Houston Chronicle

EARLY RETURNS

The Stars and Rangers are among the winners in free agency.

- By Greg Beacham

Several big winners in the opening weekend of the NHL’s free-agent signing period didn’t even have to move.

From Carey Price to Cam Fowler to Evgeny Kuznetsov, a bunch of veterans got paid by their current teams when the free-agent floodgates opened during the weekend. Several clubs moved quickly to lock up proven quantities, often a full year before they even got the chance to hit the open market.

The free-agent period has been even quieter because not many big names are available. Teams also did much of their roster shuffling earlier in the summer to prepare for the Vegas Golden Knights’ expansion draft.

So while the first flurries of free-agent movement aren’t quite as exciting as in past years, a few teams and players distinguis­hed themselves with their early offseason maneuverin­gs — and a few left themselves with work to do.

WINNER: Dallas Stars. GM Jim Nill has checked the most important boxes on his presumptiv­e list of offseason priorities. After landing franchise goalie Ben Bishop and defenseman Marc Methot before free agency, he signed center Martin Hanzal to add depth down an already strong middle and then added scoring winger Alexander Radulov. The pieces appear to be in place for a playoff contender.

LOSER: Montreal Canadiens. They locked up the extraordin­ary Price, one of the NHL’s elite goalies, but paid an extraordin­ary price to do so. That reported $84 million commitment made it tough to keep other key players. It’s tough to win every game 1-0, even against talent-depleted rosters in a post-expansion season in the low-scoring modern NHL.

PUSH: Chicago Blackhawks. They got the band back together with the acquisitio­ns of Patrick Sharp and Brandon

Saad, but they lost quality NHL players in Niklas Hjalmarsso­n and Artemi Panarin. Perhaps the Blackhawks needed a roster shakeup after their postseason pasting from Nashville, but Chicago could be playing it too safe by sticking with its old favorites.

WINNER: New York Rangers. They landed the biggest prize on the market in Kevin Shattenkir­k, who clearly wanted to come home to play on Broadway. The puck-moving defenseman should be a big boost to an already-strong roster, and New York didn’t have to break the bank or lock in for more than three years to get him.

LOSER: Colorado Avalanche. It’s been a rough nine months in the Rockies. After a horrific 48-point regular season and a depressing fall in the NHL draft lottery, the Avs lost valuable goalie Calvin Pickard to Vegas in the expansion draft. Last weekend, Colorado acquired Colin Wilson from Nashville and signed journeyman goalie Jonathan Bernier. Meanwhile, Matt Duchene remains on the trading block. It’s tough to see improvemen­t.

PUSH: San Jose Sharks. Joe Thornton is staying on a oneyear deal, but Patrick Marleau is gone from the franchise that has employed him since 1997. General manager Doug Wilson also paid top dollar in longterm extensions for defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic and goalie Martin Jones.

WINNER: Nashville Predators. Nick Bonino is a gritty veteran forward who should fit splendidly into a winning core, and Alexei Emelin could slot in well on an already formidable blue line. Even with their freeagent losses, the Western champions probably got better.

LOSER: Washington Capitals. The NHL’s best regularsea­son team has lost veteran forward Justin Williams and defensemen Karl Alzner, Nate Schmidt and Shattenkir­k during the offseason. Washington locked down Kuznetsov and Dmitry Orlov with top-dollar deals befitting their talents, but still consuming a chunk of the payroll. The Caps also kept T.J. Oshie, but only with a headscratc­hing contract. Washington still has a strong talent base, but it took a hit.

PUSH: Pittsburgh Penguins. The two-time Stanley Cup champions had to make several tough decisions, and they ended up losing a significan­t portion of their title-winning supporting cast, including Bonino, Chris Kunitz, MarcAndre Fleury, Trevor Daley and Ron Hainsey. But backup goalie Antti Niemi is on board, and they re-signed defenseman Justin Schultz. The departures will clear playing time for Pittsburgh’s next generation — and as long as Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin are on the ice, the Penguins can probably change on the fly.

 ??  ?? Signing former Wild center Martin Hanzal will strengthen the Stars’ depth down the middle, possibly restoring them to playoff contention. Christian Petersen / Getty Images
Signing former Wild center Martin Hanzal will strengthen the Stars’ depth down the middle, possibly restoring them to playoff contention. Christian Petersen / Getty Images

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