July 1 brings a different kind of NHL shopping spree.
Yes, free agency is the headline act for players whose contracts have run out. But there’s another lane opening up, and it’s the one reserved for stars who are still under contract for another season yet eligible to lock in their next deal now. That group is usually where the league’s biggest money conversations live.
At the top of that list sits Cale Makar.
The Colorado Avalanche defenseman is entering the final year of a six-year contract that carried a $9 million cap hit, and the case for a massive extension is obvious. Makar is fresh off a season in which he posted 79 points, a number that qualifies as a “down year” only because his standard is so absurdly high.
He already owns multiple 90-point seasons, along with a Stanley Cup, a Conn Smythe Trophy and two Norris Trophies. According to The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun, he could even wind up as the highest-paid player in the NHL, ahead of Minnesota’s Kirill Kaprizov and his $17-million average annual value.
Quinn Hughes belongs in the same financial neighborhood.
The Minnesota Wild defenseman is one of the most electric skaters in the sport, and his arrival helped push the team into Stanley Cup contender territory. Hughes is at the end of a six-year deal that paid him $7.85 million against the salary cap, and the next one should be far more expensive.
At 26, he’s the kind of blueliner who can eat huge minutes and still pile up offense, with the source pointing to the possibility of 90-point production from the back end. Bill Guerin is going to have to open the wallet wide if he wants to keep that momentum going.
Nikita Kucherov is another star who can cash in this summer.
The Tampa Bay Lightning winger just won the Hart Trophy as the league’s MVP, and he’s closing in on the end of an eight-year contract that paid him $9.5 million per season. At 33, he’s still producing like a superstar, coming off his sixth 100-point season and finishing with 130 points and 44 goals, which matched his career high. A raise feels like the natural next step.
Sidney Crosby also becomes extension-eligible on July 1, and that alone is a reminder of how long he’s been at this level.
The Pittsburgh Penguins captain signed a two-year extension in September 2024 at his symbolic $8.7 million per season, and now he’s back in position to add more years if he chooses. Crosby scored 29 goals and 74 points in 68 games this past season at age 38, still producing at a high level while moving deeper into the final chapter of an extraordinary career.
Macklin Celebrini rounds out the group.
The San Jose Sharks center is only 20, but he’s already making noise after a 115-point regular season in his sophomore campaign. The source says it wouldn’t be a surprise if he’s the best player in the NHL next season, and that gives San Jose every reason to try to lock him up as long as possible.
He’s listed lower on the board because he’ll be an RFA on July 1, which means the Sharks still control his rights and the odds of him leaving are very slim. He can sign his first standard NHL contract this summer as his entry-level deal expires in 2027.
In Other News...
Fitzgerald Dorsett Donald And Green Put Pitt Greatness Back In Focus
ESPNs latest look at the best college football players by jersey number turned into a reminder of just how deep Pitts history runs. Four Panthers landed at the top of their numbers, with Larry Fitzgerald Jr. at No. 1, Tony Dorsett at No. 33, Aaron Donald at No. 97 and Hugh Green at No. 99, a grouping that spans eras and styles but points to the same thing: Pitt has produced some of the sports defining stars. The list also folded in more Panthers elsewhere, keeping the programs past front and center.
For Pitt, the recognition is less about nostalgia than validation. Fitzgeralds receiving rsum, Dorsetts championship-era dominance, Donalds disruptive final season and Greens award-laden run all speak to a program that has repeatedly put elite talent on the field and into the national conversation. ESPNs rankings also nudged a few other Pitt names into the picture, which only reinforces how much of the schools football identity is tied to players who still measure among the best to ever do it. [Read more 🡒]
