The Winnipeg Jets have added Mario Ferraro on a three-year contract worth $12 million, with an average annual value of $4 million, according to Elliotte Friedman.
Ferraro arrives after seven NHL seasons, all of them with the San Jose Sharks. The 27-year-old was taken 49th overall in the 2017 NHL Entry Draft, spent two seasons at the University of Massachusetts, and then worked his way into the league before becoming a full-time NHLer in 2019-20. He has also worn an alternate captain’s letter for four seasons.
On the surface, this isn’t the kind of signing that jumps off the page for offense. Ferraro set a career high with seven goals and 23 points last season, but that has never been the selling point. He’s more of a shutdown defender, the sort of blue-liner teams lean on for hard minutes and defensive responsibility.
The problem is that it’s difficult to fully separate Ferraro from the environment he’s been playing in. The Sharks have been a rough team defensively, and that has made his case harder to sort through.
Last season, San Jose allowed the 10th-most shot attempts per game and the fourth-most shots on goal, while generating the sixth-fewest shots on goal and shot attempts per game. That left them with the third-worst shot share in the NHL.
Ferraro’s usage only adds to the challenge of judging him cleanly. Among the 215 defencemen who played 500 minutes last season, he ranked 14th in defensive zone faceoffs and 33rd in defensive zone starts per 60 minutes.
At the same time, he was in the bottom 20 in both offensive zone starts and offensive zone faceoffs per 60. Put simply, he was living in the wrong end of the ice far too often.
That context helps explain why his on-ice numbers landed where they did, and why they looked so rough on a Sharks blue line that was already under siege. The Jets are betting that a different setting will show a cleaner version of his game.
What Ferraro does bring is a dependable defensive presence. He doesn’t get much credit for puck-moving or carrying the play, but he does pile up the kind of work that matters in his own zone.
Last season, he ranked 14th among NHL defencemen in blocked shots and 23rd in hits. Over the last three seasons, he sits 14th in blocked shots and 23rd in hits.
There are still obvious questions here, and the contract comes with some skepticism attached. Some of those concerns may be real flaws in Ferraro’s game.
Others may be the product of spending so much time in a difficult situation with the Sharks. If Winnipeg can pair him with a quality puck mover, he could be a useful addition to the blue line.
In Other News...
Sharks Add Forward Who Could Reignite A Familiar Fan Debate
The Sharks have added another forward with a track record of producing in the minors, signing center Alex Barre-Boulet as an unrestricted free agent. Barre-Boulet spent most of his career in the Tampa Bay Lightning organization and comes to San Jose after a standout AHL season with the Colorado Eagles, where he was one of the leagues most productive scorers and added a different kind of offensive profile to the organizations forward group.
For Sharks fans, the name alone may bring back a familiar debate about whether a player with real skill can finally turn AHL success into a lasting NHL role. Barre-Boulet has already gotten a taste of the league with 68 NHL games on his resume, but the next step in San Jose will be proving he can hold that pace at the top level. The contract details have not yet been disclosed, leaving a little uncertainty around how the team plans to fit him in. [Read more 🡒]
Sharks Quietly Addressed One Lingering Depth Concern After July 1
The Sharks used the early part of July to shore up a part of the organization that can quietly make a big difference over the course of a season, adding four players who are expected to spend most of their time with the AHLs San Jose Barracuda. Forward Alex Barre-Boulet, along with Tye Felhaber and Brett Leason, plus goaltender Kyle Keyser, give the Sharks a deeper collection of experienced options in the system, the kind of moves that can help a minor league team stay competitive while also giving the NHL roster some insurance.
Barre-Boulet is the headliner among the group, bringing a two-year deal and a track record that suggests he can be more than just organizational depth. Leason also stands out as a forward with recent NHL experience, while Keyser adds another goaltending option behind the Barracudas projected starter. For a Sharks team still building out its pipeline, these are the kinds of under-the-radar additions that can matter when injuries hit or call-ups start to thin out the upper levels. [Read more 🡒]
