logo
Bennett's signed. Now, can the Panthers wrap things up with Ekblad, Marchand?

Bennett's signed. Now, can the Panthers wrap things up with Ekblad, Marchand?

Miami Herald2 days ago

The Florida Panthers, fresh off winning a second consecutive Stanley Cup, took care of their first major order of offseason business Friday when Sam Bennett agreed to an eight-year contract extension.
Now, can they do the same with defenseman Aaron Ekblad and forward Brad Marchand before free agency begins on Tuesday? That's the priority.
'My preference — and maybe I'm hoping — is that there's enough for guys to want to stay to be a part of this and be treated fairly and be happy,' Panthers president of hockey operations and general manager Bill Zito said Saturday. 'That's the most important thing.'
Bennett was the first of the three Zito and the Panthers were able to finalize. The second-line center's deal has an average annual value of $8 million. That cuts Florida's remaining cap space to $11 million. That'll be a tight squeeze to fit Ekblad, Marchand and the salaries for a pair of restricted free agents in forward Mackie Samoskevich and backup goaltender Daniil Tarasov.
'We've been discussing all of them,' Zito said of potential deals for Marchand and Ekblad now that the Bennett deal is done. 'Everything is so intertwined. When you spend to the cap and you do it for as many years as we have and commit to as many guys as we have, the wiggle room on little things is really, really difficult. Sometimes you just have to keep at it so that you can fit everybody and keep the team and the core of the team together.'
Zito, for his part, has done an admiral job of getting the Panthers' core signed long-term. Eight Panthers players are under contract through at least the 2029-30 season.
▪ Forwards Aleksander Barkov ($10 million AAV), Matthew Tkachuk ($9.5 million AAV) and Anton Lundell ($5 million AAV) plus defenseman Seth Jones ($7 million AAV) are signed for the next five years.
▪ Forward Sam Reinhart ($8.63 million AAV) and defenseman Gustav Forsling ($5.75 million AAV) are signed for another seven years, through 2031-32.
▪ Forwards Carter Verhaeghe ($7 million AAV) and Bennett ($8 million) are inked through the 2032-33 season.
'Obviously, people talk about these players who stay, and the guys who stay generally take discounts,' Zito said. 'Look at our roster and then ask what they could be making other places. It's because they want to be part of it, and they understand it's not a financial decision to take less. Somebody asked me if I was negotiating. No. I'm mediating because we're spending it all. We're trying to get everybody happy and then if guys want to be here, we want to treat you as fairly as we can so that we can stay and we can keep the team together, because teams win.'
Bennett easily fits into that category. He won the Conn Smythe Trophy as MVP of the Stanley Cup playoffs after leading the league with 15 goals — including an NHL-record 13 road goals — this postseason. That came after setting a career-high with 51 points (25 goals, 26 assists) in the regular season and winning a gold medal with Team Canada during the 4 Nations Face-Off. There was speculation that he could have made north of $10 million per year if he tested free agency.
But he chose to stay in Florida, where his career has taken off after being acquired at the trade deadline in 2021.
Why?
'This is the core that's been here for the last three, four years,' Bennett said Saturday. 'We've had so much success, I don't see why we can't continue it. I think we're all so committed to the same goal of winning and doing whatever it takes, putting in the hard hours to do what it takes to win. This is the core that I want to be with.'
Ekblad, who has played for the Panthers his entire career and is coming off an eight-year deal that had a $7.5 million annual cap hit, has said he wants to stay, too. The defenseman has been with the Panthers his entire career since Florida took him No. 1 overall in 2014. His 732 career regular-season games played for the organization are second behind only Barkov. Ekblad also holds the franchise's defenseman records for games played (732), goals (118), assists (262) and points (380).
'That's part of who I am at this point,' Ekblad said on June 21, the day before the team's championship parade. 'I've spent 11 years here, and that's more than I've spent in any home or city in my life. It's home, and I expect it to be home.'
Marchand, who Florida acquired as a rental at the trade deadline and whose previous deal had an annual cap hit of $6.125 million, looked like a natural fit with the team during his three-and-a-half months here.
On the ice, he logged 20 points (10 goals, 10 assists) in the playoffs, including six goals in the Stanley Cup Final, and elevated Florida's third line with Lundell and winger Eetu Luostarinen.
Off the ice, he became a central figure in the dressing room with teammates who had been enemies over the past two years. He introduced himself to the team group chat with a flurry of chirps. He became the center of the postgame celebration as the team flung rubber rats at him as they left the ice. He was the leader of Dairy Queen trips on the road during the final two rounds of the playoffs.
'We'll see what happens here soon,' Marchand said after the Panthers clinched the Stanley Cup.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Florida Panthers signings: Champs keep team together because winning sells
Florida Panthers signings: Champs keep team together because winning sells

