One of hockey's most well-respected, well-rounded veterans gave his hometown team a hometown discount, a couple of younger players signed the longest contracts still available to them and trade dominos began falling Friday around the NHL.
John Tavares re-signed for four more years with the Toronto Maple Leafs, getting $17.55 million. He'll count $4.39 million against the salary cap through the 2028-29 season after that number was $11 million annually on his previous deal.
Tavares, a point-a-game player last season at age 34, grew up in the area and never saw himself leaving.
''Even though I obviously left some money out there, I've done pretty well, I'm still doing pretty well and I get to play for an amazing club in a great city — a place where I'm from and a team that's got a real opportunity to win,'' Tavares said on a video call with reporters. ''I wanted to make it work and find a way to make a deal that was very good for both sides.''
Fellow center Brock Nelson, who is 11 months younger, got $7.5 million a year over the next three seasons to stay with Colorado after the Avalanche acquired him at the trade deadline from the New York Islanders.
''We would all agree there was going to be an opportunity for John to make a lot more money elsewhere, and his focus was staying here,'' Toronto general manager Brad Treliving said. ''His work and his commitment and his desire, it sort of steered the process on this negotiation, so full marks and full credit to John.''
The team that eliminated the Leafs from the playoffs on the way to winning the second of back-to-back Stanley Cup championships, the Florida Panthers re-signed Conn Smythe Trophy winner Sam Bennett to an eight-year, $64 million.
Trading places