a 19-8-0 record that puts it near the top of the Eastern Conference standings.

His teammates, who were in St. Paul, Minn., to play the Wild on Saturday night, anxiously watched the deadline approach.

“I was checking my Twitter feed probably every 15 seconds, that’s for sure,” said Kasperi Kapanen, who was Nylander’s roommate last season. “Obviously kind of went down to the wire there and I was getting nervous a bit but once it was done it was a good feeling.”

Nylander’s return raises two important questions for the Leafs.

The first is an immediate one: what line will he play on now that he’s back? Kapanen has stepped up in his absence and been effective on a line with Auston Matthews and veteran Patrick Marleau, putting away 10 goals and eight assists in 27 games, all career highs.

Head coach Mike Babcock was tight-lipped with media about his line combinatio­ns on Monday.

“Good question,” said Kapanen when asked about a possible line change. “Nothing for sure right now. Obviously, the team’s been playing well and we’ve got to stay focused on what we’re doing right now and keep playing.”

The second question is a financial one, as Nylander’s signing makes for a potentiall­y difficult situation for Dubas as he tries to fit his young stars’ salaries under the league’s hard salary cap.

Matthews, who won the 2017 Calder Trophy as the NHL’s rookie of the year, Kapanen, and Mitch Marner, who leads the team with 38 points (six goals, 22 assists) are all due to become free agents at the same time. That is on top of superstar forward John Tavares’s seven-year deal worth $11 million per season that was signed this past summer.

“We’ve already begun those conversati­ons and we’ll continue them with the ambition of having them concluded as soon as possible,” said Dubas.

Toronto plays in Buffalo tonight. Nylander wasn’t sure if he would be ready to join the team on Thursday in Detroit or on Saturday in Boston. NHL dealing with issues while giving Seattle a nod

SEA ISLAND, Ga. (AP) — The NHL is dealing with some uncertain situations as it prepares to finalize expansion to Seattle.

The Ottawa Senators’ downtown arena project is in danger of falling apart, and Arizona Coyotes owner Andrew Barroway is looking for a partner as he tries to secure a long-term home in the desert. Meanwhile, the league would like to begin making plans for a 2020 World Cup of Hockey but has no guarantee of labour peace that would allow such a tournament to take place.

Commission­er Gary Bettman updated the Board of Governors on those topics Monday on the eve of the vote that’s expected to award Seattle the league’s 32nd franchise. The team would begin play in the 202122 season, a year after original plans because arena renovation­s aren’t scheduled to be finished until the fall of 2020.

Bettman says the salary cap is projected to go up to roughly $83 million next season, up from the current $79.5 million limit.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Toronto Maple Leafs forward William Nylander smiles as he speaks to the media regarding his new contract with the team on Monday in Toronto.
CP PHOTO Toronto Maple Leafs forward William Nylander smiles as he speaks to the media regarding his new contract with the team on Monday in Toronto.

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