New York Post

Cap flexibilit­y key for Devils’ offseason aims

- By BRETT CYRGALIS bcyrgalis@nypost.com

The rebuilding process for the Devils was accelerate­d a little bit faster than most anticipate­d. They broke a five-year playoff drought before losing to the Lightning in a fivegame first-round series this past season.

It was all sparked by the Hart Trophy-winning campaign of Taylor Hall — his acquisitio­n from the Oilers in exchange for Adam Larsson two years ago now seeming like grand larceny executed by general manager Ray Shero.

It also helped that Shero converted on his lottery luck with the No. 1-overall pick in the 2017 draft, taking Nick Hischier and watching as the Swiss teenager showed he immediatel­y belongs playing among the world’s best. Add him to the likes of Jesper Bratt, Pavel Zacha and Joey Anderson up front and defenseman Will Butcher, one of the best college free-agent signings of recent vintage, and the young corps is solid.

Now Shero has a pretty attractive product to offer and another offseason with a good amount of flexibilit­y to explore the free-agent market, holding approximat­ely $24 million in salary-cap space. This is a team with a lot of promise, but still a lot of holes to fill if the Devils want to be competitiv­e.

The first question would be whether Shero continues to believe in Cory Schneider as his No. 1 goalie. It seemed like a great parting gift left by former GM Lou Lamoriello, who acquired Schneider for the No. 9-overall pick in the 2013 draft (eventually used on Bo Horvat). But the 32-yearold Schneider has dealt with some injuries in recent years and seen his numbers drop precipitou­sly — posting save percentage­s of .908 and .907 the past two seasons.

Schneider has four more years left on his contract with an annual salary-cap hit of $6 million, which should make it difficult to find a trade partner — unless, of course, Shero is willing to take back a bad contract. Maybe, say, like Johnny Boychuk from the Islanders, a team that desperatel­y needs a goaltender (assuming the idea of trading within the division has subsided some with the Rangers-Devils deal of Michael Grabner at this past deadline).

The idea of trading Schneider can be softened by the emergence of Keith Kinkaid, the 28-year-old from Long Island who was the one in nets as the Devils made a late-season push into the playoffs.

Moving Schneider for picks or prospects could also show that Shero knows the Devils aren’t exactly on the verge of winning the Stanley Cup — which they’re not. Some talent up front could certainly help, taking some pressure off the young guys to carry the load. The top six defensemen are pretty set, but some depth on the blueline for inevitable injuries never hurts, either.

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