Miami Herald

All-Star forwards loom over all offseason decisions

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com David Wilson: 305-376-3406, @DBWilson2

When free agency opens at noon Wednesday, the Panthers will be thinking not only about how to get better for the 2022-23 season, but also how to try to remain a Stanley Cup contender for a decade beyond then.

Their two All-Star forwards will be at the center of just about every decision.

Claude Giroux, whom the Panthers got in exchange for a first-round pick in March, is about to become an unrestrict­ed free agent. Jonathan Huberdeau, who rewrote Florida’s franchise record book last year, can be one after next season.

The Panthers have Stanley Cup aspiration­s for next year after winning the Presidents’ Trophy last season, and losing Giroux would, on paper, be a step backward. They also consider extending Huberdeau to be a top priority, knowing they can count on having one of the NHL’s best offenses if they can pair up Huberdeau and star center Aleksander Barkov for years to come.

These are the two pillars everything in the offseason hinges upon for general manager Bill Zito and his staff.

IT STARTS WITH CLAUDE GIROUX

Florida wants to keep Giroux. He wants to stay. There is a way to make it happen, but it will take some serious compromise­s from both sides.

It makes sense to start with Giroux because he has the leverage in this situation: He played in his seventh NHL All-Star Game last season, scored 65 points in 75 games in the regular season and eight points in 10 games in the 2022 playoffs, and is certainly one of the best players available on the open market; he’s still good enough to command a $5 million-plus annual salary and, at 34, in the age range where he might be searching for one final long-term deal.

Right now, the Panthers can’t come close to offering him what other teams will, especially for next year, with less than $1 million in cap space currently available.

How can they get this done, then? They’ll have to make their own sacrifices, namely some of the other talent on the current roster.

The most straightfo­rward path to clearing some cap space is trading Patric Hornqvist. The 35-year-old right wing is still a valuable leader and one of the best fourth-line wingers in the league, but $5.3 million is a lot to pay any fourth-line forward. The Panthers are far from the only team facing a brutal cap situation and it’s mostly only bad teams with flexibilit­y. Those teams have less need for a player like Hornqvist, which means they’d probably want draft picks as compensati­on for taking on the salary, and Florida can’t deal away any of its next three first-round picks because of recent trades.

The Panthers can place winger Anthony Duclair on long-term injured reserve (LTIR) after his offseason Achilles tendon injury — meaning his $3 million salary won’t count against the cap until he

returns, likely around midseason — and potentiall­y open up more than $9 million in room, if they can deal Hornqvist without taking back any players.

There is some risk with using the LTIR loophole, though: If Duclair returns at any point in the regular season, the Panthers must make room for him under the salary cap, which would necessitat­e more moves ahead of the trade deadline next year.

Whatever Zito ultimately decides to do, he will probably have to do it quickly. Unless Giroux is willing to take a big pay cut or go to a non-contender, the versatile forward will have to make a decision relatively quickly, while teams still have cap space available.

There is, of course, the possibilit­y Giroux could take a pay cut to stay with the Panthers. It would be a massive risk on his part, but Giroux could take a

one-year deal with Florida for less money than he’s worth, with the knowledge the Panthers have a much more flexible cap situation after next year, and the trust they’d like to sign him to an extension once the calendar flips to 2023 and he’s eligible to sign one.

FILLING OUT THE ROSTER

No matter whether it can keep Giroux, Florida needs to find a way to replace three forwards and one defenseman — forwards Joe Thornton, Noel Acciari and Giroux, and defenseman Ben Chiarot are all about to be free agents — from the lineup it used in the final game of the playoffs.

Mason Marchment, 27, is high on the list of priorities to bring back and might be able to fit right into Duclair’s salary slot. If Florida wants to use its LTIR savings on a defenseman, Brett Kulak, 28, is probably the top available option for the money.

Barring a series of moves, the Panthers will have to fill out the roster with cheap alternativ­es, whether it’s by giving bigger roles to prospects such as center Aleksi Heponiemi and left wing Grigori Denisenko or finding undervalue­d free agents.

In his two years with the Panthers, Zito has found a ton of success with the latter, particular­ly in his first offseason, when he signed Marchment for $700,000 and forward Carter Verhaeghe for $1 million per year and claimed defenseman Gustav Forsling off waivers.

IT ENDS WITH HUBERDEAU

Once the dust has settled on free agency, Florida and Huberdeau will know exactly how much money the club can spend to keep the All-Star left wing in Sunrise.

Right now, the Panthers have plenty of room to give Huberdeau something in the range of the $10 million-per-year extension Barkov got last year, with more than $26 million in projected cap room available for next offseason. A multiyear deal or two could eat into this space, and a desire to extend defenseman Mackenzie Weegar is a factor, too, and yet it shouldn’t preclude anything.

Like with the Giroux situation, both sides want to get a deal done, only there isn’t really anything holding up this one.

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? The Panthers will try to put together deals to keep star forwards Claude Giroux, left, and Jonathan Huberdeau.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com The Panthers will try to put together deals to keep star forwards Claude Giroux, left, and Jonathan Huberdeau.

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