Dan and Sat discuss how the Canucks offense to continues to evolve and how the team is stacking up against the NHL's elite. Also, hear from Irfaan Gaffar on the latest Canucks storylines, including Elias Pettersson's future and the trade market.
This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.
The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.
Anaheim Ducks general manager Pat Verbeek has brought up Trevor Zegras to other organizations this season, and teams believe the talented forward is available, sources told Daily Faceoff's Frank Seravalli.
A trade doesn't seem imminent, and it's unclear how far conversations have progressed, Seravalli added. TSN's Darren Dreger reported Tuesday night that the Ducks aren't actively shopping Zegras.
Zegras has struggled to start the 2023-24 campaign, mustering just four goals and seven points in 19 games. He missed all of training camp and the bulk of the preseason as his contract negotiations dragged into the fall, but he ended up signing a three-year, $17.25-million bridge deal as a restricted free agent before the Ducks' first game of the regular season.
The 22-year-old also missed around six weeks with a lower-body injury, an issue which head coach Greg Cronin said had been bothering the player "for a while."
Zegras has shown flashes of his usual show-stopping self lately, though. He scored a Michigan goal in his return from injury on Dec. 23.
Known for his creativity and skill, Zegras has eclipsed the 60-point mark in each of the last two seasons and is coming off back-to-back 23-goal campaigns. He was the runner-up for the Calder Trophy, honoring the league's top rookie, in 2022.
The Ducks made waves on Monday when they traded defenseman Jamie Drysdale and a 2025 second-round pick to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for the rights to top forward prospect Cutter Gauthier.
The Toronto Maple Leafs signed winger William Nylander to a franchise-record eight-year, $92-million extension Monday. Several ramifications from the deal affect the Leafs and the rest of the league. Let's dive in.
Leafs pay top-end value for another star player
Nylander is amid his best season, tallying 21 goals and 33 assists through 37 games, tying him with Connor McDavid for the fifth-most points in the league. Leafs fans should be ecstatic that a homegrown star wants to spend his entire career in Toronto.
But the Leafs aren't exactly getting any hometown discount here.
Nylander entered this season having never finished higher than 20th in league scoring. Since his emergence in 2021-22, he ranks 14th in points. Still, Nylander's $11.5-million cap hit will tie him for the fifth-highest-paid player in the league.
The most recent comparable is David Pastrnak - he and Nylander are the same age and play the same position. Signed 10 months ago, Pastrnak's deal with the Boston Bruins was also for eight years but with an $11.25-million cap hit. However, Pastrnak already had a 48-goal, 95-point campaign under his belt and was amid a season in which he finished as the Hart Trophy runner-up.
Pastrnak's pact was worth 13.64% of the cap ceiling when he signed the contract (13.5% of 2023-24's cap). Nylander's deal is worth 13.77% of this season's cap ceiling and 13.1% of 2024-25's projected cap. In a nutshell, the contracts are mighty close despite Pastrnak's longer track record of elite production.
Perhaps the Leafs could've saved about a million dollars per year had they reached an agreement with Nylander in the offseason. But this has been a consistent theme for an organization that hasn't been able to win negotiations with Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner, either, relative to other superstars around the league.
Getting Nylander signed is still far better than the alternative of trading him or letting him walk, and it shouldn't be a poor contract by any stretch. However, Nylander's camp clearly didn't do the Leafs any favors given that the deal also contains a full no-movement clause and bonus-heavy structure. No one should blame Nylander considering Marner and Matthews did the same thing, though. Why should he be the one to cave? Toronto just doesn't have the cap culture other teams do in which stars are open to taking slightly less for the group's betterment.
What does this mean for Marner?
Speaking of Marner, he's up next for the Leafs. Marner and John Tavares will be eligible to sign extensions on July 1 before becoming unrestricted free agents in 2025. Tavares will be in his mid-30s and likely sign for far cheaper than his current $11-millon cap hit if he stays in Toronto. The same can't be said for Marner.
Marner took the Leafs for every dollar on his current contract, receiving a $10.9-million cap hit over six years. His next deal may not be much higher considering the cap has barely increased since then.
If Nylander continues at his current pace for the rest of the season and finishes with around 120 points, it'll be tough for Marner to justify exceeding Nylander's cap-hit percentage. Marner has never recorded 100 points in a campaign.
Marner is a better defensive player than Nylander, but contracts are often based on production. Marner could go off in the second half or have a torrid start to 2024-25, but if he doesn't, his next contract should come with a cap hit far closer to Nylander's than to Matthews' $13.25M AAV. Reports indicated that Marner wanted his current deal to be paid closer to Matthews' previous contract. That's difficult to imagine this time around, with Nylander pulling himself ahead of Marner this season.
Pettersson seeing dollar signs
Vancouver Canucks superstar Elias Pettersson is likely next in line to cash in. Pettersson won't be a UFA until 2025, but he's a pending restricted free agent eligible to sign an extension at any time. Nylander's deal should be music to the ears of Pettersson's camp.
Pettersson is coming off a 102-point season and is on pace for triple-digit points again. Not only is Pettersson two years younger than Nylander, but he also plays the much more valuable position of center. And Pettersson has a strong two-way game that resulted in a seventh-place finish in Selke Trophy voting last year.
