Imperial Valley Press

Gaudreau, Kadri among players to watch in NHL free agency

- BY STEPHEN WHYNO

The top players expected to be available in NHL free agency include an MVP candidate who might have the chance to go home and a veteran who flipped his old playoff script to become a Stanley Cup champion.

Each had a career year at the perfect time.

Calgary Flames winger Johnny Gaudreau and Colorado Avalanche center Nazem Kadri could be the richest beneficiar­ies in free agency when it opens Wednesday. Seven- year contracts worth up to, if not more than, $10 million a year are possible.

That is, unless Gaudreau sticks with the Flames. “Johnny Hockey” can sign for eight years up until midnight EDT Tuesday night.

“They’re big decisions,” Calgary general manager Brad Treliving said. “They’re life decisions. If he doesn’t sign with us, he’s earned the opportunit­y to look at the market. That’s something he’s got to consider.”

One thing Gaudreau could consider is the lure of playing for the Philadelph­ia Flyers team he rooted for while growing up in Carney’s Point, New Jersey. They’d need to clear significan­t cap space to make room for Gaudreau, who had a career-best 40 goals, 75 assists and 115 points last season in leading Calgary to the Pacific Division title and into the second round of the playoffs.

Gaudreau, who turns 29 in August, finished fourth in voting for the Hart Trophy as the league’s most valuable player.

Kadri was one of Colorado’s most valuable performers on the way to lifting the Cup for the first time with this core led by Nathan MacKinnon, Gabriel Landeskog and Mikko Rantanen and the third time in franchise history.

Acquired three years ago after back-to-back playoff suspension­s, he rebounded from another lengthy ban in the 2021 postseason to put up 87 points in the regular season and 15 more in 16 games of the Avalanche’s Cup run.

But the soon- to- be 32-year-old might be one

of the odd men out, seeing as Colorado also has wingers Valeri Nichushkin and Andre Burakovsky and defensemen Josh Manson and Jack Johnson set to be unrestrict­ed free agents.

“We know we’re not going to be able to sign everybody,” said Joe Sakic, who on Monday was promoted from general manager to president of hockey operations. “We know that. But we’ve got our priority, and then we’ll see. I think some players will test the market and see what’s out there for them and see if they want to come back, but time will tell.”

Here are some other interestin­g players who could test the market at noon EDT Wednesday:

DARCY KUEMPER

Colorado’s Cup-winning goaltender won’t be back after a trade with the New York Rangers to make Alexandar Georgiev the starter moving forward. Kuemper was solid, not spectacula­r, in backstoppi­ng the Avalanche to the title with a 2.57 goalsagain­st average and .902 save percentage, though that stability could be what another high-scoring contender needs.

The 32-year-old could be a perfect fit for the Toronto Maple Leafs, another team looking to get over the hump in the playoffs with solid play in net. They already cleared cap space by trading Petr Mrazek to Chicago and are in place to spend at hockey’s most important position.

JACK CAMPBELL

Toronto’s most recent starting goalie could return or see what else is out there for a 30-year-old who has shown he can carry the load in the regular season and succeed in the playoffs.

Campbell as recently as the first round in 2021 put up a 1.81 GAA and .934 save percentage, which wasn’t enough to help Toronto advance but would be with the right amount of scoring. Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and the Edmonton Oilers would be able to provide that, and Campbell is an upgrade over boom-or-bust 40-year-old Mike Smith.

EVGENI MALKIN

The Robin to Sidney Crosby’s Batman for 16 years is a superstar in his own right like Scottie Pippen was for Michael Jor

dan with the NBA’s Chicago Bulls in the 1990s. The big question now is whether Malkin will, at 36 years old, stay with the Pittsburgh Penguins or bolt for a new opportunit­y.

Penguins GM Ron Hextall last week forecasted getting a deal done soon with defenseman Kris Letang and a day later finalized a $36.6 million, sixyear contract. In the same breath, Hextall said talks with Malkin were on a different level — further away from a sure thing.

Letang texted Malkin back after his deal was announced, saying, “I hope you get this done soon so we keep it all together.” If that doesn’t happen, one of the league’s other 31 teams will get a difference-maker who’s still a point-a-game performer.

 ?? O’MEARA AP PHOTO/CHRIS ?? Calgary Flames left wing Johnny Gaudreau (13) carries the puck past Tampa Bay Lightning left wing Ondrej Palat (18) during the third period of an NHL hockey game in 2018 in Tampa, Fla.
O’MEARA AP PHOTO/CHRIS Calgary Flames left wing Johnny Gaudreau (13) carries the puck past Tampa Bay Lightning left wing Ondrej Palat (18) during the third period of an NHL hockey game in 2018 in Tampa, Fla.
 ?? AP PHOTO/JACK DEMPSEY ?? Colorado Avalanche center Nazem Kadri hoists the Stanley Cup at a rally for the NHL hockey champions on June 30 in Denver.
AP PHOTO/JACK DEMPSEY Colorado Avalanche center Nazem Kadri hoists the Stanley Cup at a rally for the NHL hockey champions on June 30 in Denver.

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