Toronto Star

NHL: Oilers sign Draisaitl to 8-year deal worth $68M

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EDMONTON— The two biggest cornerston­es of the emerging Edmonton Oilers franchise are now locked up for the long haul.

Six weeks after extending Connor McDavid for eight years and $100 million (all figures in U.S. dollars), the Oilers signed 21-year-old Leon Draisaitl to an eight-year contract of his own with a sizable annual cap hit of $8.5 million. Paired primarily with McDavid, Draisaitl posted a careerbest 77 points last season, eighthbest in the NHL.

He added another 16 points during the first Edmonton’s playoff run in more than a decade.

“I’m really excited to be back for eight years,” Draisaitl told the Oilers’ website after the signing was announced.

“I never really thought about going anywhere else. We have something really special. We have a great group of guys. It’s something I wanted to be a part of as long as possible.”

In securing his long-term rights, the Oilers are betting on Draisaitl, a restricted free agent and one of only seven German NHLers last season, to thrive with or without McDavid, the reigning winner of the Art Ross and Hart trophies and Ted Lindsay Award.

The third overall pick of the 2014 draft, Draisaitl will have the 10thhighes­t cap hit in hockey next year — equal to Lightning captain and twotime Rocket Richard Trophy winner Steven Stamkos.

Draisaitl’s second NHL deal slightly exceeds recent eight-year pacts handed out to 25-year-old Predators centre Ryan Johansen ($8 million cap hit) and 25-year-old Capitals pivot Evgeny Kuznetsov ($7.8 million cap hit).

Both were signing their third NHL deals, however, and are slightly older than Draisaitl, who won’t turn 22 until October 27.

Draisaitl, a natural centre, slid to right wing alongside McDavid at the start of December and went on to notch 60 points in 58 games, sixth in the NHL over that span.

The question is whether the Oilers will keep the two franchise studs together and have them wreak havoc as a duo, or split them apart for increased depth.

McLellan went in the latter direction midway through a second-round playoff series against the Anaheim Ducks, and it worked effectivel­y. Draisaitl, centring a second unit, scored once in a Game 5 overtime loss and then exploded for a hat trick and five points in a 7-1 Game 6 thrashing.

The playoff showing, which saw him matched against Ducks captain and all-star Ryan Getzlaf, offered a potential preview of his NHL readiness for the second-line centre role moving forward.

“Any time you can lock up one of your top players for a lengthy period of time, it’s a good day,” Oilers general manager Peter Chiarelli said on the team’s Twitter account.

 ??  ?? Leon Draisaitl posted a career-best 77 points last season, eighth-best in the NHL.
Leon Draisaitl posted a career-best 77 points last season, eighth-best in the NHL.

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