Mike Grier Just Made Two Sharks Deals Fans Will Judge Carefully

The San Jose Sharks have strategically secured vital players, Ostapchuk and Kesselring, poised to strengthen their roster and adapt to changing salary cap dynamics.

The San Jose Sharks kept their draft-weekend momentum rolling with a pair of extensions that quietly shape the roster for the next few seasons.

On Saturday, the team announced that restricted free agent Zack Ostapchuk had signed a four-year extension. The following day, restricted free agent Michael Kesselring agreed to a three-year deal. After a busy first day of the draft, general manager Mike Grier also took care of two important pieces of business.

Ostapchuk’s contract comes in at $2.35 million per season, a price that gives the Sharks a cost-controlled fourth-line center while leaving room for bigger future deals. That matters for a team that still has centerpieces Macklin Celebrini, Will Smith, Michael Misa and Sam Dickinson to extend down the line.

For this season, the most likely picture is a fourth line of Barclay Goodrow - Zack Ostapchuk - Ty Dellandrea. If the Sharks bring back Ryan Reaves, he could also fit into that mix.

Next year could look different. The expectation is that San Jose will not re-sign Goodrow, and with Ostapchuk under contract through 2027-28 and Dellandrea also in place, the club would likely turn to free agency for another fourth-liner or give a younger player such as Carson Wetsch a shot.

Call it a changing of the guard.

Kesselring’s deal is the more expensive one, with the defenseman landing a three-year contract worth $4.50 million per season. On paper, it’s a hefty number for a player who appeared in 34 games last season and finished with two assists. But the context matters.

Buffalo had a crowded defense, and San Jose does not. The Sharks should be able to give Kesselring a larger role, and both sides clearly believe he can handle it. AFP Analytics noted that the deal effectively wipes last season from the evaluation, and that Kesselring’s play with the Utah Mammoth would have put him around the same $4.5 million range.

The Sharks also avoided the kind of trade protection that can complicate future roster decisions. As The Athletic’s Thomas Drance pointed out, that kind of flexibility comes at a cost, and San Jose was willing to pay it.

Three years also keeps the Sharks flexible as younger defensemen continue to push forward. Players like Dickinson, Luca Cagnoni, Keaton Verhoeff, Ryan Lin and Eric Pohlkamp are working their way toward the lineup, and one or more of them could surpass Kesselring’s value before this contract runs its course.

That’s the bigger picture here: San Jose locked in two useful pieces without boxing itself in.

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