New York Post

AGONIZING SILENCE

Tavares mum as deadline expires, putting his Isles future in doubt

- By BRETT CYRGALIS bcyrgalis@nypost.com

After so much good fortune, it seems like the Islanders have now suffered one of the worst blows in franchise history.

Captain John Tavares was not announced as signing a new deal as of late Saturday night, and once it got to midnight and the calendar changed to July 1, he was going to be an unrestrict­ed free agent. Tavares couldn’t sign with another team until noon on Sunday, but because of the rules in the collective bargaining agreement, the Islanders were set to become just like any other team.

That means they could offer Tavares just a seven-year deal, whereas before midnight they could have signed him to an eight-year deal. That equates to about a $11 million-$13 million difference, assuming that was going to be about the annual salary-cap hit on his new deal.

And that means that with Tavares not signing, he could very well have said goodbye to the only NHL franchise he has known since they took him with the No. 1-overall pick in 2009.

It never seemed like contract terms were an issue for the captain who is set to be 28 years old when the season starts. He still could re-sign and forfeit the extra year — assuming he had not signed late Saturday night and it just wasn’t announced — but he was adamant throughout this process that he was weighing all the aspects of a franchise, from on-ice competitiv­eness to geophysica­l lifestyle.

This was all a culminatio­n of a long, drawn-out process from one of the league’s elite players. He smartly chose not to sign an extension last summer, and went through another difficult season with the added annoyance of answering questions about his pending free agency. Tavares was then studious in taking advantage of his right to listen to what other teams had to say, bringing five of them into his agent’s office in Los Angeles earlier this week to go along with hearing a pitch from the Islanders.

The teams that talked to him were the Sharks, Ma- ple Leafs, Lightning, Stars, and Bruins. And the Islanders, led by new President Lou Lamoriello and new coach Barry Trotz, still have to continue their drastic reshaping of the organizati­on.

The thing the Islanders need the most is a No. 1 goalie. It sure seems like former general manager Garth Snow, a journeyman goaltender himself, made a big mistake when he tried to hand the reins to Thomas Greiss, giving him a three-year, $10 million deal before the start of this past season. Greiss couldn’t handle the load by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, putting up a putrid 3.82 goals-against average and a .892 save percentage in 27 games.

Greiss’ co-netminder, Jaroslav Halak, is on his way to free agency after his four-year, $18 million deal given in the summer of 2014 turned out to be not be the answer, either.

It also isn’t as if the recent goaltendin­g has gotten any help, with a defensive corps that was shallow and exposed with a handful of injuries. It looks as if Calvin de Haan is headed to free agency after his stellar stay-at-home play was hardly ever fully appreciate­d by the Islanders brass. Thomas Hickey also seems to be fielding offers from other teams, and likely is going to get a term that the Islanders would prefer to avoid.

That leaves some glaring holes on the back end, with Nick Leddy leading the way and Johnny Boychuk’s onerous contract (the 34-year-old is owed $6 million per for the next four seasons) there as well. Assuming restricted free agent Ryan Pulock gets locked up to some sort of deal, there are still spots to be had.

Tavares always had maintained his desire to stay with Islanders, but all of that put together was supposed to make it a heck of a lot easier. The Mississaug­a, Ontario, native is set to get married in August, and the Islanders playing the next three years bouncing between home games at Barclays Center and the renovated Coliseum won’t be ideal.

After all this, he apparently still hadn’t made a decision. If that’s the case, it looks like his time with the Islanders might be coming to a close.

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