Dallas Stars winger Jason Robertson, along with Philadelphia Flyers forwards Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale, headlined the group of 15 players who filed for salary arbitration on Sunday.
The arbitration window runs from July 20 to Aug. 1, though any player can still work out a new deal with his current team before the hearing date arrives. Clubs also have until 5 p.m. ET on Monday to file for team-elected salary arbitration.
Robertson, 26, is coming off a four-year contract worth $31 million, with an average annual value of $7.75 million. He delivered another big season in 2025-26, finishing with 45 goals and 96 points in 82 regular-season games. He added five goals and eight points in six playoff games before Dallas was knocked out in the first round.
Before free agency opened, Robertson reportedly turned down an eight-year contract from the Seattle Kraken with an AAV of approximately $15 million as part of a sign-and-trade.
Zegras set career highs with 26 goals and 67 points in his first season with the Flyers after arriving from the Anaheim Ducks in the 2025 season. Drysdale, 24, posted eight goals and 32 points in 78 regular-season games in 2025-26 while averaging 21:33 of ice time. Both players are coming off three-year deals they originally signed with Anaheim before being dealt to Philadelphia in separate trades.
The rest of the arbitration list includes Kirby Dach of the Montreal Canadiens, Cole Perfetti of the Winnipeg Jets, Peyton Krebs of the Buffalo Sabres, Ronan Seeley of the Carolina Hurricanes, Jet Greaves and Cole Sillinger of the Columbus Blue Jackets, Akira Schmid of the Florida Panthers, Braden Schneider of the New York Rangers, Alex Jefferies of the New York Islanders, Xavier Bourgault of the Ottawa Senators, Nick Robertson of the Pittsburgh Penguins and Connor McMichael of the St. Louis Blues.
Robertson, McMichael and Schmid were all traded this off-season to their current teams before signing new deals.
In Montreal, Dach is one of three restricted free agents for the Canadiens, along with forward Zack Bolduc, who is not arbitration eligible, and defenceman Arber Xhekaj, who did not file. Dach finished with eight goals and 15 points in 37 games, then added four goals and one assist in 19 postseason games. Since joining the Canadiens in July of 2022, he has appeared in just 154 of a possible 328 regular-season games because of various injuries.
Perfetti, one of the youngest players on the Jets roster, had 12 goals and 32 points in 68 regular-season games last season.
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Jason Robertson Trade Buzz Just Took A More Serious Turn
Jason Robertsons offseason has moved into a trickier stage for the Stars, with the winger now expected to head to salary arbitration as a restricted free agent. After another huge season in which he piled up 45 goals and 51 assists, Robertson remains one of Dallas most important players, which is exactly why any chatter around his future is getting so much attention around the league.
The tension for Dallas is that the Stars would prefer not to move him, but their cap situation could make every option feel uncomfortable. Pittsburgh has stayed in the mix as a possible landing spot, and the fact that Robertson would be open to that kind of move only adds to the pressure as the arbitration process approaches. [Read more 🡒]
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Nieuwendyks time in Dallas eventually became part of the teams championship story, while Iginla went on to become the face of Calgary hockey for more than a decade and a half. It is the kind of trade that can be judged from both sides, and even now it remains one of those rare deals that still shapes how Stars fans talk about what might have been. [Read more 🡒]
