Vancouver Sun

Signing a centre won’t come cheap

- BEN KUZMA bkuzma@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ benkuzma

You get what you pay for.

That’s the hope for those forced to overpay for roster solutions in free agency. And for the Vancouver Canucks, who face a supply-versus-demand scenario in quest of a niche centre, general manager Jim Benning must determine if the dollars make sense when the market opens Sunday.

The Canucks have reached out to unrestrict­ed free-agents Tyler Bozak and Riley Nash during the league’s five-day interview period and could also have some level of interest in Derek Ryan and Jay Beagle. The problem is there are several suitors for the big fish — John Tavares and Paul Stastny — and the trickle-down effect will be targeting the next tier of centres.

That will make it more costly to acquire Bozak, Nash, Ryan or Beagle. The Canucks have salary cap space to push the pay envelope if they think Bozak is a more well-rounded solution to replace the retired Henrik Sedin as a pivot who can play up and down the lineup and help the power play.

Bozak was a third-line centre and second-unit power-play option last season in Toronto where he had 43 points (11-32) at a US$4.2-million cap hit.

Aside from offering the 32-year-old Regina native $5 million and a reasonable three-year term, they have to sell a guy on a rebuild when he can opt to go to a contender. And it doesn’t necessaril­y get easier with Nash, who said he’d buy into the rebuild. He had a career 41 points (15-26) with Boston and earned just $900,000.

Nash is in for a big raise, even though it’s fair to wonder if the season was a one-off with better players after 17 points the previous campaign.

Nash is represente­d by Kurt Overhardt, an agent known for getting his clients deals that often far exceed market value, so any deal is going to cost the Canucks — if they get their targeted guy.

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