The Buffalo Sabres’ offseason work has mostly settled into place, but three familiar names from last season are still hanging out on the open market.
With the roster looking close to complete after the departures of Alex Tuch, Jordan Greenway, and Bowen Byram, and the additions of defensemen Olen Zellweger and Louis Crevier, the Sabres appear to be leaning on younger players to help fill the gap left by Tuch. Even so, Peyton Krebs, Tanner Pearson, and Logan Stanley remain unsigned, and the odds of each returning to Western New York are not the same.
Krebs is the clearest candidate to stay. He is the only restricted free agent of the group, and because he elected arbitration, he cannot be targeted with offer sheets from other teams. That alone gives Buffalo a lot more control over the situation.
He also proved his value last season by moving all over the lineup. Krebs opened the year on the fourth line, then later became a regular on the Sabres’ top line with Tage Thompson at center. That kind of flexibility matters, and it makes him the most likely of the three to land a new deal with Buffalo.
Arbitration is the next step if the two sides don’t settle first, but that process usually doesn’t have to run its full course. The term in arbitration is limited to one or two years, and the team gets to choose the length. That’s why a longer agreement, possibly for three or four years, would not be a surprise if the Sabres and Krebs work something out ahead of time.
Pearson’s situation looks much less promising. Buffalo brought him in at the trade deadline for veteran depth ahead of the playoffs, and he dressed in only four games while picking up two assists.
But the numbers around him tell the story: the Sabres already have 13 forwards under contract, and Krebs would only add to that total once his deal gets done. There just doesn’t appear to be a clean place for Pearson on the roster, so if he keeps playing in the NHL, it likely won’t be in Buffalo.
Stanley is the most interesting case of the three. It is a little surprising he is still unsigned given how thin the pool of available defensemen was this summer.
The Sabres acquired him at the deadline, along with Luke Schenn, with the hope of strengthening their third pair. Stanley brings size, and he had shown some offensive touch with the Jets, scoring nine goals in 76 games after managing only five over the previous five seasons.
That production never really carried over in Buffalo. In 17 regular-season games with the Sabres, Stanley finished without a goal and had five assists.
Even with Zellweger and Crevier added this summer and Zach Metsa still on the roster, there does not seem to be much room for Stanley. Still, Buffalo also saw last season how fast depth can vanish, and if Stanley remains unsigned for much longer, the Sabres could circle back and consider a one- or two-year deal.
Jarmo Kekalainen has already had a busy offseason, and the roster does not have much more space. But that doesn’t necessarily close the door on Krebs or Stanley. Both could still be back when training camp arrives in a few months.
In Other News...
Sabres Suddenly Feel Closer Than Ever To The Goalie They Need
Connor Hellebuycks future in Winnipeg appears to be moving toward a trade, and Buffalo has emerged as the most natural place to watch. The Sabres have the kind of package that can make sense for a goalie of his caliber, with a roster and asset mix that could appeal to the Jets as they weigh how to maximize a return. For a team still trying to stabilize its crease, the fit is obvious enough that this has quickly become one of the more intriguing storylines on the Buffalo beat.
The complication, as always in a deal like this, is getting the terms right. Winnipeg has pushed for a premium draft-pick return, and Buffalo has already shown a willingness to engage without crossing every line the Jets want crossed. San Jose remains in the picture as another possible landing spot, which only adds to the pressure on the Sabres if they want to position themselves as the cleanest match. For now, Buffalo looks like the club with the clearest path, but in a market this delicate, the path is not the same thing as the finish line. [Read more 🡒]