USA Today

time23 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Florida Panthers signings: Champs keep team together because winning sells

The Florida Panthers have won back-to-back Stanley Cup titles and have been to the Final three years in a row. If that doesn't say start of a dynasty, general manager Bill Zito's recent magic might have positioned the team for another run and more. Zito had expressed confidence that he could sell his three key pending unrestricted free agents on a winning culture and get Sam Bennett, Aaron Ekblad and Brad Marchand re-signed. Playoff MVP Bennett was first, agreeing to an eight-year, $64 million extension that was announced before the NHL draft. Then the team announced an eight-year deal for top-pairing defenseman and 2014 No. 1 overall pick Ekblad worth a reported $6.1 million a year on June 30. And reports emerged later in the day that Marchand, who scored 10 playoff goals after arriving in a trade, would be getting a six-year deal worth a little more than $5 million a year. His contract will run until he's 43. Zito vowed that the team would spend to the salary cap and it will. And all three are taking under-market contracts to stick around. Also important, they aren't joining the Panthers' rivals. The Panthers now have Aleksander Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Reinhart, Bennett, Carter Verhaeghe, Marchand, Anton Lundell, Seth Jones, Ekblad and Gustav Forsling signed through at least 2030. Zito also made a recent trade for goaltender Daniil Tarasov, 26, who will get to learn under veteran Sergei Bobrovsky and possibly be the Panthers' No. 1 goalie of the future. The Panthers are like a family. Witness how captain Barkov made sure that all the first-time Stanley Cup winners got to lift the Cup before last year's winners did. That camaraderie is a key selling point. So is winning. And the Panthers have put themselves in position to do more.

Brad Marchand staying with Panthers on six-year contract: Report
Brad Marchand staying with Panthers on six-year contract: Report

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Brad Marchand staying with Panthers on six-year contract: Report

Brad Marchand staying with Panthers on six-year contract: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston Brad Marchand isn't just staying with the Florida Panthers, he is committing to the two-time defending Stanley Cup champs for six more years. Advertisement Yes, you read that right. The 37-year-old veteran has agreed to a six-year contract worth just under $32 million with the Panthers, as first reported by Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman on Monday. The salary cap hit will be less than $5.5 million, which is pretty good value for Florida. According to TSN's Pierre LeBrun, Marchand's contract is front-loaded with just $1 million in base salary for each season. If Marchand plays out this entire contract, he'll be 43 years old when it expires. Marchand spent 15-plus seasons with the Boston Bruins before they dealt him to the Panthers at the trade deadline in March. Advertisement He made a seamless transition to the Panthers lineup and was arguably their best player in the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs. He tallied 20 points (10 goals, 10 assists) in 23 postseason games, including six goals in the Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers. The Panthers won the series in six games to secure back-to-back championships. The Panthers have done a masterful job re-signing their own free agents this offseason. In addition to Marchand, Florida has kept top-six center Sam Bennett (eight years, $64 million) and star defenseman Aaron Ekblad (eight years, $48.8 million). The Bruins, Toronto Maple Leafs and Utah Mammoth reportedly were going to have interest in Marchand if he hit the free agent market Tuesday, but now those teams will have to pursue other options.

Blue Jackets circle back to Ivan Provorov after summer makeover stagnates
Blue Jackets circle back to Ivan Provorov after summer makeover stagnates

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Blue Jackets circle back to Ivan Provorov after summer makeover stagnates

