Brock Boeser stayed put in Vancouver. The New York Rangers retooled their blue line by landing free agency's top defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov, and trading K'Andre Miller to Carolina.
And Nikolaj Ehlers is taking his time before determining his future.
The frenzy of multiple signings when NHL free agency opened Tuesday was tempered by a free agent class thinned by teams making pre-emptive moves to keep top talent.
''The list wasn't deep,'' Columbus Blue Jackets general manager Don Waddell said, before assessing how active he intended to be in the coming days. ''No, I would say that where we're at now, we're comfortable with where we're at if you look at our group here.''
That group includes defenseman Ivan Provorov, who was signed to a seven-year, $59.5 million contract.
Taking advantage of a record $7.5 million jump in the salary cap, the Vegas Golden Knights landed the biggest prize in a sign-and-trade deal to acquire Mitch Marner on Monday. On the same day, the two-time defending champion Florida Panthers used ''home Cup'' advantage to re-sign defenseman Aaron Ekblad and forward Brad Marchand.
''It's easy to want to stay here, and then the culture of winning is just a huge draw,'' Ekblad said. ''We've all been taken care of very well.''
Boeser, a six-time 20-goal-scorer, elected to stay in Vancouver by agreeing to a seven-year, $50.75 million contract a half hour into the signing period.