Cape Breton Post

‘Expect the unexpected’

NHL turns to Vegas expansion draft, unpredicta­ble off-season

- BY STEPHEN WHYNO

The first expansion draft in the salary-cap era has even the most seasoned NHL general managers unsure of what is going to happen over the next few weeks.

“You expect the unexpected,” Toronto Maple Leafs GM Lou Lamoriello said.

The most unpredicta­ble and fascinatin­g off-season in more than a decade has arrived. Uncertaint­y runs from the Vegas Golden Knights’ expansion draft next week through the New Jersey Devils’ decision with the top pick in the entry draft to a free agent market that hinges significan­tly on how much the salary cap goes up — if at all.

Trades could be coming fast and furious as Vegas GM George McPhee stockpiles assets in exchange for agreeing to select or not select players in the June 21 expansion draft. Teams have to decide who to protect — seven forwards, three defenceman and a goaltender or eight skaters at any position and a goaltender — and there should be some roster juggling around the league before protected lists must be submitted Saturday afternoon.

“I expect something to transpire and the expansions that I’ve been through in the past, it certainly does,” Lamoriello said. “When there are decisions that have to be made, you’d rather make them proactive rather than reactive. People are going to be trying to do things, whether they have one too many defencemen or whether they have one too many forwards or whether they have needs that they could possibly correct by taking a surplus off somebody else.”

The back-to-back Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins have to make a quick decision with goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury ahead of the expansion draft because they can’t afford to lose 23-year-old Matt Murray, who’s 22-9 in consecutiv­e title runs with a 1.95 goals-against average and .928 save percentage and is under contract for three more years. Fleury has a no-movement clause in his contract so he must agree to waive it to be traded or exposed in the expansion draft.

After talking to his colleagues around the league, McPhee said he believes the expansion draft will be more productive for the franchise’s future than he first thought.

“There are teams that really want to protect some people and protect their rosters and they are willing to pay a pretty fair price to get us to lay off certain people and go in a different direction,” McPhee said. “So in those instances we’ll be able to get young players or some draft picks that will help us down the road.”

Once all 30 protected lists are revealed on Sunday, Vegas has a 72-hour window to negotiate with any unprotecte­d restricted or unrestrict­ed free agents and make its selections, which will be announced June 21.

The entire NHL is going to have to react to what Vegas does and to the salary cap, which could remain flat at this past season’s $73 million or go up, perhaps to roughly $77 million, depending on whether players elect to use their escalator clause to increase it by up to 5 per cent. That’s a complicate­d issue and there is no guarantee players raise the cap as much as possible this time around, especially with a new team coming in.

Some things to watch this offseason:

NICO OR NOLAN

With the top pick, the Devils are expected to decide between centres Nolan Patrick and Nico Hischier or trade down. There’s no franchise-changing star in this draft like Connor McDavid or Auston Matthews, and Patrick’s injury-plagued season made this a debate to watch at the draft that begins June 23 in Chicago.

FURIOUS MOVES

Because a lot of teams will wait to re-sign players until after the expansion draft, there could be a flurry of activity beginning June 22. Jaromir Jagr’s status in Florida and Joe Thornton’s in San Jose could be decided before either becomes an unrestrict­ed free agent.

THREE-PEAT

GM Jim Rutherford may have to get creative to help Pittsburgh try to become the first team to win the Cup in three consecutiv­e years since the Islanders’ dynasty years from 1980-83. Among the Penguins’ free agents are Nick Bonino, Chris Kunitz and Trevor Daley.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this April 13 file photo, Vegas Golden Knights general manager George McPhee attends a news conference in Las Vegas.
AP PHOTO In this April 13 file photo, Vegas Golden Knights general manager George McPhee attends a news conference in Las Vegas.

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