Dayton Daily News

SALARY CAP COULD SPARK NHL TRADE FRENZY

- By Stephen Whyno

Matt Niskanen wasn’t totally shocked when the Washington Capitals traded

him to Philadelph­ia last week. One look at their salary cap

picture explained it. “I know what kind of situation Washington was in, so I knew there was a pos

sibility,” he said. General managers say

there is more trade chatter now than at any time in recent years, and much of it has to do with a wide gap between the haves and have nots across the NHL. Only it’s not about contenders

and rebuilders; a handful of teams know they will be up against the salary cap ceil-

ing and many others have plenty of room and can use it to take on bad contracts to get better.

The NHL trade market is heating up. Follow the money to see where it goes.

“One thing I think is really apparent is that there’s a commodity out there called

the cap,” Winnipeg general manager Kevin Cheveldayo­ff said. “I think that a lot of people are talking around those things as well. It’s an inter- esting dynamic this summer, so we’ll kind of see.”

Cheveldayo­ff ’s Jets are on the selling side because they need to get new contracts done for budding star forwards Patrik Laine and Kyle Connor, and already have an establishe­d core signed to big-ticket deals. They traded defenseman Jacob Trouba to the New York Rangers on Monday and aren’t done deal- ing.

“There’s realities in a hard cap world,” Cheveldayo­ff said. “There’s no question we have a challengin­g summer still ahead of us.”

The rebuilding Rangers are closer to the other end of the spectrum with almost $19 million in cap space to play with. They might be able to accelerate the climb back to the playoffs with some shrewd moves at the draft this weekend and beyond because they can spend to the cap and don’t need to win this year.

“What we’ve learned over the last few years since we started on this rebuild is having cap space affords you conversati­ons you couldn’t have before,” New York GM Jeff Gorton said. “Now I think we’re in conversati­ons and we’re talking to teams about

things that maybe three or four years ago we weren’t able to do. There’s a lot of different avenues to do this, and there’s a lot of conversati­ons that go into it as far as eating money or spending money or what you have to do. But definitely having cap space is a big thing ... it’s a big weapon to have as we move forward in our rebuild.”

The New Jersey Devils are in a similar spot. They are expected to take American center Jack Hughes with the first overall pick Friday — leaving Finnish winger Kaapo Kakko for the Rangers sec- ond — and might be a No. 1 defenseman and a few other additions from being playoff contenders again.

Might a trade for Nashville’s P.K. Subban fit for New Jersey? The Devils not only have more than $30 million in cap space but a surplus of young forwards and pros- pects that could make for an

intriguing offer to the Predators, who look poised to shake things up after back- to-back early playoff exits. Pittsburgh is among the

contending teams that need to shed salary to be under the cap. The Penguins began that process by sending defense- man Olli Maatta to Chicago for young forward Dominik Kahun and a draft pick , and winger Phil Kessel would have been on the move to Minnesota had he not vetoed

the trade.

GM Jim Rutherford said he’s “trying to retool” on the fly and won’t rule out trading someone like center Evgeni Malkin or defenseman Kris Letang.

“There’s been great players traded in this league, and if somebody comes along with a package that makes sense for the Penguins, we have to look at it,” Rutherford told 93.7-FM in Pittsburgh. “We’re not finished making changes. I would expect that there will be a couple more before training camp starts.”

The same goes for San Jose, which re-signed twotime Norris Trophy winning defenseman Erik Karlsson to a $92 million, 11-year contract and already cleared some room by dealing veteran blue liner Justin Braun to Philadelph­ia. The Sharks still have to re-sign impressive young forward Timo Meier and would love to bring back Joe Thornton and captain Joe Pavelski.

Of course, there’s only so much money to go around, which may force the Sharks to deal.

“Under a cap system, choices and decisions need to be made,” GM Doug Wilson said.

 ?? JUSTIN BERL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Pittsburgh is among the contending teams that need to shed salary to be under the cap. The Penguins began that process by sending defenseman Olli Maatta (above) to Chicago for young forward Dominik Kahun and a draft pick, and winger Phil Kessel would have been on the move to Minnesota had he not vetoed the trade.
JUSTIN BERL/GETTY IMAGES Pittsburgh is among the contending teams that need to shed salary to be under the cap. The Penguins began that process by sending defenseman Olli Maatta (above) to Chicago for young forward Dominik Kahun and a draft pick, and winger Phil Kessel would have been on the move to Minnesota had he not vetoed the trade.

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