Zadorov ranked sixth among NHL blue-liners with 228 hits in 70 games last season and tied for third in the league in hits per contest (3.3) among rearguards with at least 50 games played.
The 24-year-old was a restricted free agent coming off a two-year, $4.3-million contract he signed with Colorado in September 2017, according to CapFriendly.
Zadorov spent the last four seasons with the Avalanche, who acquired him from the Buffalo Sabres in the Ryan O'Reilly trade in 2015.
The Pittsburgh Penguins have signed head coach Mike Sullivan to a four-year contract extension, the club announced Friday.
The deal will begin after the upcoming season and run through the 2023-24 campaign.
"Mike has done a great job delivering four 100-plus-point seasons with our team," general manager Jim Rutherford said. "To win back-to-back Stanley Cups in this era speaks volumes of him as a coach. His instincts in managing the interworkings of our team both on and off the ice has been impressive."
Along with winning two Stanley Cups, Sullivan has posted a regular-season record of 174-92-34 across four years in Pittsburgh.
Paquette is an Energizer Bunny of sorts for the Bolts. He finished sixth in the NHL with 269 hits last season and managed to chip in offensively with a career-high 13 goals. He also had his best season in the faceoff circle, winning 52.6 percent of his draws at even strength.
The Lightning now have $5.57 million remaining in projected cap space with three RFAs - including 41-goal scorer Brayden Point - left to sign.
Harrington is known more for his contributions on the defensive side of the puck rather than the offensive side. He had 17 points and 81 blocked shots while averaging just over 13 minutes per game in a career-high 73 contests last season. He skated in all 10 of Columbus' playoff games, tallying four assists.
The 26-year-old is arguably the team's best penalty-killing blue-liner. Among the five defensemen who regularly killed penalties for the Blue Jackets last season, Harrington was on the ice for the fewest high-danger scoring chances against and fewest goals against per 60 minutes when the team was shorthanded, according to Natural Stat Trick.
Originally a second-round pick of the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2011, Harrington was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2015 as a part of the Phil Kessel trade. He was sent to the Jackets a year later in exchange for Kerby Rychel.
The first three days of July have come and gone, and the hockey world is left with more questions than answers in regard to offer sheets.
What did the Canadiens, who convinced star forward Sebastian Aho to sign an offer sheet Monday, actually accomplish aside from causing a minor stir in Carolina?
Will the reaction (the Hurricanes matching the five-year, $42.3-million deal with little hesitation) be chalked up as evidence that offer sheets aren’t effective in 2019?
Or, did Habs general manager Marc Bergevin simply play his cards wrong against Canes GM Don Waddell? Would a more lucrative deal of, say, $50 million over five years have changed the dynamic of the situation and have led to a precedent-setting outcome?
In the wake of a hectic week of transactions, there’s plenty to unpack beyond the muddy offer-sheet drama. NHL teams completed 11 trades over the past week, while the first three days of July produced 143 contracts, $732 million in future earnings, and 267 contract years, according to CapFriendly. Jake Gardiner, Marcus Johansson, and a small group of free agents may still be available, but the bulk of offseason activity has passed.
Now that the dust has settled, let’s reflect on the week’s biggest developments.
Metro Division disrupted in major way
You could argue that a team like the Central Division’s Stars or the Atlantic’s Panthers should be crowned the offseason’s biggest winner to date, but there are a handful of legitimate cases across the league. It's a toss-up.
In terms of pure chaos, though, the Metropolitan is the center of attention, hands down. It’s the one division that’s been rocked the hardest since the draft.
The Rangers’ rebuild hit fast forward with the landmark acquisition of Artemi Panarin; New Jersey added Wayne Simmonds a couple of weeks after the club scooped up Jack Hughes first overall and P.K. Subban via trade; the Flyers may have overpaid Kevin Hayes, but he will be a difference-maker; Carolina quietly picked up Erik Haula from Vegas and James Reimer from Florida.
