Ridgway Record

Malkin re-ups with Pens; Evander Kane stays put in Edmonton

- By John Wawrow, Dave Campbell and Stephen Whyno

Evgeni Malkin decided to return to the Pittsburgh Penguins after all, Evander Kane chose to stay in Edmonton, and the goalie carousel kept spinning a day before the the NHL's free agency period opened.

Malkin late Tuesday night signed a $24.4 million, four-year deal that counts $6.1 million against the salary cap through 2026. He had as recently as Monday told the team he was testing the market.

"Evgeni is a generation­al talent who will be remembered as one of the greatest players in NHL history," general manager Ron Hextall said. "His hockey resume and individual accomplish­ments speak volumes about him as a player, and we are thrilled to watch him continue his remarkable legacy in Pittsburgh."

Kane followed by announcing "I'm back," in a post on his verified Twitter account in which he revealed agreeing to a $20.5 million, four-year contract with the Oilers.

He credited Edmonton for giving him an opportunit­y to continue his career in January after the San Jose Sharks terminated the remainder of Kane's contract for violating COVID-19 protocols while in the American Hockey League. Kane is challengin­g the Sharks' decision by filing a grievance through the NHL Players' Associatio­n.

"A big part of my decision to stay in Edmonton was because of the opportunit­y given to me only seven months ago, but also the chance to be a part of a championsh­ip team," wrote Kane, who maintained negotiatio­ns with the Oilers, even after the team gave him permission to other clubs.

"Throughout the last 12 months, there have been lots of road blocks, tons of adversity and many tough days," he added. "I'm grateful for the tremendous amount of support from family, friends, teammates and others who have helped me stay strong through these difficult times."

Kane topped 20 goals for eighth time in 13 NHL seasons despite appearing in just 43 games, all with Edmonton.

Before Malkin and Kane stole the headlines by re-signing, the Minnesota Wild added another shift to the NHL's offseason goalie shuffle when they traded Cam Talbot to the Ottawa Senators for Filip Gustavsson.

The Senators had an opening after dealing Matt Murray to Toronto. The Wild intended to bring back Talbot in the same timeshare with MarcAndre Fleury they used down the stretch on the way to the best regular-season record in franchise history, but general manager Bill Guerin changed his mind five days after re-signing Fleury.

"Sometimes you just know in your gut that things might not work out, and somebody might not be happy. I don't want a player to be like that either, and sometimes it's best to just move on," Guerin said. "There was no drama. We don't want to create drama."

The 37-year-old Fleury, a three-time Stanley Cup winner along side Malkin in Pittsburgh, started all but one of Minnesota's playoff games in the first-round loss to St. Louis. Talbot didn't hide his disappoint­ment about having to wait until the eliminatio­n game to see the ice in that series.

Guerin said Talbot did not directly request a trade.

"Cam is a wonderful guy. He's a big part of where our culture is today, and it's not that he would have been a problem," Guerin said. "It's just, you know, sometimes there's a little awkwardnes­s and that's not always the best thing."

Talbot, who has a $3.67 million salary-cap hit on the final year of the contract he signed with the Wild in 2020, will slide in next to Anton Forsberg in Ottawa's net.

The 35-year-old Talbot went 13-0-3 in his last 16 regular-season starts.

With Fleury in the fold on a two-year, $7 million contract, Gustavsson will be the clear No. 2 goalie for Minnesota while top prospect Jesper Wallstedt develops in the AHL. The swap also netted almost $3 million in cap space for the strapped-for-space Wild.

The 24-year-old Gustavsson mostly struggled through 18 games with the Senators last season, going 5-12-1 with a 3.55 goals-against average. He was a 2016 second-round draft pick by Pittsburgh, when Guerin was in the front office there.

Also Tuesday, the Philadelph­ia Flyers placed forward Oskar Lindblom on waivers with the intent of buying out the final year of the 25-year-old cancer survivor's contract.

General manager Chuck Fletcher called it a "very difficult decision" to free up salarycap space by cutting a player who recovered from being diagnosed with Ewing's sarcoma. The Flyers will donate $100,000 in Lindblom's name to a Philadelph­ia organizati­on that supports families impacted by cancer.

 ?? File photo by Becky Polaski ?? Evgeni Malkin is shown in action during the March 23, 2022 game between Pittsburgh and Buffalo played in Buffalo, N.Y.
File photo by Becky Polaski Evgeni Malkin is shown in action during the March 23, 2022 game between Pittsburgh and Buffalo played in Buffalo, N.Y.

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