If Pettersson signs for the maximum eight-year term on his next deal, the cap hit should start with a 12. He deserves it.
2024 UFA class gets weaker
Nylander was the cream of the crop among the 2024 UFA class. There are some intriguing names after him, but Nylander was the one star player who could've single-handedly transformed a franchise.
While nobody else in the class deserves to reach Nylander's $11.5-million cap hit, his contract should help other pending UFAs maximize their full earning potential.
Players like Sam Reinhart and Jake Guentzel, both in their primes, should see handsome paydays. The same goes for productive veterans Steven Stamkos, Matt Duchene, and Jonathan Marchessault on shorter-term deals if they test the market.
Hard salary cap remains bad for hockey
Fans and media members are guilty of analyzing and debating the salary when a contract like Nylander's is signed. But it's a fair thing to want to do in a league with a hard cap where every $100,000 is mightily important.
It shouldn't be that way, though. Fans, in particular, should be able to enjoy a player committing to their favorite team instead of nitpicking over the details.
The NHL is the only major sports league with a hard salary cap, and it lags significantly behind the NFL, NBA, and MLB when it comes to player salaries. Poor marketing is partly to blame, but there are other reasons. For example, the aforementioned notion that star players should take slightly less for the group's betterment wouldn't be a thing if it weren't for the hard cap.
Although highly unlikely under current commissioner Gary Bettman, adding a luxury tax system would be a great starting point to allow stars to get their full worth, reward successful franchises, and allow teams greater cap flexibility. Greater cap flexibility could lead to more player movement and, thus, more fan engagement.
Matt and Blake pay a visit to the Louvre to review the Canucks win over the Rangers. The masterpiece performance from the team has some elevating playoff expectations, so the guys kick around where this season could go, and whether the Lotto line is something to use in the long term and post-season.
NHL Insider John Shannon makes his 2024 debut and talks about what a win like that does for the Canucks and whether management will use that as further evidence to go all in before the trade deadline. Also, an update on the urgency of Elias Pettersson negotiations and John gives his take on the Ducks-Flyers trade as well. All that plus a little NFL, CFL and MLS news as well! Presented by Applewood Auto Group.
St. Louis Blues forward Kevin Hayes vigorously denied having anything to do with Cutter Gauthier refusing to sign with the Philadelphia Flyers before the club traded the talented prospect's rights to the Anaheim Ducks on Monday night.
Anthony SanFilippo, a writer and podcast host for Crossing Broad - a Philadelphia-based sports blog - speculated to his co-host that Hayes' "fingerprints are all over this" and later wrote that sources told him Hayes was "very influential" with Gauthier.
"Yeah, I think it's complete bullshit, honestly," Hayes said Tuesday, according to Matthew DeFranks of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "I think those two guys acted like complete pieces of shit, to be honest, making shit up. Now, I'm going to bed and waking up with death threats and people want my family dead. ...
"And people that are happy that my brother's dead," he continued. "I think it's completely insane that this guy can say something like that. I honestly heard it and started laughing. Who the f--k am I to have influence on if a kid plays for an NHL team or not? I don't have that influence."
Hayes spent four seasons with the Flyers before they traded him to the Blues in June. The 31-year-old played four years at Boston College, where Gauthier is currently starring as a sophomore.
The 19-year-old winger is fresh off leading the United States to a gold medal at the world juniors while pacing the squad with 12 points in seven games. The Flyers traded his rights to the Ducks for defenseman Jamie Drysdale and a 2025 second-round pick Monday night.
Philadelphia general manager Daniel Briere later revealed Gauthier told the organization he didn't want to be a Flyer. The GM added that the team never got an answer as to why.
The Flyers drafted Gauthier fifth overall in 2022.
Fresh off signing an eight-year, $92-million extension Monday, the Toronto Maple Leafs star is on his way to punching a ticket to his first All-Star Game.
Nylander paces all skaters in fan voting for the event with 744,990 votes as of Tuesday. Eight more skaters and four more goalies will be added to the initial rosters via fan voting, which ends Jan. 11.
The St. Louis Blues inked forward Nathan Walker to a two-year contract extension with an average annual value of $775,000, the club announced Tuesday.
Walker has played all but two of his 32 games this season with the Blues' AHL affiliate, the Springfield Thunderbirds. He posted 13 goals and 16 assists in those 30 contests.
St. Louis called up the 29-year-old on Jan. 1. He scored a goal in the Blues' 2-1 win over the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday for his lone point after being held off the scoresheet in a 2-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Thursday.
Walker originally signed with the Blues in July 2019. He's split time between the NHL and AHL squads since then.
The Welsh-born Australian has also suited up for the Washington Capitals and Edmonton Oilers. The Capitals drafted him 89th overall in 2014, making him the first Aussie ever selected by an NHL team.
Sat Shah and Bik Nizzar breakdown the Canucks 6-3 win over the New York Rangers. Hear from Head Coach Rick Tocchet, Elias Pettersson and Nils Hoglander post game. Randip Janda and Iain McIntyre provide their analysis.
The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.