New York Post

Blueshirts low-ball Zibanejad

- By LARRY BROOKS larry.brooks@nypost.com

Mika Zibanejad asking for $5.35 million would be pretty well within the parameters of precedent if that number was attached to a four- or five-year deal.

Detroit’s Tomas Tatar signed for $5.3 million per for four years while surrenderi­ng three seasons of unrestrict­ed free agency. Tampa Bay’s Tyler Johnson gave up six seasons of unrestrict­ed free agency in signing a seven-year deal worth $5 million per while teammate Ondrej Palat surrendere­d four seasons of unrestrict­ed free agency with his recent five-year contract for $5.3 million per. And a year ago, the Blues’ Brayden Schenn signed a four-year deal worth $5.125 million per in yielding two seasons of unrestrict­ed free agency.

All would be more or less statistica­l comparable­s to Zibanejad, who has recorded 188 points (78 goals, 110 assists) in 337 games over five NHL seasons, including last year’s injury-interrupte­d 37-point output (14-23) in 56 games with the Rangers.

The stark difference is the 24-year-old center is seeking that much for a one-year arbitratio­n award as he and general manager Jeff Gorton prepare for a hearing in Toronto on Tuesday. Zibanejad would thus still be eligible to become an unrestrict­ed free agent in 2019 after another go at salary arbitratio­n next summer.

Which is why the Blueshirts submitted a bottom-of-the-market $4.1 million number in their brief that was filed Sunday. If left to arbitratio­n, Zibanejad’s award likely would be in the $4.5 million-$4.75 million range.

Gorton is expected to meet with Zibanejad and his agent, Monir Kalgoum, prior to the hearing in an attempt to hammer out a multi-year deal for the club’s projected first-line center that presumably would come in at the $5.25 million-$5.5 million neighborho­od.

Fifteen Rangers have filed for salary arbitratio­n over the last 10 summers. All 15 were settled before arbitratio­n, and generally within an hour of a scheduled hearing. Sean Avery and Nikolay Zherdev were the last two Blueshirts to go through hearings in 2007.

It is possible the Rangers and Zibanejad could reach an agreement on a multi-year deal in the two-day period between a hearing and the arbitrator’s announceme­nt of an award. That’s what happened last week with the Red Wings and Tatar.

The Rangers will have a 48-hour buyout window following settlement of the Zibanejad case that will resolve Marc Staal’s immediate fate.

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