Daily Camera (Boulder)

Rangers get Trochek, Senators land Giroux

- The Associated Press

On a hectic afternoon in which Claude Giroux looked ahead to a homecoming in Ottawa, the Washington Capitals landed Stanley Cup-winning goalie Darcy Kuemper and the New York Rangers spent big on center Vincent Trocheck, Jaromir Jagr — remember him? — even wondered whether he could get in on the action.

In a message to NHL GMS on Twitter, Jagr wrote that he is a little slow at 50 but has strong hands, before closing his note with “Call me anytime,” followed by a winking emoji.

With all the moves and all the money being thrown around Wednesday in the opening hours of free agency, it would hard to blame Jagr for joking about the possibilit­y of returning for a 25th NHL season.

The slight, $1 million rise of the NHL salary cap to $82.5 million, coupled with numerous teams dumping or buying out contracts to free up payroll space, led to a rush of action once teams were allowed to begin signing players.

“It was a little bit expected because teams have had time to recover from the COVID pandemic,” said defenseman Ben Chiarot, who signed a $19 million, four-year contract with Detroit. “Players thought it would be better than in past years because teams are operating at a normal clip.”

The Red Wings were among the busier teams in general manager Steve Yzerman’s bid to end a sixyear playoff drought. Detroit also signed center Andrew Copp to a $28.125, five-year contract and left winger Dominik Kubalik for $5 million over two years.

Washington GM Brian Maclellan took particular notice of the Red Wings being one of the teams with cap space that capitalize­d on it.

“Detroit was really busy,” Maclellan said with a laugh. “It went real quick. I think you add another team and you got 32 teams competing for guys, it’s a competitiv­e environmen­t.”

The Capitals signed Kuemper to a $26.25 million, five-year contract. Kuemper, who had a career-best 37 wins last season, takes over after the Capitals moved on from llya Samsonov by not issuing him a qualifying offer and traded Vitek Vanecek to New Jersey.

Colorado also bid farewell to forward Andre Burakovsky, who signed a $27.5 million contract with the Seattle Kraken. The defending champions did resign forward Artturi Lehkonen and defenseman Josh Manson to long-term contracts.

Despite all the moves, much of the focus remained on where prized winger Johnny Gaudreau might land, on a day that also included a major trade involving defenseman Brent Burns.

The 2017 Norris Trophywinn­er is headed to the Carolina Hurricanes with forward Lane Pederson from the San Jose Sharks for two players and a 2023 third-round pick.

In addition to Gaudreau, who declined to re-sign with Calgary, Colorado’s Nazem Kadri, and the top defenseman available, John Klingberg, were still available by Wednesday evening.

Giroux’s signing in Ottawa was expected: General manager Pierre Dorion joked he couldn’t escape Senators fans asking: “When are you signing Claude?” Giroux, who played his junior hockey across the river from Ottawa in Gatineau, Quebec, signed a $19.5 million, three-year contract.

The 34-year-old Giroux brings veteran leadership to Ottawa’s mix of youngsters. He spent his first 14plus seasons in Philadelph­ia, where he served as the Flyers captain, before being traded to Florida in March.

“I wouldn’t sign here if I didn’t think we had a chance to win the Cup,” Giroux said.

“I’m not saying we’re going to win the Cup this year, but the plan is to build on it and have baby steps for that.”

Trocheck signed a $39.375 million, seven-year contract with the Rangers following Copp’s departure. The 29-year-old Trocheck has nine seasons of NHL experience, including two-plus years in Carolina, where he had 39 goals and 96 points in 135 games with the Hurricanes.

Trocheck is reunited with Rangers coach Gerard Gallant after the two were together in Florida.

“This was one of just a few teams that we really looked at and thought it was a good fit. So coming in, we knew that New York was probably our number one choice,” he said.

Besides Kuemper, the offseason-long goalie carousel saw Jack Campbell leave Toronto for a five-year, $25 million contract with Edmonton. Campbell cashed in after a season in which he had career highs in wins with a 31-9-6 record, five shutouts and 47 starts.