In other words, the three Metro teams that missed last year’s playoffs, plus Carolina, who made it to the conference finals, have bulked up. As for the five playoff teams:
The Blue Jackets are worse after losing Panarin, Matt Duchene, Sergei Bobrovsky, and Ryan Dzingel. They did, however, sign Gustav Nyquist, and still look good on paper; although the Penguins shed Phil Kessel and gained Alex Galchenyuk and Brandon Tanev, the team can never be counted out until Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin begin to fade; the Islanders missed out on Panarin and whiffed on a Robin Lehner extension, but snagged Semyon Varlamov and re-signed captain Anders Lee; Washington didn’t make any groundbreaking moves, but have much of their 2018 Stanley Cup lineup intact.
The Metro could easily send five teams to the 2020 playoffs, but it’s become difficult predicting who those teams might be.
Nobody in better shape than Avalanche
Take a glance around the NHL and think about how the landscape might look in five years. There isn't a franchise in better shape than the upstart Avalanche, especially if you trust GM Joe Sakic’s vision and consider the following information:
The core is extremely young. Nathan MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen (RFA), J.T. Compher (RFA), Cale Makar, Samuel Girard, Conor Timmins, and Martin Kaut are all under 25 years old, while Gabriel Landeskog and Philipp Grubauer are 26 and 27, respectively.
Sakic’s addressed a lack of forward depth this offseason by adding a second-line center (Nazem Kadri), two middle-six wingers (Joonas Donskoi, RFA Andrei Burakovsky), and a fourth-line center (Pierre-Edouard Bellemare) through two trades and two signings.
Colorado boasts a league-high $27.2 million in cap space for the 2019-20 season. Not a single albatross contract is on the books.
There’s more talent coming down the pipe. Both Bowen Byram and Alex Newhook - picked fourth and 16th overall, respectively, in last month's draft - are highly touted, and in the next three drafts, the Avs own 20 selections, including all three first-rounders.
All of this is incredibly promising for an Avs team that, despite making the playoffs in consecutive seasons, is just getting started. Colorado is positioned to cleanly transition from playoff team to contender over the next couple of seasons. And by the tail end of MacKinnon’s contract, which expires after 2022-23, they could be a powerhouse. The future is blindingly bright.
Maple Leafs stickhandle out of trouble
With Mitch Marner negotiations ongoing, GM Kyle Dubas managed to turn over a chunk of Toronto’s 2018-19 roster in only a few days.
Departing are defensemen Gardiner (destination unknown), Nikita Zaitsev (Ottawa), Ron Hainsey (Ottawa), and Calle Rosen (Colorado), as well as forwards Connor Brown (Ottawa) and Kadri (Colorado). Arriving are defensemen Tyson Barrie (Colorado), Cody Cedi (Ottawa), Ben Harpur (Ottawa), and Kevin Gravel (UFA), as well as forwards Alex Kerfoot (Colorado), Jason Spezza (UFA), Nick Shore (UFA), and Kenny Agostino (UFA).
For those keeping score at home, that’s eight players in, six players out since July 1.
Rewinding to draft weekend in mid-June, Andreas Johnsson and Kasperi Kapanen signed extensions to get ahead of a potential offer-sheet conundrum, and Patrick Marleau left via trade to create cap space.
The only real stinger for the Leafs following all of these interconnected transactions is the loss of their 2020 first-round pick. Toronto's operating through a short-term lens and didn't have much choice but to ship out a first-rounder as they dance around the incoming $81.5-million salary cap.
Then on Thursday, Kerfoot and Ceci, both RFAs, signed four- and one-year deals, respectively, making Marner the lone player on the 23-man roster without a contract. Sure, Dubas could try to upgrade his No. 2 goalie in the leadup to training camp, but that takes a back seat to the Marner negotiations.
The young executive's salary-clearing work since the draft leaves the club with, after some LTIR and AHL assignments, roughly $9.5 million in cap space. Starting the 2019-20 season without a dark cloud hovering over the team obviously would be the ideal scenario. Perhaps a two-year bridge deal for Marner - something in the neighborhood of $9.5 million a season - works? If that's not enough for Marner's camp then Dubas isn't out of the woods yet.
