Habs give offer sheet to Aho; Panarin and Bobrovsky cash in as free agency opens

Jul 1, 2019 | 3:11 PM

NHL general managers pulled out their owners’ wallets as free agency opened Monday.

Marc Bergevin made the biggest splash.

The general manager of the Montreal Canadiens tendered the league’s first restricted free agent offer sheet since 2013, signing Carolina Hurricanes centre Sebastian Aho to a contract worth US$42.27 million over five years.

The deal, which the Hurricanes have a week to match in order to keep the 21-year-old, carries an annual average value of $8.454 million.

“He wanted to be here in Montreal,” Bergevin said. “He agreed to this. He believes that’s a really good offer for him, and he wants to be part of the Montreal Canadiens.”

Meanwhile, the three biggest unrestricted free agents to hit the open market Monday all ended last season with the Columbus Blue Jackets — and all left for greener pastures.

Flashy winger Artemi Panarin signed with the New York Rangers, two-time Vezina Trophy winner Sergei Bobrovsky inked a deal with the Florida Panthers and centre Matt Duchene agreed to a lucrative contract with the Nashville Predators.

If the Hurricanes decide not to match the agreement with Aho, who is just one of a number of impressive RFAs across the NHL potentially available this summer, the Canadiens will have to surrender first-, second- and third-round draft picks to Carolina.

The offer sheet to Aho, who had 30 goals and 83 points last season, is the first in the NHL since 2013 when the Calgary Flames tried to pry then-Avalanche centre Ryan O’Reilly out of Colorado, which matched the deal.

The last offer sheet to be accepted was back in 2007 when the Edmonton Oilers poached winger Dustin Penner from the Anaheim Ducks with a five-year contract at the cost of three draft picks.

Hurricanes GM Don Waddell said his franchise will take time to assess the offer, but joked he was “surprised it wasn’t more.”

Carolina’s social media team had some fun with situation, posting a poll on the team’s official Twitter feed with the question: “Will we match the offer sheet for Sebastian Aho?”

The only options presented were “Yes” and “Oui” — which should give a pretty good indication which way the Hurricanes are leaning.

There are a number of high-profile RFAs on the market, including Aho, Toronto Maple Leafs winger Mitch Marner, Winnipeg Jets sniper Patrik Laine, Calgary Flames forward Matthew Tkachuk and Tampa Bay Lightning centre Brayden Point.

Leafs GM Kyle Dubas, who has cleared salary cap space in hopes of making a deal — or at the very least matching a potential offer sheet — continues to negotiate with Marner’s camp.

“It’s part of the CBA and it’s within the rules,” Dubas said of offer sheets. “You have to be mindful of that and leave yourself protected and well-situated to defend whatever may come your way.”

Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff was part of the Chicago’s front office in 2010 when the San Jose Sharks signed Niklas Hjalmarsson to an offer sheet. The Blackhawks wound up matching the four-year deal and keeping the defenceman in the Windy City.

“You evaluate it and you act accordingly,” Cheveldayoff said. “When it comes to an offer sheet, I listened to the press conferences of respective general managers and like Don said in his, as a group they’ll take a look at it and then respond accordingly.”

On the UFA front, Panarin got a seven-year contract worth $81.5 million in the Big Apple after the 2016 Calder Trophy winner as rookie of the year scored a career-high 87 points in 2018-19.

Bobrovsky, meanwhile, heads to South Beach on a seven-year, $70-million pact to guard the Panthers’ crease after Roberto Luongo retired last week.

And Duchene continued the exodus from the Blue Jackets, who made the second round of the playoffs for the first time this spring, when he agreed to a seven-year, $56 million contract in Music City — a move only made possible after Nashville traded defenceman P.K. Subban to the New Jersey Devils at the draft.

The Vancouver Canucks addressed a need on their blue line by signing Tyler Myers — a member of the Jets since 2015 — to a five-year, $30-million contract.

“He’s a great fit for our group going forward,” said Canucks GM Jim Benning, who also signed defenceman Jordie Benn to a two-year pact worth $4 million.

The day got going with a trade between Toronto and the Ottawa Senators, which saw the Leafs exchange Nikita Zaitsev for fellow blue-liner Cody Ceci. The six-player swap also included winger Connor Brown going to the Senators in deal that helps salary cap-squeezed Toronto clear more space as it endeavours to sign star Marner.

The Senators also raided the Leafs’ locker room in free agency, nabbing defenceman Ron Hainsey ($3.5 million) and winger Tyler Ennis ($800,000) on one-year deals.

“Our goal is to make sure the Ottawa Senators are better and we feel we’ve done that,” Dorion said. “We’re really comfortable with these decisions.”

The Alberta teams played a version of goalie musical chairs as Mike Smith signed a one-year deal worth $2 million, plus incentives with Edmonton after two seasons in Calgary, while Cam Talbot, who the Oilers traded to Philadelphia in February, inked a one-year pact with the Flames for $2.75 million.

Montreal added goalie Keith Kinkaid as a backup for Carey Price, while Winnipeg signed defenceman Nathan Beaulieu.

In some of the other moves made Monday, Joe Pavelski, who had been with San Jose for 13 seasons, signed a three-year, $21-million deal with the Dallas Stars. The centre is a tidy replacement down the middle and against the cap for Jason Spezza, who signed with his hometown Leafs for one year at the league minimum of $700,000.

Corey Perry, who was bought out by the Anaheim Ducks, joins Pavelski with the Stars after Dallas lost fellow winger Mats Zuccarello to the Wild when he signed on for five years and $30 million in Minnesota.

The Sharks also lost winger Joonas Donskoi, who signed a four-year, $15.6-million contract with Colorado, but inked restricted free agent forward Timo Meier.

And Islanders captain Anders Lee chose to remain in New York — unlike John Tavares last July 1 when he bolted for Toronto as a UFA — by signing a seven-year, $49-million contract, while the Blue Jackets started to fill the void left by Panarin, Bobrovsky and Duchene by adding forward Gustav Nyquist to a four-year deal.

— With files from Gemma Karstens-Smith in Vancouver and Lisa Wallace in Ottawa

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Joshua Clipperton, The Canadian Press