The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Anaheim Ducks buy out contract of former MVP Corey Perry

- AP Sports Writer

By Greg Beacham

The Anaheim Ducks have bought out the contract of former NHL MVP Corey Perry after 14 seasons with the franchise.

The Ducks announced the move Wednesday, with general manager Bob Murray calling it “one of the most difficult decisions I’ve had to make in my 44 years in the NHL.”

Perry has spent his entire career with the Ducks, and he is the franchise leader with 988 games played — four more than Anaheim captain Ryan Getzlaf, his teammate and frequent linemate throughout their intertwine­d careers. The Ducks’ decision to part ways with Perry while keeping Getzlaf ends one of the most durable partnershi­ps in recent hockey history.

Perry had two seasons left on his contract with an annual salary cap hit of $8.625 million, but his scoring production has declined in recent seasons while Getzlaf is still going strong.

Perry and Getzlaf won the Stanley Cup together in 2007 and signed similar eight-year contract extensions in March 2013, but the 34-year-old stars’ remarkable partnershi­p is over.

“Corey gave everything to this franchise for 14 years, never giving an inch to his competitor­s,” Murray said. “While his scoring touch is undeniable, his will to win became his greatest attribute. We thank Corey for everything he’s meant to the Ducks organizati­on. No matter what he elects to do from here, Corey ... will always be part of the Ducks family.”

Perry won the Ducks’ only Hart Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player in 2011. He is the third-leading scorer in Ducks’ history with 776 points, and his 372 goals rank second while his 404 assists are third.

The sometimes-pugnacious forward is also the Ducks’ career leader with 1,110 penalty minutes. Perry and Getzlaf led the Ducks’ tough-nosed approach to the game over the past decade in particular, with Anaheim making the postseason 11 times in their 14 years together.

“For many years, Corey has epitomized what it means to be a Duck, playing an aggressive, relentless game while being a compassion­ate and giving member of the Orange County community,” Ducks owners Henry and Susan Samueli said in a statement issued by the team.

Perry is also a two-time Olympic gold medalist as part of Canada’s championsh­ip teams in 2010 and 2014, again playing alongside Getzlaf. Perry also won championsh­ips at the World Cup, Memorial Cup, World Juniors and World Championsh­ips, joining Scott Niedermaye­r as the only players to win titles in those six levels of hockey.

Perry scored a careerbest 50 goals during his MVP season, and he has posted eight 25-goal seasons. But he has just 42 total goals over the past three years, and he missed five months of last season with a major knee injury.

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