Ridgway Record

Big-name stars make up star-studded NHL free agent class

- By Stephen Whyno AP Hockey Writer

This NHL free agent class already had the most high-end talent in several years. Then Evgeni Malkin made it known he's testing the market.

Join the club.

The longtime Pittsburgh cornerston­e, Colorado Stanley Cup champions Nazem Kadri and Darcy Kuemper, Calgary MVP candidate Johnny Gaudreau and Dallas defenseman John Klingberg headline one of the deepest groups of free agents in recent history. Even though the salary cap is only going up $1 million per team, record revenues have made for the first increase since 2019, setting the stage for significan­t money to flow when the market opens Wednesday.

"There is some money to be spent out there," Carolina general manager Don Waddell said. "I think there were 21 teams that were cap teams last year and another five or six that were real close. There's some money to be spent, and players are going to make a lot of money."

Probably no one more than Gaudreau, who set career highs with 40 goals, 75 assists and 115 points in leading the Flames to the Pacific Division title. His next deal will almost certainly shatter the richest contract signed last year: $63 million to Dougie Hamilton from New Jersey.

Gaudreau, a South Jersey native who grew up rooting for the Flyers, has unsurprisi­ngly been linked to Philadelph­ia and also the New York Islanders, though Calgary has put on a full-court press to keep the dynamic winger who turns 29 in August.

"Johnny's a really good player — there's going to be a lot of attention," Calgary GM Brad Treliving said. "They're big decisions. They're life decisions. If he doesn't sign with us, he's earned the opportunit­y to look at the market."

That market got better when Malkin on Monday signaled his intent to the Penguins to see what other options he might have. The 36-year-old was a point-a-game player last season even after returning from knee surgery.

Teams looking for a younger option in the middle have Kadri, who like Gaudreau had a career year and extended that production deep into the playoffs. Kadri, who will be 32 by opening night, was one of the Avalanche's best players on their Cup run with 15 points in 16 games sandwiched around a broken right thumb he played through in the final.

Teammate Andre Burakovsky, longtime Flyers captain-turned-Panthers forward Claude Giroux, Rangers center Ryan Strome and Blues winger David Perron are also among the many intriguing options up front.

"It's going to be interestin­g," Waddell said. "It looks like there's an abundance of forwards and not as many defensemen."

The best in that shallow pool is Klingberg, highly coveted as a right-shot defenseman who can run the power play. Think Hamilton money for the soon-tobe 30-year-old Swede, who put up 47 points last season.

Waddell joked he and the Hurricanes aren't looking for a goaltender for the first time in many years, but there's no shortage of teams that are. Kuemper, who backstoppe­d the Avalanche to the Cup, is available after they acquired Alexandar Georgiev from the Rangers, and so is Jack Campbell with the Toronto Maple Leafs moving on to Matt Murray, who they got from Ottawa.

After inconsiste­ncy in net cost them in the playoffs, the Edmonton Oilers are expected to be big players in the goalie market. So will the Washington Capitals after GM Brian MacLellan "jumped into the fire" by trading Vitek Vanecek to the Devils and doubled down on remaking his goaltendin­g by not tendering a qualifying offer to Ilya Samsonov.

Whether it's by trade or free agency, the Capitals now need two goalies and know the price considerin­g the high demand and low supply.

"Given the environmen­t, I think it will be high," MacLellan said.

The precedent has been set high for a lot of free agents after Colorado re-signed Valeri Nichushkin to a $49 million, eight-year deal Monday. Nichushkin got that after nine goals and six assists in the playoffs, so his $6.125 million annual cap hit could be the floor for Tampa Bay postseason star Ondrej Palat, unless he takes a hometown discount to try to help the Lightning win the Cup for a third time since their run of success began in 2020.

With or without Palat and stable defenseman Jan Rutta, the Lightning could again shop in the bargain aisle as they did last year by adding veterans Corey Perry, Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and Zach Bogosian, who were key pieces of a third consecutiv­e run to the final.

"You start with, what holes do I need to fill and who are the best options to fill those holes, considerin­g the cap space I have and the cap space I'm going to need to sign those players," Lightning GM Julien BriseBois said.

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