The Telegram (St. John's)

Making a sacrifice

Mats Sundin not surprised Maple Leafs asking stars to take less money to stay together

- BY JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Mats Sundin isn’t surprised the Toronto Maple Leafs are asking their young stars to make a financial sacrifice to stay together.

The way the team’s former captain sees it, that’s simply the nature of the business.

“I think (it happens) in every negotiatio­n for all players in the league,” Sundin said with a grin at an NHL Alumni Associatio­n event Monday night.

But the salary cap crunch the Leafs could face if Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner and William Nylander all max out their dollar value is no laughing matter.

In a somewhat unusual public declaratio­n earlier this month, Leafs president Brendan Shanahan indicated the team would request that the talented forwards take less money on their next deals in order to fit everyone under the cap.

Nylander, a restricted free agent, is currently mired in a contract impasse that dragged through the summer, into training camp and is now approachin­g the 10-game mark of Toronto’s season.

The 22-year-old winger, who is coming off back-to-back 61point campaigns, and the Leafs are reportedly as much as Us $2million apart on a long-term deal, with Nylander’s camp thought to be asking for around $8 million annually and Toronto countering in the $6-million range.

Matthews and Marner, both 21, can become restricted free agents next summer and are also in talks with the team on new contracts that, barring something unforeseen, will exceed whatever Nylander eventually gets.

“For Nylander and the Maple Leafs, you hope that the whole situation’s going to settle,” said Sundin, who played 13 seasons in Toronto. “(The Leafs) have a great, young group of players right now that are going to be able to compete and be one of the best teams in the league for a long time.

“Hopefully he can join the team and they can settle that.”

NHL Alumni Associatio­n executive director Glenn Healy said the comments made by Shanahan, who referenced that he and a number of star players with the Detroit Red Wings took less money to stay together during their championsh­ip years, needs to be put in proper context.

“I would say this: When Brendan played, there was no salary cap. So there was no taking less, you just took what you got, you took what the club budgeted,” said Healy, who played goalie in the NHL for 15 seasons. “It’s a different world now.

“We didn’t have a salary cap back then. We had, ‘Take what you were worth.”’

And what advice would Healy give a player in Nylander’s position today?

“I would never say, ‘Take less than you’re worth,”’ he said. “Take more than you’re worth. “Set the bar high.” Sundin, who now lives back home in Sweden with his wife and three children, was in Toronto for the NHL Alumni Associatio­n’s gala celebratio­n where he was one of threes recipients of the Keith Magnuson Men of the Year Award along with countrymen Niklas Lidstrom and Borje Salming.

Now 47, Sundin said he’s been keeping a close eye on the Leafs, who started the season with big expectatio­ns after signing John Tavares in free agency. Sundin scored 564 goals and added 785 assists for 1,349 points in 1,346 career games with the Leafs, Quebec and Vancouver.

 ??  ?? Sundin
Sundin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada