Waterloo Region Record

NHLers following NBA path in picking locations

- Stephen Whyno The Associated Press

Kevin Shattenkir­k could have gotten more money but took less to join the New York Rangers.

Joe Thornton could have gotten a multiyear deal from someone but wanted to stay with the San Jose Sharks.

Brian Campbell and Patrick Sharp could have gotten more money the past two summers but took the Chicago discount to return the Blackhawks.

The National Hockey League is becoming more like the National Basketball Associatio­n with top players forgoing longer, big-money contracts to pick their preferred destinatio­n, a trend that has added a new wrinkle to free agency.

“It’s their opportunit­y to go to where they want to go and sometimes you might have to take a little bit less money to go there,” Dallas Stars general manager Jim Nill said. “Do you want to go to a good team? Is it a city you want to go to? Is it where your family wants to be?”

Shattenkir­k is not exactly LeBron James, but the New Rochelle, N.Y., native filled that role on Saturday when he turned down offers of seven years and over $30 million to sign with the Rangers for $26.6 million over just four years.

The 28-year-old defenceman felt like it may be his only opportunit­y to “fulfil a lifelong dream” and wants to help pull off what LeBron did in Cleveland.

“No matter where you go, you’re trying to win your team a Stanley Cup,” Shattenkir­k said. “There’s no better place to try to do it for me than in New York.”

The NHL’s hard salary cap and players re-signing to so many long-term deals means super teams like in the NBA won’t happen.

But where and who matters more and more to hockey players than simply how much and for how long.

Thornton had more than half the 31-team league reach out to sign him at age 38 and signed for $8 million for one year because he simply wanted to stay in San Jose.

“It was nice getting courted by all these teams, and I felt bad saying, ‘Hey I’m going back to San Jose,’ but that’s where my heart is and that’s where I’m happy,” Thornton said.

Likewise, Sharp couldn’t pass up going back to Chicago where he was part of three Stanley Cup teams, even if his contract is worth just $850,000 with performanc­e bonuses. Sharp said he was “coming back to make some more great memories and try to help this team win another Stanley Cup,” which Campbell tried last off-season, too.

Familiarit­y with Nashville and coach Peter Laviolette led Scott Hartnell to return to the Predators one a $1 million, one-year deal, after playing his first six NHL seasons with them.

Executives around the league don’t begrudge players for making personal choices.

“Players have priorities on where they want to play: family reasons, where teams are, whether they’re on the verge of winning a Stanley Cup or a rebuilding situation,” Buffalo Sabres GM Jason Botterill said. “I think that happens every year.”

Some money factors could play a role, such as Alexander Radulov making more in Dallas than he would have earned on the same, exact contract in Montreal or Vegas, Tampa Bay and Florida having a leg up in states with no income tax. But the Stars wouldn’t have attracted Radulov if they weren’t contenders.

“Trying to win is a huge component to players picking places,” said veteran winger Chris Kunitz, who won the Cup three times with the Penguins and signed with the Lightning.

“I think we’re all pretty fortunate in what we do, but we also want to go out there and compete and have a chance to win,” he added.

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