A whopping 243 players have scribbled their autograph on contracts worth a silly $988,121,625 through the first five days of the NHL’s open season on free agents.
And yet, more than few notable athletes remain without employment for the 2021-22 season.
General managers will need to bargain harder, and jobless players may need to lower their asking prices, but there are still gems — or at least worthy gambles and depth additions — to be unearthed from 2021’s UFA class after the July 28’s frenzy.
We round up the rumours and assess the value of the free agents who are taking a more patient approach this summer (in some cases, that’s even by choice) and are still up for grabs in August.
1. Tuukka Rask
Age: 34
Position: Goaltender
2020-21 salary cap hit: $7 million
The question isn’t whether Rask — a Vezina-winning, Cup-winning, Jennings-winning stud — is deserving of a rich, new short-term contract. The question is whether his body is up for one.
Rask openly pondered 2021 retirement this past season and drew criticism in some (unkind) circles for departing the playoff bubble early to attend to a family matter.
He underwent surgery on a torn hip labrum in late July and won’t be ready to play until January or February. If and/or when he straps on the pads again, Rask only sees it being in Boston.
“I’m not going to play for anyone else than the Bruins. This is our home,” Rask said on June 11.
“At this point of my life and my career, I don’t see any reason to go anywhere else, especially with the health I’m looking at now and a recovery time of five or six months. Hopefully it works out that I recover well, and we can talk about contracts when the time is right for that.”
The Bruins’ crease is already in overhaul mode, with Jaroslav Halak (Vancouver) and Dan Vladar (Calgary) moving on.
Expect Rask’s situation to simmer on the back burner, as the B’s roll into 2021-22 with a young, fresh tandem of Linus Ullmark and Jeremy Swayman.
“We needed to be prepared and allow Tuukka all the time he needs to get healthy. He just had surgery, spoke to him this morning, doing very well,” GM Don Sweeney said after signing Ullmark in free agency.
“We’ve always left the door open for Tuukka to return. And I think it just allows Jeremy to continue to progress at a natural rate but also give him the opportunity to be at the NHL level.
“When you’re trying to be a competitive team, you have to have depth. We felt that the last two playoffs, and we came up short. Now we’re trying to make sure that we’ve got the most competitive team we can, and identify if we have some needs going forward that we may have to have some changes as well.”
2. Kyle Palmieri
Age: 30
Position: Right wing / Left wing
2020-21 salary cap hit: $4.65 million
Rental piece Palmieri’s two goals in 17 regular-season games for the Islanders underwhelmed, but he exploded for seven more in the post-season.
All reports point to Palmieri staying put on the Island. The belief is that a long-term deal has already been agreed to… but GM Lou Lamoriello hasn’t announced a thing. (Mike Hoffman, Blake Coleman, Jaden Schwartz and Boone Jenner could serve as comparables.)
Lamoriello must also compensate key RFAs Anthony Beauvillier and Adam Pelech this summer, and he may be exploring a Vladimir Tarasenko trade as well. Perhaps he doesn’t want agents to know how much cap space he has left.
With Jordan Eberle now a Kraken, New York needs some dependability on its wing.
Kyle Palmieri is staying on Long Island per @JamesNicholsNYI
Isles have to hope that he still can come back to his level after a down season. We are curious what deal he’ going to sign. pic.twitter.com/wXlXtkT1J8— Andy & Rono (@HockeyStatsCZ) July 28, 2021
3. Casey Cizikas
Age: 30
Position: Centre
2020-21 salary cap hit: $3.35 million
The pivot of the New York Islanders’ crash-and-bang identity line drew a healthy amount of interest from the competition, with the Toronto Maple Leafs, Seattle Kraken, Buffalo Sabres and San Jose Sharks all reportedly exploring a signing.
A career-long Islander, Cizikas has apparently shook hands on a multi-year deal to remain on the Islander. Like Palmieri, we’re still awaiting an announcement.
There is also speculation that Lamoriello will sign sudden UFA Zach Parise, whose price should be more modest.
4. Jason Demers
Age: 33
Position: Defence
2020-21 salary cap hit: $4.5 million
Right-shot defencemen were scooped up fast and furious on July 28, but this former Coyotes blueliner and steady, stay-at-home veteran is still available.
Demers only registered four assists in 2021, but he’s still logging more than 17 minutes a night and driving play north despite starting the majority of his shifts in the D-zone.
Another $4.5-million payday is unlikely, but some team will scoop him up.
Thank you to all the Coyotes fans, my teammates , the training staff I’ll never forget the years I spent in the desert #howling #enjoyedeverymin excited to see what comes next in my career and this upcoming season
— jason demers (@jasondemers5) July 28, 2021
5. Nikita Gusev
Age: 29
Position: Right wing / Left wing
2020-21 salary cap hit: $1 million
A right shot capable of playing either wing, Gusev made some noise in 2019-20 when he finally left the KHL, scoring 13 goals and 44 points in 66 games for a bad Devils squad.
