NHL free agency opens Monday, less than a week since Commissioner Gary Bettman presented the Stanley Cup to the Florida Panthers.
The offseason comes at you fast, and with all of it packed into a short period of time and more extra money to spend since before the pandemic, general managers are not quite sure what's to come when the free agent frenzy gets underway.
''It's going to be unpredictable, really," San Jose general manager Mike Grier said Saturday on NHL Network. ''It'll be interesting. Every team's trying to get better, and there's only so many seats at the table.''
Sixteen seats at the playoff table, but nearly all of the league's 32 teams will make a signing of some sort, and hundreds of millions of dollars are expected to be committed to players this week. This summer marks the first big salary cap increase since 2019 — a $4.5 million bump to $88 million — and there is no shortage of top players who will cash in as part of a free agent class headlined by longtime Tampa Bay captain Steven Stamkos and 2023 playoff MVP Jonathan Marchessault.
Some moves got done Sunday, including one of the biggest-named players on the market staying put: Three-time Cup champion Patrick Kane re-signed with Detroit for next season. Toronto also re-signed forward Max Domi (four years, $15 million) and defenseman Timothy Liljegren (two years, $6 million) and Utah kept Sean Durzi around for the next four seasons with a $24 million contract.
''Sean is a reliable two-way defenseman who can anchor the power play and provide offense from the blueline," GM Bill Armstrong said. "He's a young, highly skilled defenseman with an incredibly bright future, and we look forward to having him as a core player for this organization.''
Beyond signings, more trades are also in the offing, after Detroit GM Steve Yzerman called some of the activity at the draft over the weekend ''eye opening'' and moves he didn't see coming.
''Every team's got a little bit more cap space,'' Los Angeles Kings president Luc Robitaille said. "And we're seeing where things are going to be (going up) in the next two or three years. We expect some movement, and it should be exciting.''