COLUMBUS, Ohio — This was supposed to be the Columbus Blue Jackets' latest summer of significant change, with a laundry list of upgrades and expenditures that general manager Don Waddell wanted to pursue to help his promising, young roster move forward. Instead, its been the summer of stagnation. Waddell did acquire two significant players to help the Blue Jackets' third and fourth forward lines — Charlie Coyle and Miles Wood were added in a trade with Colorado — but the biggest areas that needed help were from the red line back: defense and goaltending. Advertisement The defense, barring an out-of-nowhere blockbuster, will remain almost entirely unchanged. On Sunday, Dante Fabbro signed a four-year, $16.5 million contract ($4.125 million salary cap) to return to his spot next to Zach Werenski on the top pair. As of late Monday, Waddell and Mark Gandler, the agent for defenseman Ivan Provorov, were putting the finishing touches on a seven-year, $59.5 million contract ($8.5 million AAV) that would extend Provorov through the 2031-32 season, the most far-reaching contract on the roster. Meanwhile, the likelihood that struggling goaltender Elvis Merzlikins will remain with the Blue Jackets increased exponentially when the NHL's 10-day buyout window closed without Merzlikins on the waiver wire. Barring an unlikely trade of the 31-year-old Latvian, the fact that he's still on the roster suggests strongly that Merzlikins and Jet Greaves — in some order — will be the Blue Jackets' 1-2 punch next season. In a normal year, you might hold off on assuming that the Blue Jackets, or any other club, would be finished with their offseason makeover, because Tuesday is the start of NHL free agency. And, with the salary cap going up, most clubs have money to spend for the first time in five seasons. But that money was largely used by teams to re-sign their own players (as the Blue Jackets ended up doing with Provorov and Fabbro). It's hard to remember a free-agent pool as shallow as the one that will become available at noon ET on Tuesday. Waddell lamented the scarcity of players available after Friday's first round of the NHL Draft, the first sign that this summer might not go as the Blue Jackets had hoped. The plan, Waddell indicated, was to use the Jackets' two first-round picks (Nos. 14 and 20) to help bring immediate help. Most years, that's possible at the draft. This year? Not so much. The only picks-for-player(s) trade involving first-round picks was struck by Montreal and the New York Islanders, when defenseman Noah Dobson was sent to the Canadiens in exchange for Montreal's No. 16 and No. 17 pick. Advertisement That trade is a good example of the difficulty Waddell had making deals, and it wasn't because of any inaction on his part. Waddell was deeply involved in trade talks with Islanders new GM Mathieu Darche, but he deemed the asking price to be too high. The request, reportedly, was not only the Blue Jackets' two first-round picks, but also towering top-six forward Dmitri Voronkov and a prospect. Provorov closing the gap with his 1st as a Jacket! 🚨@FanaticsBook | #CBJ — Columbus Blue Jackets (@BlueJacketsNHL) November 19, 2023 Once Waddell recognized that the trade market wasn't going to provide a right-side, top-four defender, and when it became clear that free agency wasn't going to involve that caliber of player, either, he circled back to two of his most reliable defenders from last season. In the process, Provorov — and to a lesser extent Fabbro — gained enormous leverage in the negotiations. The Blue Jackets were reluctant to go long-term with Provorov, both before last season's trade deadline and earlier this season when they tried to move along with a deal, but they had no choice when the market fizzled. The Blue Jackets made a series of other decisions on Monday, too. The Blue Jackets are letting UFA forwards Sean Kuraly, Christian Fischer and Luke Kunin, and defenseman Jack Johnson head to free agency. It appears forwards James van Riemsdyk and Justin Danforth will go to the market, too, barring a last-minute contract on Tuesday morning. They extended qualifying offers to three restricted free agents — defenseman Daemon Hunt and Voronkov — protecting their rights to the players. Both Hunt and Voronkov have arbitration rights that must be exercised in the coming days. Forward Mykael Pyyhtiä was given his qualifying offer in May so that he could obtain insurance to play for Finland in the IIHF World Championships. Advertisement Defenseman Jordan Harris, a restricted free agent, was not extended a qualifying offer that would have guaranteed him a one-way contract for next season. That makes him an unrestricted free agent on Tuesday, free to sign with any other club. Harris, who was acquired from Montreal last August in the trade that sent Patrik Laine to the Canadiens, played in only 33 games for the Blue Jackets and was a healthy scratch for long stretches of the season. The Blue Jackets also declined to extend qualifying offers to minor-league defensemen Cole Clayton, Samuel Knazko and Ole-Julian Bjorgvik-Holm. Waddell previously mentioned a desire to add a top-six forward, and there are a few available on the free-agent market. Winnipeg's Nikolaj Ehlers tops the lists, along with Vancouver's Brock Boeser and Dallas' Mikael Granlund. In an interview early Monday on the Blue Jackets' flagship station, WBNS-FM, Waddell described his approach to free-agent forwards as 'adding around the edges.' He did that late last summer, adding van Riemsdyk, Zach Aston Reese and others. There could be surprises, of course. The Jackets could jump in and land a prominent player. (We've seen that before.) A free-agent signing elsewhere in the league could create a roster glut or a salary-cap problem that could make a player expendable. An out-of-nowhere call from another GM could delight Waddell with a trade offer. But as it stands, the Blue Jackets — for now — will have to hope that their young talent continues to take big steps forward as they did last season, that Greaves is ready to be a strong NHL goaltender capable of carrying a load, and that newcomers Coyle and Wood are able to help the club's third and fourth lines make more of an impact.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store