New York Post

KEVIN OR SELL

- Larry Brooks

AT SOME point, the Rangers are going to have to declare. Maybe not today and maybe not tomorrow, Bogie, but probably sooner than you think. The Rangers are going to have to declare which of their veterans are keepers and which will go when Houseclean­ing II comes around in late February, if not at a much earlier juncture than the NHL deadline.

Clubs around the league will pick at the Blueshirts’ bones. The brigade of scouts attending Tuesday’s victory over the Panthers didn’t make a wrong turn into the Garden. It is neither a secret nor meant to be one that general manager Jeff Gorton is open for business. He isn’t the only one.

The Rangers want to procure more youth. They want to expand the prospect base so their margin for error expands. They have a firstround­er of their own and they will have the 31st overall selection if Tampa Bay wins the Stanley Cup (if not, they will own the Lightning’s second-round pick). One firstround­er may not be enough to satisfy the GM.

Which is where Kevin Hayes comes in … or goes, however you see the future unfolding for the pending unrestrict­ed free agent operating on a one-year, $5.175 million deal after he and the Rangers could not agree on a multi-year extension. Mats Zuccarello and Adam McQuaid also are months away from free agency. But it is Hayes who presents the most vexing issue for Gor- ton, because he has the greatest value on the market and on the ice.

How long does management and the coaching staff honestly believe it will take for the Rangers to be a legitimate playoff considerat­ion? If it is longer than three years, then there is likely to be a wholesale event around the deadline. But if it falls within that range, if the real progress in structure and fight that have manifested themselves through the first nine games takes hold, and the authoritie­s envision a quicker turnaround, then Gorton will have to declare.

Does the GM envision Hayes as part of the next core? If he does, it will likely come at the going rate of between $5.7 million and $6.2 million per for six years. If he does not, then it becomes a twopronged question of when and for what in return for No. 13.

Hayes is here if I’m running the show. The steady escalation in the 26-yearold’s maturation from his dismal sophomore season has been striking, even if he remains an unrepentan­t Patriots and Red Sox fan. He spends his summers in the gym. He has responded to being called out and benched on the season’s first weekend. He is as receptive to coaching as anyone.

He still tends to slow things down instead of speeding things up, but he has been working to generate pace. Hayes has scored only twice, including once into the empty net against the Panthers, but he has been creating chances for himself and his linemates. Most impressive­ly, he has been on for only one five-on-five goalagains­t, that in Game 3 against the Hurricanes.

There are other considerat­ions. The Rangers are deepest on the depth chart at center and left defense, neediest on the wings and right D. Should a team offer a younger top-six winger or a top-four right defenseman, surely Gorton would have to listen. But moving Hayes as a rental for the generic late first-rounder-plus package does little to advance the franchise. Again: When does the staff think the team will be ready?

The thing, too, is that Hayes does not want to go and is not anticipati­ng free agency. He has not put a hold on talks until after the season. Indeed, while per the collective bargaining agrement, nothing can be done until Jan. 1, it would suit Hayes just fine if an agreement were reached on New Year’s Day.

“I’m watching this develop, and it would be cool to be here for this rebuild. I want to be part of the future,” Hayes told The Post on Wednesday, before the club’s flight to Chicago for Thursday’s opener of a four-game trip. “I’m going to stay out of it, my agent [Bob Murray] will do the talking, and nothing can happen ’til Jan. 1, anyway, but I would love for them to talk starting that day and get a deal done.

“It’s how I feel. I was looking around the city the other day and was thinking how this is what I know, the New York media, the New York Rangers, the New York fans, and this is where I want to be. I’m close to the coaches, the organizati­on is great. This is a good formula for me.

“I try to be as honest a player as I can be and show people what they’re going to get from me every day.”

 ?? Robert Sabo ?? KEEP HIM: If it were up to Larry Brooks, he writes, Kevin Hayes would still be with the Rangers after the trade deadline.
Robert Sabo KEEP HIM: If it were up to Larry Brooks, he writes, Kevin Hayes would still be with the Rangers after the trade deadline.
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