Daily Press

Faces look familiar, locations do not

- By John Wawrow

Jeff Skinner was enjoying an afternoon in his parents’ backyard when suddenly the Sabres forward thought his father was pulling an April Fools’ joke on him in mid-September.

“My dad came out and told me that Eric Staal is on our team,” Skinner said upon learning the Sabres had acquired his former Hurricanes teammate in a trade with the Wild. “I first thought he was joking.” He wasn’t.

The Sabres’ addition of Staal was completed before the Stanley Cup was even awarded, and it wasn’t the most high-profile move made over the last four months.

But it was among the first of many trades and free-agent signings involving some of the league’s more notable players changing teams during a most unusual offseason. The draft was held in October, training camps opened in late December and the league is preparing to embark on a 56-game shortened season with four realigned divisions — all a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Don’t adjust your TV sets, which is where most fans will have to watch the action, with most arenas closed to the public. It may take a few weeks to get accustomed to some of the NHL’s more familiar faces playing in different places when the regular season opens Wednesday.

Zdeno Chara is no longer in Boston after the Bruins captain signed with Capitals. Onetime Caps goalie Braden Holtby is now with the Canucks. Blues captain Alex Pietrangel­o has left St. Louis — where he was replaced by veteran Bruins defenseman Torey Krug — to hit the jackpot with the Golden Knights in Vegas.

Staal wasn’t even the only member of his family on the move, with younger brother Marc traded from the Rangers to the Red Wings. And the Sabres made an even bigger splash in free agency by landing 2018 league MVP Taylor Hall in October.

On the west coast, Patrick Marleau is back in San Jose for a third stint in four years, while the Sharks lineup for the first time in 15 years will be without Joe Thornton, who’s now with the Maple Leafs.

“Just soak it all in,” said the 41-year-old Thornton, who grew up a 90-minute drive from Toronto. “I feel like I’m young again.”

Though NHL stars switch teams every offseason, the moves this year were, in part, precipitat­ed by the effects of COVID19, which has frozen the salary cap at $81.5 million for at least this season and likely the next. That placed teams anticipati­ng the cap to increase in a bind.

The effects were evident before free agency opened with teams not retaining the rights to some of their restricted free agents in fear of what the players might be awarded in salary arbitratio­n hearings. That was the case in Buffalo, where the Sabres cut loose Dominik Kahun after the forward showed promise when playing six games after being acquired in a trade with the Penguins.

And while several players earned lucrative paydays in free agency, such as Pietrangel­o, who signed a seven-year, $61.6 million contract, his deal proved to be an exception when it came to length.

Hall, for example, signed a one-year, $8 million deal with the Sabres after realizing the free-agent market was going to be tight.

“I came into it thinking that it was either going to be a six- or seven-year deal or a one-year deal, and see where the marketplac­e went to potentiall­y next summer,” Hall said. “I don’t know if I’ll get there.”

The defending champion Lightning had to get creative with their roster.

They lost defensemen Kevin Shattenkir­k and Zach Bogosian to free agency and traded center Cedric Paquette and defenseman Braydon Coburn to the Senators. The team acquired right wing Marian Gaborik and goalie Anders Nilsson from the Senators, but both will be placed on long-term injury reserve.

Oilers GM Ken Holland chalked it up to the new economic realities facing the NHL.

“It’s salary-cap related, which is related to the pandemic, which has given us a hard, flat cap for the foreseeabl­e future,” Holland said. “The possibilit­y of a flat cap for the next few years has a factor in all those factors.”

That left teams having to manage their caps by deciding whether it’s better to keep a high-priced veteran or fill the payroll slot with two lower-priced youngsters.

 ?? K.M. CANNON/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? Former Blues captain Alex Pietrangel­o was the exception this offseason when he landed a long-term deal with the Golden Knights.
K.M. CANNON/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Former Blues captain Alex Pietrangel­o was the exception this offseason when he landed a long-term deal with the Golden Knights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States