Chattanooga Times Free Press

Blue Jackets center of attention

- BY JOHN WAWROW

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Where many express concern, Jarmo Kekäläinen said he sees only opportunit­y regarding the uncertain state of the Columbus roster a week before NHL free agency.

To Kekäläinen, the fear of possibly losing stars such as Matt Duchene, Artemi Panarin and goalie Sergei Bobrovsky on July 1 is offset by the knowledge that their departures would open significan­t space under the salary cap.

That would put the Blue Jackets general manager in prime position to fill those holes through trades or free agency at a time when the newly announced $81.5 million payroll maximum for next season is forcing various cap-strapped teams to shed salary.

“I think every $100,000 or every $1,000 counts at this point for some teams that are going to be squeezed,” Kekäläinen said shortly after the new cap number — $1.5 million lower than initially projected — was announced. “They’re going to have to sell their problems. We could be a solution.”

Kekäläinen won’t rate the Blue Jackets’ chances of re-signing one or all three players.

“I’m sure we’ll get some answers shortly if it starts looking like they’re moving into another direction. But we thought this could happen,” he said, referring to the bold gamble Columbus made in choosing to acquire Duchene in a trade with Ottawa and retain Panarin and Bobrovsky at the trade deadline in February knowing they were in the final years of their contracts.

“If it happens, we’re not going to be shocked,” Kekäläinen added. “If it is the case, then we just move forward with what we have and start building other ways.”

The 27-year-old Panarin is considered the top free agent on the market. The NHL’s 2016 rookie of the year has topped 70 points in each of his four seasons and scored 116 goals in 322 career games. Duchene, a center, has topped 20 goals seven times in 10 seasons and is coming off a year in which he had a career-best 31 goals.

And then there is the 30-year-old Bobrovsky, a two-time Vezina Trophy-winner. The Blue Jackets could also lose center Ryan Dzingel, whom they acquired in a separate trade with Ottawa.

Other notable free agents set to hit the market are San Jose captain Joe Pavelski, Winnipeg defenseman Tyler Myers and Toronto defenseman Jake Gardiner.

The list of top-end talent has dwindled with Erik Karlsson re-signing with San Jose, forward Jeff Skinner re-signing with Buffalo and Philadelph­ia acquiring and signing center Kevin Hayes.

According to Spotrac. com, only nine of 31 teams are projected to be $20 million or more under the cap, led by Colorado at $35.5 million. At the other end of the spectrum is Vegas, currently projected to be $1.6 million over the cap, and will have to be in compliance by the start of the season in October.

Some teams may resort to the rarely used option of poaching from the restricted free agent pool. This would require a team issuing an offer sheet, which would lead to the player’s team having to decide to match the offer or receive draft picks as compensati­on.

Calgary, in 2013, was the last team to issue an offer sheet in a bid to acquire then-Avalanche center Ryan O’Reilly, only to have Colorado match the contract.

Speculatio­n has focused on talented Maple Leafs forward Mitchell Marner being a candidate to receive an offer sheet, something Toronto GM Kyle Dubas acknowledg­ed without committing to whether the team would match it.

“It’s kind of hanging over everything now,” Dubas said last week. “It’s our intention they’re here for as long as we can possibly keep them. But if the dollar amount doesn’t make sense as far as our internal economics, it will be a decision as to what we might do.”

The Maple Leafs are at least better positioned to re-sign Marner after freeing up $6.2 million of cap space by trading veteran forward Patrick Marleau to Carolina over the weekend. Cap constraint­s were behind the Nashville Predators’ decision to trade P.K. Subban to New Jersey, with the Devils easily affording the play-making defenseman’s $9 million annual cap hit over the final three years of his contract.

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