The Oilers are retooling after veteran Mike Smith’s playoff inconsiste­ncies contribute­d to the Oilers being outscored 22-13 in a sweep by Colorado in the Western Conference Final. Elsewhere:

— The Chicago Blackhawks finally began adding players by signing six players, including forwards Andreas Athanasiou and Max Domi to one-year, $3 million contracts.

The Blackhawks are in a full rebuild after trading center Kirby Dach to Montreal and forward Alex Debrincat to Ottawa and watching forward Dominik Kubalik leave for Detroit.

— The Buffalo Sabres added experience­d goaltendin­g depth by signing Eric Comrie to a two-year deal. The former Winnipeg backup will be in the mix to compete for playing time with veteran Craig Anderson and Ukko-pekka Luukkonen.

Buffalo also locked up one of its top offensive players by agreeing to re-sign Victor Olofsson to a two-year contract worth $9.5 million. Olofsson, who turns 26 next week, was a restricted free agent and scored 20 goals and a career-best 49 points last season.

— The New Jersey Devils traded forward Pavel Zacha to Boston for center Erik Haula. The move balances out the Devils’ lineup with New Jersey in the mix to land Gaudreau. clusive negotiatin­g rights, Macfarland got restricted free-agent forward Artturi Lehkonen to sign a five-year, $22.5 million contract.

Lehkonen and the Avs were in no hurry to bind themselves with a contract, but Macfarland and company got the job done — a pattern this club establishe­d in 2017 after Colorado finished last in the league with 48 points.

The Avs, who also resigned pending unrestrict­ed free agents Andrew Cogliano and Jacob Macdonald and acquired goalie Alexandar Georgiev from the Rangers last week, have done well working to keep their championsh­ip combinatio­n together. And they’re not done trying.

They might yet

Kadri soon.

“Never say never but we’ve got nothing on the front burner as we speak,” Macfarland said.

Six potential flight risks have been signed and only four were lost to other teams Wednesday. Goalie Darcy Kuemper went to Washington and forwards Andre Burakovsky, Nicolas Aube-kubel and Nico Sturm went to Seattle, Toronto and San Jose, respective­ly.

The only major newcomer thus far is Georgiev and the Avs still have approximat­ely $5 million of cap space to potentiall­y help bring back Kadri. Trading an existing player to free up cap space land would likely have to happen to keep Kadri in Colorado at $7 million or more per year.

Macfarland’s first day of free agency as a general manager was undoubtedl­y a success based on the retention of Stanley Cup winners — particular­ly Manson and Lehkonen. They both were acquired ahead of the trade deadline in March and both played huge roles in Colorado’s Cup run.

The Avs gave up their top-two defensemen prospects for Manson and Lehkonen, but in review, they were great trades because both are locked in for at least four years. They will not go down as tradedeadl­ine rentals.

“When we made the trade for Josh Manson we gave up some futures in terms of a good young prospect (Drew Helleson to Anaheim), and Lehkonen similar (Justin Barron to Montreal) and to be able to bring both those guys back (is great). It was important for us to bring those guys back for a variety of reasons,” Macfarland said. “No. 1, they’re good hockey players. They’re great people. And they helped make us better.

“So that was always part of the plan. Obviously, Josh had the UFA card, but I think Josh showed on the ice how important he was and he wanted to come back. So that was was really vital.”

Macfarland gets an “A” for his efforts this week. If he brings back Kadri, he might follow Sakic as GM of the year by this time next year.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Carolina Hurricanes center Vincent Trocheck skates back to the bench after scoring on New York Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin during the second period of Game 6of a second-round playoff series in New York. President and General Manager Chris Drury announced Wednesday that the team has agreed to terms with Trocheck on a seven-year contract.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Carolina Hurricanes center Vincent Trocheck skates back to the bench after scoring on New York Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin during the second period of Game 6of a second-round playoff series in New York. President and General Manager Chris Drury announced Wednesday that the team has agreed to terms with Trocheck on a seven-year contract.
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