The latest NHL contract wave is giving the Edmonton Oilers a pretty clear roadmap for Matt Savoie.
That’s the real takeaway from a busy stretch that included Trevor Zegras landing a four-year extension with the Philadelphia Flyers at an AAV of $9.125 million, plus a pair of RFA deals that should have Edmonton paying attention. The St. Louis Blues gave Connor McMichael a six-year contract with a $6.75 million cap hit, while the Jets kept Cole Perfetti out of arbitration on a five-year deal carrying a $6 million AAV.
None of those deals is a perfect match for Savoie, but they do help frame where his next contract could land. McMichael is 25 and just finished his fourth full season, with a 26-goal season already on his résumé.
This past year, though, he scored 14 goals and added 32 assists. Perfetti has been close to the 20-goal mark but hasn’t hit it yet, putting up 19 goals in 2023-24, 18 the following season, and then 12 goals in 68 games last year.
Savoie’s case is different because he has less NHL mileage, but his first season was strong enough to make the conversation interesting. He scored more than both of those players last season, though he finished nine points behind McMichael. And when you stack his rookie year against theirs, it holds up well.
The bridge-deal angle matters too. Perfetti came out of his entry-level contract on a two-year, $3.25 million deal, while McMichael signed a two-year contract at a $2.1 million AAV. With prices rising around the league, the idea of simply bridging Savoie later could push that number into the $3.5 million to $4 million range.
That’s why the Oilers have to think bigger.
A long-term deal used to sound like it would have to start above $6.5 million for Savoie, but the recent contracts for McMichael and Perfetti make that feel less certain. Both of those players were two years closer to UFA eligibility, which naturally raises the price. Savoie doesn’t reach UFA eligibility until 2031, so the first four years of his next deal would be RFA years only.
That changes the math. A seven-year contract would buy up three UFA years and leave Savoie hitting the open market at 30, which could set him up for a major payday if he becomes the kind of consistent 25-plus goal scorer Edmonton hopes he can be. But a full seven years may not be the path either side wants.
Something closer to the Perfetti range makes sense, maybe a little lower on the AAV because there are fewer UFA years involved. A six-year, $5.5 million extension would be one possible number, and it’s easy to see why the Oilers would want to get ahead of it now rather than wait.
Savoie showed last season that he can handle top-six minutes and work on the penalty kill. If he eventually takes over for Ryan Nugent-Hopkins on the top power play unit, his goal total could jump in a hurry. Edmonton also has roughly $26 million in cap space for the 2027-28 season, so there’s no real reason to play chicken with a player who could become an offer-sheet target or simply price himself into a much higher tier after another strong year.
From Savoie’s side, a six-year, $5.5 million AAV extension would mean $33 million in career earnings before he turns 30 and would also put him on track to hit UFA status at 29, right when he could be in the middle of his best years. That’s the kind of setup that can work for both sides.
With contracts continuing to climb, the Oilers would be smart not to wait on a player who looks like he should be a major part of their future.
In Other News...
Former Oilers Prospect Just Surfaced In Stunning Star Trade Chatter
A former Oilers prospect has suddenly been pulled into a much bigger conversation, with Sam OReillys name surfacing in reported trade talks between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Columbus Blue Jackets involving defenseman Zach Werenski. OReilly, who was dealt from Edmonton to Tampa Bay last August, has been viewed as a promising young piece after a strong junior run, and he is expected to begin his professional career with the Syracuse Crunch next season.
For Edmonton fans, it is another reminder of how quickly a prospect can go from future hope to a possible chip in a major NHL deal. The chatter around Werenski did not last long, though, as both Columbus and the defenseman later issued statements reaffirming their commitment to each other, leaving OReilly still on Tampa Bays side of the ledger and his next step unchanged for now. [Read more 🡒]
This Connor McDavid Rumor Will Make Oilers Fans Uncomfortable
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For now, though, the actual evidence points in the other direction. McDavid remains committed to Edmonton, and there is no clear sign he is looking for an exit as the Oilers try to push their way toward a Cup run. The speculation seems rooted more in the idea that he wants to win than in any confirmed discussions, which is why the rumor feels more like offseason noise than a real warning sign, even if it is the kind of noise that gets attention fast. [Read more 🡒]
One Oilers Camp Longshot Could Suddenly Matter More Than Fans Realize
With training camp approaching and roster decisions looming for both Edmonton and Bakersfield under new coach Mike Babcock, the Oilers are again sorting through the kind of depth questions that can shape a season in subtle ways. Jordan Oesterles recent retirement is part of that broader picture, but the more intriguing angle is the search for a player who can make noise in camp and give the organization a little more flexibility if the lineup gets tested.
One name worth watching is Eduards Tralmaks, whose AHL production and profile make him more than just another longshot invite. He is not expected to see much NHL ice, and even a brief run at the top level would be a surprise, but his ability to stand out in camp could put him on the radar if injuries create an opening later on. For a team trying to keep its options open, that kind of impression can matter more than it first appears. [Read more 🡒]
