Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Ducks captain Getzlaf looks for a new contract

- By Elliott Teaford eteaford@scng.com @elliotttea­ford on Twitter

Ryan Getzlaf, the longest-serving captain in Ducks’ history, needs a new contract. If the numbers add up and he agrees to a lesser role, he’s expected to re-sign with the only NHL team he’s known and begin his 17th season with the Ducks on Oct. 14 against the Winnipeg Jets.

The NHL’s free-agent marketplac­e opens for business Wednesday, and Getzlaf isn’t likely to be going anywhere. Ducks general manager Bob Murray sounded confident last week when asked about re-signing Getzlaf, the franchise’s leader in games played with 1,101, dating to 2005-06.

Murray said that talks with Gerry Johansson, Getzlaf’s agent, were underway and a contract could be finalized within “three or four days” of the completion of the NHL draft this past weekend.

Getzlaf has been the Ducks’ captain since 201011. Only Hall of Fame right wing Teemu Selanne has scored more points (988) than Getzlaf (982), and it’s a milestone everyone (with the likely exception of Selanne) would like to see Getzlaf surpass in the opening days and nights of the 202122 season.

Re-signing means concession­s must be made, however.

Getzlaf’s eight-season, $66 million contract came to an end when the season ended for the Ducks with a third consecutiv­e playoff miss. If he re-signs, he’ll have to take a considerab­le pay cut. Think in terms of a one-year, $1 million (or maybe $2 million) deal for the 36-year-old center.

What’s more, Getzlaf must agree to a new role with the rebuilding Ducks, one he began to fill near the end of the 2020-21 season, when he shifted from the top line to the fourth and from the first power-play unit to the second in order to make way for younger, ascending players.

Getzlaf isn’t the only player on the Ducks’ roster who needs a new contract. Right wing Carter Rowney and defenseman Andy Welinski are also eligible to become unrestrict­ed free agents Wednesday, free to sign with any of the NHL’s 32 teams, including the Ducks.

Centers Max Comtois, Isac Lundestrom and Sam Steel, left wing Max Jones and defenseman Josh Mahura received qualifying offers before Monday’s deadline and will become restricted free agents Wednesday, with the Ducks holding the rights to match any offers they receive from other teams.

Danton Heinen, a left wing, didn’t receive a qualifying offer and will be an unrestrict­ed free agent.

Left wing Alexander Volkov signed a one-year, $925,000 contract extension on July 17, avoiding free agency. The Carrick brothers, Sam and Trevor, and Vinni Lettieri signed oneyear extensions on July 12. Those three are expected to continue playing with San Diego of the AHL.

As for the Ducks’ pursuit of free agents from other teams, well, don’t expect anything resembling a blockbuste­r signing. Bigname (read: expensive) free agents such as Dougie Hamilton, David Krejci and Gabriel Landeskog are probably headed elsewhere in the coming days.

Last year’s biggest offseason signing didn’t work out as expected, with defenseman Kevin Shattenkir­k signing a three-year, $11.7 million contract last Oct. 9, and failing to deliver the goods with only two goals and 13 assists in 55 games in the pandemicsh­ortened season.

Trades are more likely as Murray continues to rework the roster, especially among the mid-career players on the roster. Protecting forwards Nicolas Deslaurier­s, Adam Henrique, Rickard Rakell and Jakob Silfverber­g for the expansion draft last week meant protecting trade chips.

Deslaurier­s is believed to be one of the Ducks’ most sought-after assets because of his valued role as a heavyweigh­t protector. He had five goals and five assists in 44 games last season and served as a deterrent to teams thinking of taking advantage of young players such as Trevor Zegras.

The Ducks are one of a number of teams linked to a potential trade for skillful center Jack Eichel of the Buffalo Sabres. The rebuilding Sabres have already shipped Sam Reinhart to the Florida Panthers and Rasmus Ristolaine­n to the Philadelph­ia Flyers in significan­t deals.

Whether through signings or trades, the Ducks are expected to seek additions to their forward ranks, especially anyone capable of bolstering their league-worst offense, which averaged only 2.21 goals per game last season, and their historical­ly inept power play, which clicked at a meager 8.9 percent.

The Ducks’ defense corps appears set for 2021-22, despite losing No. 5 defenseman Haydn Fleury to the Seattle Kraken in the expansion draft. The Ducks could even re-sign Jani Hakanpaa, the defenseman they traded to the Carolina Hurricanes to get Fleury on April 12.

In the end, re-signing Getzlaf might prove to be the least complicate­d of any of Murray’s moves.

Danault aided Montreal’s unlikely run from playoff purgatory to the Stanley Cup Final, but there seems to be little firm indication that the Canadiens will be re-signing the 28-year-old. Danault has finished seventh or better in the Selke Trophy voting for the league’s best forward in each of the past three seasons. He has skated to a +44 rating during that time, despite Montreal having a negative-five goal differenti­al over the

JACK EICHEL, CENTER, BUFFALO SABRES >> Acquiring Eichel would entail a trade rather than a straight signing, similar to what Chicago did when it brought in defenseman Seth Jones on Friday. Still, with free agency often eliciting an open-market premium for talent that seldom if ever equals that of Eichel, the Kings have to at least entertain the possibilit­y of sending some of their stockpile of prospects to Buffalo for the prolific pivot. The Sabres have already been active after a woeful 2021 campaign that saw them sell off assets at the deadline and then continue in the offseason. Last week, they traded defenseman Rasmus Ristolaine­n to Philadelph­ia and center Sam Reinhart to Florida.

Eichel, whose representa­tives said in a statement that they expect a trade imminently, would not come cheap. His price could rival or even exceed that of both Ristolaine­n and Reinhart who, cumulative­ly, fetched two first-round picks, a second-rounder, a prospect and a roster player. The Kings have generally been conservati­ve with their assets, but depending on the exact price they could be one of several teams inquiring about Eichel.

 ?? SEAN M. HAFFEY — GETTY IMAGES ?? Longtime Ducks captain Ryan Getzlaf, who is up for a a new contract, is looking at a changing role and most likely a pay cut if he re-signs with Anaheim.
SEAN M. HAFFEY — GETTY IMAGES Longtime Ducks captain Ryan Getzlaf, who is up for a a new contract, is looking at a changing role and most likely a pay cut if he re-signs with Anaheim.

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