The Russian’s ’21 campaign was split between New Jersey and Florida. His shooting percentage dropped, and he failed to find his groove in either lineup.
Gusev is only 29. He should have some game left, and he’s garnered some interest on the market. Does he give the NHL another shot, or return to the KHL?
6. Travis Zajac
Age: 36
Position: Centre
2020-21 salary cap hit: $5.75 million
Like so many other veteran Islanders who are technically unrestricted free agents, there is a quiet assumption that bottom-six centreman Zajac may have a deal in principle to return to the Eastern Conference finalists.
At this stage in a career, Zajac should be signing a one-year contract near the league minimum.
Despite seeing his 1,000th game drift in the rear-view mirror, the durable Zajac can still play.
He’ll kill penalties, chip in a bit of offence (20 points in 46 games in 2021), and remains an excellent faceoff asset, with a career 53.8 per cent success rate in the dot.
7. Sami Vatanen
Age: 30
Position: Defence
2020-21 salary cap hit: $2 million
My how Vatanen’s stock has fallen since his days as an emerging Anaheim Duck. The right-shot D-man still has some offensive upside and could thrive in third-pairing minutes.
Bouncing from Anaheim to New Jersey to Carolina to New Jersey to Dallas over the past four seasons, there is still belief that if Vatanen finds the proper fit, he could resurrect his career and celebrate his 500th game this upcoming season.
Righties are tough to come by.
Not a lot left on the UFA market when it comes to centres. On defense I think Sami Vatanen would be an interesting player to take a flier on as a bottom pair right hand shot defenseman.
— HabsLinks (@HabsLinks) July 29, 2021
8. Zdeno Chara
Age: 44
Position: Defence
2020-21 salary cap hit: $795,000
The oldest and tallest man in the NHL hasn’t retired yet, so it remains unknown if his career ended in a handshake line against the Boston Bruins or if he’ll give it another go on a one-year, team-friendly contract.
“Z is in Slovakia spending time with family. He is working out hard and leaving all of his options open. There is no rush on anything with him,” Chara’s agent, Matt Keator, told Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic.
Last season, Chara didn’t sign with the Washington Capitals until about a week before training camp. If he’s interested, we’re certain a few GMs will kick tires at a third-pairing leader and excellent penalty killer.
During Chara’s season-ending Zoom call, he was unsure if he’d play a 24th season.
“This season didn’t end the way we wanted, but that’s life,” Chara said.
“You have to move on. As far as myself and my future, I’m probably going to take a few days to talk to my family and make decisions after. I think that, obviously, it’s not always a decision I can make myself. Sometimes there are things in life you have to realize. I have to have those conversations with my wife and my children and see where we’re going to be in the next two days or weeks. After those conversations, I’ll probably let those emotions settle in and see where I’m at.”
9. Ryan Donato
Age: 25
Position: Centre / Left wing
2018-19 salary cap hit: $1.9 million
Rare that 25-year-old NHL centres appear on the open market. But with the San Jose Sharks trading for Donato in 2020 and not deeming the forward worth a qualifying offer in 2021, here we are.
The Boston native is coming off back-to-back 20-point seasons in shortened campaigns are should be able to find a bottom-six niche in the league.
But with a non-playoff club like the Sharks taking a pass, Donato’s bargaining power has taken a hit. A short-term, low-money gamble could help Donato rejuvenate his career and wouldn’t be a bad gamble for clubs looking for depth up the middle.
Donato was drafted by his hometown Bruins back in 2014 and is already looking to join his fourth franchise.
It seems like the San Jose Sharks aren’t going to qualify Ryan Donato per @wyshynski. So Donato will be an UFA on Wednesday. We think he is legit NHLer, bottom-six forward. pic.twitter.com/VNvuYUayzn
— Andy & Rono (@HockeyStatsCZ) July 26, 2021
10. Alex Galchenyuk
Age: 27
Position: Centre / Wing
2020-21 salary cap hit: $1.05 million
Feeling as if his NHL career was on the line, the determined winger certainly showed flashes in Toronto alongside John Tavares and William Nylander.
He’s exploring his options. Toronto has yet to close the door (at least publicly) on a return, and even the team that drafted Galchenyuk (Montreal) is said to have some level of interest in a reunion.
His last contract was one year at $1.05 million. Would he take that again?
More notable UFAs still on the market: Eric Staal, Zach Parise, Bobby Ryan, Tyler Bozak, Jordie Benn, Joe Thornton, Devan Dubnyk, Jake Virtanen, James Neal, Erik Gudbranson, Erik Gustafsson, Valtteri Filppula, Christian Djoos, Derick Brassard, Dominik Kahun, Jimmy Vesey, Brian Boyle, Henrik Lundqvist, Alex Chiasson, Tyler Ennis, Tobias Rieder, Artem Anisimov, Mark Jankowski, Colton Sceviour, Lucas Wallmark, Marcus Hogberg, Curtis McElhinney, Riley Sheahan, Ben Hutton
All salary info via the excellent CapFriendly.com.