A fresh report has pushed Rasmus Andersson’s Vegas outlook back into the spotlight, and the early read is that the Golden Knights defenseman may not be going anywhere after all.
Darren Dreger addressed the situation on Barn Burner and said Andersson’s status appears to have been settled behind the scenes. According to Dreger, a “handshake agreement” was believed to be in place, with the expectation that Andersson would remain with the team.
“The assumption was by other managers...other agents...the belief is there was at least a handshake agreement that there would be something and is something done."
Darren Dreger
That lines up with the long-running buzz that Andersson was expected to land a deal around $8.5 million AAV, a number that did not exactly thrill plenty of Golden Knights fans after his Vegas stint. Even so, the report suggests a formal Andersson deal is close, which would further shape the team’s blue line.
There is at least a path for Andersson to make the second go-round work. Ryan Craig is set to take over behind the bench, and that change could give the former Flames star another chance to settle in and produce.
Craig’s system also points toward more chances to create offense. Last season, players like Trevor Connelly, who had 35 assists, Matyas Sapovaliv, who had 17 assists, and Tanner Laczynski, who finished with 42 assists, flourished under his approach.
Still, if the Golden Knights want Andersson to really fit, they need to give him the right kind of support.
When Vegas traded Pavel Dorofeyev to the New York Rangers, it also moved its top goal-scorer. His 37 regular-season goals disappeared with him, and that left the Golden Knights without a true primary shooter.
That is going to matter. Vegas cannot afford to spend next season stringing together endless passes in the offensive zone and hoping for the best. A team that leans too far into puck movement without enough finishing touch can turn into a slog in a hurry.
So the next move has to be finding another legitimate shooter. That would take pressure off Andersson and Jack Eichel and help keep the power play from slipping into the kind of stagnant stretch that leaves nothing but empty shot totals.
If the Golden Knights can add that kind of help, Andersson’s next chapter in Las Vegas has a much better chance of landing smoothly. And maybe, just maybe, it changes the mood around his return as well.
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Piiparinen stood out for the way he handled the puck, cleanly moving it and looking comfortable in transition, while Whitehead used his size well in net and cut down angles with authority. Connelly offered the kind of offensive pop that can separate a prospect from the pack, and in a camp built around opportunity, that combination of polish, presence and skill is exactly what can make one player much harder for the Golden Knights to ignore. [Read more 🡒]
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Parker Wotherspoon arrived from Pittsburgh in a separate deal that sent Kaeden Korczak the other way, adding another layer to the defensive picture just as the front office keeps balancing talent and flexibility. The structure of these moves matters almost as much as the names involved, because Vegas is clearly trying to win now while still leaving itself room to keep adjusting the roster. [Read more 🡒]
