Salary arbitration hearings are now on the calendar, and the docket is packed.
A total of 15 players filed for arbitration earlier this month, though Ottawa’s Xavier Bourgault has already signed. That leaves 14 still without contracts as the hearings move closer, and PuckPedia has the schedule in hand.
Philadelphia will be front and center early, with the Flyers involved on July 20 and again on July 22. The full schedule runs like this:
July 20
D Jamie Drysdale, Flyers
F Cole Perfetti, Jets
July 22
F Trevor Zegras, Flyers
July 23
G Jet Greaves, Blue Jackets
July 25
F Connor McMichael, Blues
F Jason Robertson, Stars
July 27
F Cole Sillinger, Blue Jackets
July 28
F Nicholas Robertson, Penguins
July 29
D Braden Schneider, Rangers
D Ronan Seeley, Hurricanes
July 30
F Kirby Dach, Canadiens
F Alex Jefferies, Islanders
August 1
F Peyton Krebs, Sabres
G Akira Schmid, Panthers
The placement on the docket isn’t random. Teams can ask for their players to be slotted at a certain point in the process, which is why Philadelphia is set up early while Montreal, Florida, and Buffalo are likely sitting toward the back to buy themselves more time for talks or planning.
A quick refresher on how arbitration works: a player and team can still strike a deal anytime before the hearing begins. Once the hearing is over, the ruling has to be sent by email within 48 hours of the close.
The awards themselves are limited to one- or two-year terms, and players in their final year of restricted free agency can only receive a one-year deal. Because these are player-elected cases, the team gets to choose the term.
There’s also a walk-away threshold. If the award comes in above an average annual value of $4.9508MM, the team has 48 hours to decide whether to accept it or walk away.
And once a club has resolved all of its arbitration cases, a second buyout window opens three days later. That window is narrow, though: only a player who was on the roster at the trade deadline and carries a cap charge of $4MM or more is eligible for buyout during that 48-hour period.
In Other News...
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Johnson is coming off a strong rookie year in the ECHL and is still early in his pro career, while Ciona brings a championship background from the WHL and a draft pedigree from Calgary. Senden adds a different layer as a veteran with multiple titles at different levels, giving WBS a mix of upside, experience and organizational stability as it continues to stock the roster for what could eventually ripple upward to Pittsburgh. [Read more 🡒]
