The Cale Makar extension is already looming as the Avalanche’s biggest contract storyline, and Elliotte Friedman’s latest read on it should make Colorado fans feel a little better about what comes next.
Makar still has one more season left on his current deal, but the expectation is that the Avalanche will want to get his next contract handled as soon as they can. The big question, as always, is the number. And Friedman thinks it may not end up being the absolute ceiling.
“I think he’s going to get whatever he wants. I’ll bet you he does not max out. They’ll go to him and they’ll be like, “we could pay you whatever you want, and you deserve it,” and he’ll take a big number like he deserves, but I don’t think he’ll take everything he can."
Elliotte Friedman on 32 Thoughts
That matters because the cap ceiling is massive. A single player can take up as much as 20% of the salary cap, and for the 2026-27 season, that cap is projected at $95.5 million. That means the maximum would be $19.1 million, which would top Kirill Kaprizov’s $17 million average annual value after his latest extension.
Makar has earned every dollar that’s coming his way, but Friedman’s belief that he won’t squeeze the Avalanche for every last possible cent is the part that stands out. He’s one of the most plugged-in voices in the league, so even if nobody is handing him a direct quote from the player or the team, the takeaway is still clear enough for Colorado fans: this doesn’t sound like a deal that has to end with Makar taking the full cap max.
For the Avalanche in 2026-27, Makar is currently the third-highest-paid player on the roster. Nathan MacKinnon leads the way at $12.6 million, while Martin Necas sits second at $11.5 million. MacKinnon’s contract is already a bargain, and if Necas puts together a strong 2026-27 postseason, that deal could wind up looking like one too.
What’s certain is that both sides want a deal done. The rising salary cap will shape the final number, but the Avalanche and Makar are clearly headed toward an extension.
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