New York Post

Hamonic’s future key to Isles’ offseason

- By BRETT CYRGALIS bcyrgalis@nypost.com

There is one large domino that has to fall — or not — before the rest of the Islanders offseason business can commence.

So the number 3 on the back of Travis Hamonic’s white jersey could very well have been three black dots, teetering and ready to topple, with the status of his pending trade request coloring the most important and complicate­d summer of work for general manager Garth Snow since he took over in 2006.

With the players set to reconvene for exit interviews on Tuesday back on Long Island, the sting of the 4-0 eliminatio­n loss to the Lightning in Game 5 of their second-round series in Tampa on Sunday afternoon is still fresh. The fact that it was likely Hamonic’s final game as an Islander wasn’t lost on anyone, and could be seen in his watering eyes.

Yet coach Jack Capuano made a curious statement, saying he and his staff were not planning on losing Hamonic, only because nothing had happened yet. The soon-to-be 26-year-old had asked to be moved before the season started for an undisclose­d personal reason so he could be closer to his family outside of Winnipeg.

Capuano’s statement showed there is at least a hope circulatin­g around the franchise that Hamonic will change his mind and stay. With his terrific postseason, and his relatively modest $3.857 million salary-cap hit over the next four seasons, he is unquestion­ably a coveted player for those teams in need in the northern parts of the Midwest and West.

What type of deal Snow is looking for remains uncertain, although packaging Hamonic with one of the Islanders many prospects could bring back a large haul, included in which should be at least one impactful NHL player.

Which is why the sooner Harmonic’s future is decided, the better idea Snow can have about how he can start to build the 2016-17 roster

That starts with addressing the free agencies of forwards Kyle Okposo, Frans Nielsen and Matt Martin. Let’s say Snow can pry Ryan Nugent-Hopkins out of Edmonton, does that make Nielsen expendable? If Hamonic is traded for a return that combines for a larger salary-cap hit, then is there not enough space to fit substantia­l raises for Okposo and Martin?

The most unpredicta­ble part of every team’s offseason is also the unknown of the expansion draft looming in the summer of 2017. How many players, and how much salary, they will be forced to expose for the assumed new team out in the Las Vegas?

For the Islanders, that draft might come as a godsend concerning 32-year-old Johnny Boychuk and his $6 million cap hit for the next six seasons — a deal that was necessary at the time and has started to show the early signs of being an albatross. Or how about goalie Jaroslav Halak, who seemingly can’t stay healthy and has two more years remaining at $4.5 million, now part of a goaltendin­g tandem following the breakout postseason (however disappoint­ingly it ended) for Thomas Greiss.

But all good teams have bad contracts. It’s part of the way the NHL works under this hard-cap system. And all good teams are forced, at some point or another, to make difficult decisions with players they like.

“That’s a tough part about losing, not going to the rink tomorrow to go on the ice and practice,” Capuano said. “Every team goes through it.”

So does the rest of the league, and that is what makes Hamonic such a valuable commodity. Maybe the Islanders can somehow find a way to convince him stay, and maybe not. But the sooner a decision can be made, or the sooner a deal can be done, then the sooner the Islanders can get on with their collective life.

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