Overall, it’s been an efficient offseason for the Leafs, an organization that's doubled down on its allegiance to skilled players. It's early in the process, but right now the Leafs' 18-man depth chart (not projected lines, as Marner remains unsigned, and Hyman and Dermott are injured) looks something like this:
LW
C
RW
LD
RD
Johnsson
Matthews
Marner
Rielly
Barrie
Hyman
Tavares
Nylander
Muzzin
Ceci
Mikheyev
Kerfoot
Kapanen
Dermott
Holl
Moore
Spezza
Petan
Handing out best/worst honors
Early July usually generates both tire-pumping and head-scratching signings. Below is a collection of the best and worst signings:
Best one-year deal - Devils netting Wayne Simmonds at $5 million. He’s slowing down and has battled injuries but could use the change of scenery, so this show-me deal makes sense for both parties.
Worst one-year deal - Blackhawks grabbing Robin Lehner at $5 million. Nice get but what if the Vezina Trophy finalist, who’ll be 28 in training camp, decides to walk away next summer?
Best contract now, and in the future - Sharks re-upping Timo Meier for four years on a $6-million cap hit. Already a stud at 22 years old, the Swiss power forward will easily turn this extension into a bargain.
Worst contract now, and in the future - Penguins forking over $3.5 million per season for six years to Brandon Tanev. A perfectly useful forward is now overpaid and overcommitted - good for player, bad for team.
Best reclamation project - Stars inking Corey Perry to a one-year deal at $1.5 million with $1.75 million in performance bonuses. The ex-Hart Trophy winner is incentivized to produce, and can help out the power play.
Worst reclamation project - Panthers devoting $5.5 million a season for three years and a modified no-trade clause to Anton Stralman. He’ll help that defense corps, but the package is a little rich for a 32-year-old suited for third-pairing work.
Best aligning of timelines - Rangers landing Artemi Panarin for seven years at $11.6 million annually. He's the perfect poster boy for New York's burgeoning core, which now includes Kaapo Kakko, Adam Fox, and Jacob Trouba.
Worst aligning of timelines - Wild signing Mats Zuccarello to a five-year, $30-million deal. Weird fit, since the soon-to-be 32-year-old is a player who should be the final piece to the puzzle, and Minnesota's not exactly close to contending for a Stanley Cup.
Best big splash - Predators snagging Matt Duchene for seven years and $8 million per season. It cost the team P.K. Subban, which sucks, but the price tag is reasonable for the best center on the UFA market.
Worst big splash - Canucks acquiring Tyler Myers for five years at $6 million per season. The former Calder Trophy winner solidifies the back end, yet the length and AAV are far too generous for his talent level.
The Montreal Canadiens signed free-agent defenseman Ben Chiarot to a three-year contract with an average annual value of $3.5 million, the team announced Thursday.
Chiarot, who spent the past six seasons with the Winnipeg Jets, should strengthen the left side of a Habs blue line that needed reinforcement this summer.
"We are very happy to have come to an agreement with Ben Chiarot today," general manager Marc Bergevin said. "He is a very reliable defenseman and a solid player who will fill a need for our club. He is the type of player who can play some big minutes and be used in different situations. We are convinced he will improve our defensive group."
Chiarot put up 20 points and averaged 18:37 of ice time across 78 games in 2018-19.
Kerfoot, a restricted free agent, was acquired by the Maple Leafs on July 1 in a blockbuster deal that also included defenseman Tyson Barrie and sent 10-year veteran forward Nazem Kadri to the Colorado Avalanche.
With Kerfoot reportedly inked, the Leafs' hectic summer of RFA transactions is nearly complete. Blue-liner Cody Ceci, also acquired July 1, reportedly agreed to a one-year, $4.5-million contract, leaving superstar forward Mitch Marner as Toronto's only unsigned player.
Kerfoot has two NHL seasons under his belt, and put up 42 points across 78 games in 2018-19 with Colorado. He'll turn 25 in August.