USA TODAY US Edition

Who’s representi­ng?

A look at the All-Star teams,

- Kevin Allen kmallen@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

A week ago, the buzz around the NHL was that it was going to take a seven-year deal worth $7 million a season to land top unrestrict­ed free agent defenseman Kevin Shattenkir­k.

Saturday, the New York Rangers, a team in desperate need of the puck-moving expertise that Shattenkir­k possesses, signed him to a four-year deal worth an average of $6.65 million.

The Rangers were among the big winners on the opening day of the free agent season.

After buying out Dan Girardi’s contract and trading Derek Stepan, the Rangers put themselves in a favorable salary cap situation. But they didn’t want to risk more cap torment by giving too many years to Shattenkir­k.

It helped that Shattenkir­k, a native of New Rochelle, N.Y., wanted to play in New York. The Rangers are landing a right-shot defenseman who had 56 points last season, including 14 in 19 games with the Washington Capitals at the end of the season.

Last week, the Rangers resigned trade-deadline acquisitio­n Brendan Smith, also a defenseman. All of a sudden, the Rangers defense has been upgraded from below average to intriguing. LOSER: WASHINGTON CAPITALS The Capitals have lost defensemen Karl Alzner (Montreal Canadiens) and Shattenkir­k to free agency and Nate Schmidt to the Vegas Golden Knights in the expansion draft. They also lost winger Justin Williams (Carolina Hurricanes) to free agency.

Meanwhile, most of the Metropolit­an Division has been active, with the Pittsburgh Penguins adding defenseman Matt Hunwick in addition to the Rangers’ and Hurricanes’ moves. The New York Islanders (Jordan Eberle) and Columbus Blue Jackets (Artemi Panarin) expect to be improved after offseason trades, and the Penguins will be just as good.

Sunday, the Capitals did re- sign center Evgeny Kuznetsov to an eight-year, $62.4 million deal. To clear cap space, they traded winger Marcus Johansson to the New Jersey Devils.

Will the Capitals be as dominant next season? Unless they make some more moves, they could take a half-step back. WINNER: SAM GAGNER A year ago, teams were not lining up to sign Gagner to a free agent contract. After making $4.8 million a season, Gagner signed for $650,000 a year with the Blue Jackets for 2016-17.

Coach John Tortorella gave him enough playing time, and he scored 18 goals and registered 50 points, both career highs.

He turned that into a three- year contract with the Vancouver Canucks that will pay him more than $3 million a season.

The moral: Sometimes it pays off in the long run to accept the best opportunit­y and not necessaril­y the biggest paycheck. LOSER: GENERAL MANAGERS By Saturday night, NHL general managers had signed 82 players for a cap hit of roughly $143 million, according to Capfriendl­y .com. Calgary Flames President Brian Burke has said that general managers make more mistakes on this day than any other day of the year, except trade-deadline day. As happy as GMs are today about their moves, history tells us many of these deals won’t work out. WINNER: PITTSBURGH PENGUINS At first glance, you would think the Penguins were losers because they lost Nick Bonino to the Nashville Predators, Trevor Daley to the Red Wings, Ron Hainsey to the Toronto Maple Leafs and Chris Kunitz to the Tampa Bay Lightning.

But they signed defenseman Hunwick to a three-year deal at $2.25 million a season. GM Jim Rutherford said they think he can have as much of an impact as Daley, who signed for more than $3 million a season.

They also added backup goalie Antti Niemi, and Rutherford resigned defenseman Justin Schultz, a restricted free agent, to a three-year deal with a cap hit of $5.5 million. The Penguins’ salary cap situation is better than it has been in the last few seasons.

Rutherford hasn’t yet found the No. 3 center he needs to fill out his roster, but he joked that coach Mike Sullivan said he could get by as long as Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin are healthy.

“It’s important that we don’t panic and go after a center just to say we got a center,” said Rutherford, who indicated he might have to wait until the season starts to find the player he wants.

This is why the Penguins have won two Stanley Cups in a row and are a threat to win a third. LOSER: CONNOR HELLEBUYCK The Jets still are bullish on their young goalie’s ability, but they didn’t sign Steve Mason to a twoyear contract paying him $4.1 million a season to be Hellebuyck’s 25-game backup.

They obviously think Hellebuyck, 24, isn’t quite ready to carry the load. WINNER: DALLAS STARS In this offseason, GM Jim Nill secured the goalie he wanted in Ben Bishop, the defenseman he needed in Marc Methot and the center he coveted in Martin Hanzal, who was a free agent.

Hanzal, a 20-goal scorer with superb faceoff skills, joins Tyler Seguin and Jason Spezza to give Dallas one of the top center groups. LOSER: NHL FANS Because July 1 fell on a Saturday and the free agent class was short on high-profile players, the day lacked the pizazz of previous free agent days.

This year’s signing day seemed businessli­ke, a bunch of teams just getting the job done.

 ?? CHARLES LECLAIRE, USA TODAY SPORTS ??
CHARLES LECLAIRE, USA TODAY SPORTS
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