Artem Zub has become one of those players Ottawa fans notice most when he’s not on the ice. The Senators’ Russian defenceman arrived in the NHL during the 2020-21 COVID season, started out in the press box under DJ Smith, and quickly settled in once he got his chance. Since then, he’s grown into Jake Sanderson’s steady partner on the blue line, and last season he posted a career-best 30 points in 81 games.
Now comes the part that matters for Ottawa: Zub is headed for unrestricted free agency after this season, and his next contract should come with a healthy jump from his current $4.6 million salary.
That expectation is only getting stronger after the wave of recent defence contracts around the league. New York Rangers blueliner Braden Schneider just landed a $5.5 million deal and avoided arbitration, despite the fact that his development has stalled over the last two seasons. The 6'4" right-shot defender had been trending toward a reliable top-four shutdown role with limited offence.
Then there are the $7.2 million deals for Simon Nemec of the Calgary Flames and Pavel Mintyukov of the Anaheim Ducks. Those two are in a different bucket than Zub because their offensive upside is much higher, while Zub’s value comes from the defensive side of the puck. They’re also younger players still early in their careers, and both were able to take advantage of the rising cap and their teams’ needs.
The UFA market has also been busy. Rasmus Andersson of the Las Vegas Golden Knights signed a seven-year, $8.5 million contract after an injury-hit season that limited him to 33 games.
That deal runs through age 36. Jacob Trouba of the San Jose Sharks also cashed in, landing a four-year, $8.25 million contract that takes him to 36 as well.
Some view that one as a major overpay for an aging defenceman, though San Jose was thin on NHL-calibre options and had to spend to get one.
All of that points in Zub’s direction. In some cases, he stacks up better than the names above; at the very least, he’s the one coaches trust most. That’s why a number around $8 million starts to make sense, especially if general manager Steve Staios tries to see whether Zub would take the same figure as Sanderson.
For Ottawa, the appeal is obvious. Finding a player who can do what Zub does on the open market would be difficult, and doing it on a team-friendly deal would be even harder. With the cap rising and the Senators’ window getting tighter, a five-year contract at just under double his current salary would give the club both stability and flexibility.
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