Golden Knights Just Made The Kind Of Move Fans Dread

The Rangers' strategic gamble on Pavel Dorofeyev signals a bold shift towards youth and goal-scoring prowess, reshaping their roster for future success.

TARRYTOWN, N.Y. - The Rangers didn’t just chase Pavel Dorofeyev this offseason. They paid like a team convinced it had found one of the missing pieces.

New York landed the 25-year-old winger in Friday’s trade with the Vegas Golden Knights, sending three draft picks the other way, including this year’s No. 26 overall selection and a top-10 protected first-rounder in 2028. The move came with a seven-year, $77 million extension that was formally agreed to Tuesday, locking in the goal scorer as a long-term part of the Rangers’ plans.

For a club that has had trouble generating steady offense, Dorofeyev is exactly the kind of bet president and general manager Chris Drury has been hunting. The Rangers have been linked to young talent all offseason - Bowen Byram, Mason McTavish and Brady Tkachuk among them, with Elliotte Friedman also mentioning Carolina defenseman Alexander Nikishin on Monday’s episode of “32 Thoughts.” The common thread is obvious: players 26 or younger, the kind who can matter for years rather than just a short window.

Drury has made clear, through his pursuit and now through the price he was willing to pay, that he wants foundational pieces, not stopgaps.

The deal got done because New York found a team under pressure. Vegas had only $4.625 million in cap space, according to PuckPedia, and the Knights were also trying to keep room to re-sign unrestricted free agent defenseman Rasmus Andersson. That left them in a bind before even considering a raise for Dorofeyev, who has scored 72 goals over the last two seasons.

The Rangers, meanwhile, had the room to force the issue. Vegas never came close to matching the $11 million average annual value New York put on the table, which made a trade-and-sign package the only realistic path forward.

The Knights’ view of Dorofeyev is fairly specific: dangerous finisher, not a true playdriver. He isn’t the kind of winger who dominates the puck.

He needs teammates who can get him the puck in the right spots, then he lets that left-handed shot do the rest. But when those chances show up, he finishes with the kind of touch that gets paid.

That said, the idea that he was merely riding shotgun with Vegas stars is overstated. He spent only 99:22 of 1093:38 at five-on-five this season with Jack Eichel, according to Natural Stat Trick. He did log 605:21 with Mitch Marner on the opposite wing, but the numbers suggest he wasn’t just along for the ride: his expected goals-for rate was 57.27 percent with Marner and 56.29 percent without, while his actual goals-for rate was 56.82 percent with Marner and 52.38 percent without.

Ten of Dorofeyev’s 15 five-on-five goals came with Marner on the ice. Still, the two were split up for Vegas’ run to the Stanley Cup Final, and Dorofeyev kept producing.

He scored 12 goals in 22 playoff games. A lot of that work came on Eichel’s line, where Vegas outscored opponents 13-8 and posted a 52.93 percent xGF in 182:40 together at even strength.

Without Eichel, the Knights were outscored 3-1 and carried a 42.98 percent xGF in 109:36.

The Rangers won’t be able to pair Dorofeyev with a center of Eichel’s caliber, but they’re hoping a fit develops from a top-six group that includes Alexis Lafrenière, Gabe Perreault, J.T. Miller and Mika Zibanejad.

There’s another important layer to his scoring profile: 20 of his 37 regular-season goals came on the power play, the second-highest total in the NHL. That makes his production heavily weighted toward special teams, but New York is betting that part of his game will translate immediately. The Rangers’ power play is likely to include Dorofeyev, Lafrenière, Miller, Zibanejad and Adam Fox.

The contract is steep. Eleven million a year is a massive number for a player whose game may be elite in only one area.

But goals cost money, and the Rangers have spent years trying to find more of them. They still have about $16.5 million in cap space entering Wednesday’s start of free agency, and that total could grow if veteran Vincent Trocheck is moved, something many around the league still expect to happen eventually.

The rising salary cap also helps soften the blow. Dorofeyev’s $11 million AAV is 10.58 percent of next season’s $104 million cap, and that share will shrink over time. The deal runs through his age-32 season, which makes it easier to stomach than it might look at first glance.

The Rangers also had some built-in familiarity working in their favor. Dorofeyev’s agent, Rick Komarow, negotiated Igor Shesterkin’s eight-year, $92.48 million contract in Dec. 2024, and he also represents this year’s first-round pick, Alberts Šmits.

Dorofeyev’s own offseason routine has long had a New York connection, too. This will be his fourth straight summer training with Rangers strength and conditioning consultant Ben Prentiss, who runs Prentiss Hockey Performance in Stamford, Conn. The facility has become a regular stop for NHL players, and Dorofeyev has worked there alongside current Rangers such as Fox, Miller, Drew Fortescue and Matt Rempe.

The relationships may make the adjustment smoother. But the real reason Dorofeyev is in New York is simpler than that: Drury wanted young skill, and he was willing to spend both the picks and the cap space to get it. What happens next will play out over the next seven years.

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