The Utah Mammoth have a decision on their hands, but the cleanest move might be the simplest one: don’t match the New Jersey Devils’ offer sheet for Barrett Hayton.
New Jersey went after Hayton on Wednesday, July 1, with a one-year deal worth $4.775 million. Offer sheets are rare enough in the NHL that they always grab attention, but this one doesn’t look like the kind Utah needs to chase.
The price isn’t outrageous. The fit is the issue.
Utah already added Vincent Trocheck, and that changes the picture at center. With Logan Cooley and Nick Schmaltz also in the mix, the Mammoth have enough down the middle without locking themselves into Hayton for another season. If they matched the offer, they’d also be stuck with him for a full year before being able to move him, which means a real risk of losing him for nothing.
That’s part of what makes this such a tricky call, even if the contract itself is manageable. Hayton, now 26, has not delivered the kind of jump Utah had hoped for.
He followed a career-best 2024-25 season with a much quieter one in 2025-25, finishing with 10 goals and 15 assists. The year before, he posted 20 goals and 26 assists.
That drop-off matters.
There’s still a version of Hayton who could help an offense next season. The problem is that the breakout Utah has been waiting for keeps getting harder to bank on. At this point in his career, the clock is ticking on that kind of leap.
And with the Mammoth’s top nine already looking effective and solid, there isn’t a strong reason to spend the money just to keep him. If Utah lets him go, it would receive a 2027 second-round pick.
The bigger question is whether the team would ever trade Hayton for that return on its own. Probably not.
But that doesn’t mean it should take the gamble and keep him, either.
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