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The dust began settling Thursday around the NHL more than 24 hours into free agency, with a handful of high-profile players still on the market and the league’s career goal-scoring record-holder back for another season.
Three-time Stanley Cup champion Patrick Kane and two-time winner Vladimir Tarasenko were among the top unrestricted free agents available by late afternoon. Jason Robertson headlines the restricted free agents without a contract as the Dallas Stars work to get him signed.
The Washington Capitals needed very little to bring Alex Ovechkin back, re-signing him to a bonus-laden deal with a $1 million salary that will make him $9 million at age 41 as long as he plays in 10 games. The Capitals made sure to keep enough salary cap space open to fit Ovechkin during an offseason in which they added Jordan Kyrou, Alex Tuch, Boone Jenner and Vincent Desharnais.
“I’m truly happy for him,” said John Carlson, a teammate for 16-plus seasons, who signed a two-year, $17 million deal with Tampa Bay. “I felt that he really wanted to come back, and I’m glad that he came to that decision. I think it’s great for everyone. I think it’s great for hockey.”
A day after landing prized free agent goalie Sergei Bobrovsky, the Toronto Maple Leafs continued their offseason transformation by signing former Capitals forward Brandon Duhaime to a three-year contract.
Free agency as it stands
Kane is still available after spending the past three years with Detroit. Kane is 37 now and a decade removed from winning the Hart Trophy as MVP when he led the league in scoring. Also unsigned are wingers Tarasenko and Anthony Mantha, who is coming off a career year, and forward Claude Giroux, who is still chasing a championship at 38.
The first day of free agency featured more than 55 players changing places across the league with more than $360 million worth of contracts. And that’s not even counting Bowen Byram becoming the highest-paid defenseman at an average salary of $12.5 million beginning in 2027 under his new deal with Chicago after he was acquired in a trade with Buffalo.
Byram’s time with that distinction may be short if Colorado gets a new contract done with two-time Norris Trophy-winner Cale Makar, which also would go into effect in 2027-28.
Wild day of signings and a trade
The Minnesota Wild were busy in re-signing their own free agents and acquiring forward Blake Coleman and defenseman Olli Maatta in a trade with Calgary. The Flames acquired defenseman Jake Middleton and three draft picks, including a second-rounder in 2029. Calgary also agreed to retain 50% of the $4.9 million Coleman is owed in the final year of his contract.
The 34-year-old Coleman has 10 seasons of NHL experience and posted his fourth 20-goal season last year, finishing with 20 goals and 35 points. Matta is a 13-year NHL player noted for his defensive play. The 30-year-old Middleton leaves Minnesota after four-plus seasons.
The Wild signed Maxim Shabanov for $1.6 million for next season after the New York Islanders decided not to bring back the Russian winger.
Minnesota is also bringing back two players by re-signing defenseman Zach Bogosian ($1.25 million) and right winger Nick Foligno ($900,000) to one-year deals.
Montreal extends Jakub Dobes
Building the future of the Canadiens took another step forward with an extension for Jakub Dobes, the self-described “goofy goalie” who was one of the stars of their run to the Eastern Conference Final. Dobes got a three-year extension from 2027-30 worth just over $16 million, with the final four digits of his annual average salary ($5,357,575) matching his No. 75 jersey number.
“I feel like it was really important this summer to kind of get it done with,” Dobes said on a video call with reporters. “Where I come from in the Czech Republic, it’s a lot of money. I’m really happy, especially for my family that we have this all together. I cannot really get satisfied. I don’t feel like the money is too important to me. I’m just happy I can focus on hockey and have a clear mind and try to win a championship with Montreal.”
The team earlier this week signed rookie of the year finalist Ivan Demidov to an eight-year, $73 million deal through 2035. Captain Nick Suzuki is signed through ‘30, while wingers Juraj Slafkovsky and Cole Caufield and defensemen Lane Hutson, Noah Dobson, Mike Methson and Kaiden Guhle are all under contract through ’31.
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AP Sports Writer Dave Campbell in St. Paul, Minnesota, contributed to this report.
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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/nhl


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