Montreal Gazette

‘Middle class’ NHL players face camp tryouts

- STEPHEN WHYNO

When Alex Chiasson found himself without a job halfway through the off-season, frustratio­n began to set in.

Even at age 26 with 106 points to his name in 320 NHL games, Chiasson wasn’t tendered a contract by the Calgary Flames, and by late July his options were limited. In early September, he agreed to attend Washington Capitals training camp on a profession­al tryout agreement.

“Every day is a tryout for me,” Chiasson said. “Every day I’ve just got to prove that I belong and that I can earn a spot on the team.”

Chiasson is not alone. Almost 60 players are on similar PTOs around the league, though it’s not all unproven commoditie­s and grizzled veterans trying to show they still have something left in the tank. Chiasson one of 11 tryout guys 30 or younger with at least 100 games of NHL experience — an unusual result of teams paying stars more and relying on entry-level players.

The result is squeezing hockey’s middle class.

“There’s extra bodies around,” Capitals general manager Brian MacLellan said, citing Vegas expansion as a positive. “There’s good players that are still out there. … That’s just the way the market is for this year.”

Experience­d 20- and early 30-something players settling for PTOs is a trend in the NHL after 16 such players did it last year and 15 in 2015.

Chiasson and defenceman Jyrki Jokipakka are chasing contracts with Washington, Jimmy Hayes with the New Jersey Devils, Brandon Pirri with the Florida Panthers and Cody Franson with the Chicago Blackhawks.

Given that the salary cap has only gone up from US$71.4 million in 2015-16 to $73 million last season and now $75 million, general managers don’t have a lot of breathing room. Consider a team like Chicago has more than $45 million committed to its top six players and there wasn’t space available to offer Franson a guaranteed contract despite the 30-year-old defenceman having 205 points in 527 games.

Pirri understand­s the deal after the New York Rangers didn’t tender him a contract. He’s rejoined the Panthers at 26, trying to make the team like he was a youngster again.

“GMs, they’re getting smart,” Pirri said. “It’s a no-risk move for them. For guys like us, we’ve got to be prepared and you’ve got to come into camp ready. It’s an opportunit­y, and if guys aren’t prepared, these tryouts are not going to be worth it and then there’s no risk to the team. But if you go to the right situation, someone that believes in you and you perform, I think GMs are honest enough to give you that opportunit­y.”

Opportunit­y led Chiasson and Jokipakka to the Capitals, who lost six players from last season, Hayes to New Jersey after he was bought out by the Boston Bruins and defenceman Eric Gelinas to the Canadiens after they revamped their blue line and lost veteran Andrei Markov. But they don’t have guaranteed deals in large part because young players are NHL-ready sooner than ever before.

“You look around the league and you’ve got these young guys that come in, they’re 18, 19, 20 — they can play,” Chiasson said.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? Alex Chiasson wasn’t tendered a contract by the Calgary Flames. He agreed to attend the Washington Capitals’ training camp on a profession­al tryout agreement.
ALEX BRANDON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES Alex Chiasson wasn’t tendered a contract by the Calgary Flames. He agreed to attend the Washington Capitals’ training camp on a profession­al tryout agreement.

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