Ducks Add Depth Pieces While Bigger Blue Line Questions Still Loom

With the addition of Jensen and other key signings, the Anaheim Ducks bolster their roster depth while maintaining significant salary cap flexibility.

The Anaheim Ducks kept busy on the free-agent front today, adding defenseman Nick Jensen, forward Jeff Malott, defenseman Jett Woo and goaltender Laurent Brossoit. The team also signed RFA Judd Caulfield, and it had already brought in A.J. Greer yesterday after recently acquiring his rights from Florida.

Jensen is the headliner of the group and the one most likely to factor into Anaheim’s NHL lineup right away. He comes over after playing 61 games for Ottawa last season, putting up 17 points with four goals and 13 assists.

Over a 10-year NHL career, he has appeared in 694 games and totaled 172 points, including 26 goals and 146 assists. His deal runs two years with a $2.25 million AAV.

At 6-foot-5 and 215 pounds, Malott fits the profile of a bottom-six depth forward who can bring some physicality. He spent his first full NHL season with Los Angeles, skating in 58 games and finishing with nine points, including three goals and six assists. He averaged just under nine minutes of ice time and signed a three-year contract with Anaheim.

Woo arrives with plenty of AHL mileage but no NHL games yet. Last season, he split time with San Jose’s AHL club, the SJ Barracuda, where he appeared in 17 games.

Before that, he spent five seasons with Abbotsford in the AHL, piling up 293 games and 86 points, with 19 goals and 67 assists. The length of his contract has not been announced.

Brossoit gives the Ducks another goaltending option after spending last season with the San Jose Sharks, where he appeared in one game and took the loss. In his career, he has started 119 games and posted a 64-47-13 record, along with a 2.66 goals-against average and a .910 save percentage. He has spent the last two seasons mostly in the AHL with the San Jose Barracuda and Rockford Icedogs.

Anaheim’s blue line has seen some turnover, and Jensen’s arrival comes with that in mind. He brings size at 6-foot-0 and 202 pounds, along with a mobile, two-way style that can add a little offense. He also missed the final 18 games of Ottawa’s season and the playoffs after knee surgery, so how he looks coming back will be worth watching.

Malott looks like a straightforward fourth-line piece. He plays a hard, direct game, gets to the dirty areas and can contribute the occasional goal, but not on a regular basis.

He also looks like a possible replacement for Ross Johnston, who signed with St. Louis today.

Woo, listed at 6-foot-0 and 205 pounds, offers a different kind of depth on the back end. He skates well, backs in effectively and can move through the neutral zone with some pace. There’s offensive upside there, but the production has not followed in recent seasons.

Brossoit is a depth addition, and with Petr Mrazek having been lost during the season to injury, the Ducks are adding another netminder to the mix. He will likely spend time in San Diego, especially after Ville Husso handled the backup role well behind Lukas Dostal.

Taken together, the moves do not look like ones that will dramatically change Anaheim’s outlook. Jensen has the best chance to make a real impact at the NHL level this season, while Malott and Woo are depth adds meant to help fill out the roster. Brossoit could see Anaheim time if injuries hit Dostal or Husso.

The Ducks still have about $36 million in cap space, according to Puck Pedia, and general manager Pat Verbeek still needs to get RFAs Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, Tyson Hinds and Pavel Mintyukov under contract.

Around the league today, Jacob Trouba signed with San Jose, Jeffrey Viel signed with Tampa Bay and Ross Johnston signed with St. Louis.

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