Winnipeg wasted no time on July 1, with Kevin Cheveldayoff bringing in three new faces in Mario Ferraro, Noah Gregor, and Stuart Skinner. It’s a mix of size, depth, and insurance, and the two names that really jump off the page are Ferraro and Skinner.
Ferraro arrives as the most intriguing of the bunch. The 27-year-old defenseman spent his entire seven-year run with the San Jose Sharks, where he handled heavy minutes, wore an alternate captain’s tag for the last four seasons, and carved out a reputation as a steady, hard-nosed blue liner.
Winnipeg signed him to a three-year deal with a $4 million AAV and an eight-team no-trade clause. He was a top-four defenseman in San Jose and should give the Jets an upgrade on the left side of their third pair, with penalty-kill utility built in.
Drafted 49th overall in 2017, the 5-foot-11, 200-pound Ontarian put up a career-best 23 points last season, scoring seven goals and adding 16 assists in 82 games. In 490 career games, he has 24 goals, 90 assists, 114 points, plus 955 hits and 920 blocked shots.
He also led Sharks defensemen with 137 hits last season. His game is built on calm puck movement, defensive reliability, and enough bite to make opponents feel him over a shift.
There’s also the context of what he came from. San Jose never gave Ferraro a playoff game, never finished above .500 during his tenure, and leaned on him for more than 21 minutes a night since he was 22.
That kind of load can warp the numbers, and his possession metrics and plus-minus are rough, but those stats come with a warning label when they’re attached to a rebuilding team. In Winnipeg, he won’t be asked to be the guy.
Behind Josh Morrissey and Dylan Samberg, there’s a real chance he can settle into a role that suits him better.
Gregor is a much cheaper bet. Winnipeg gave the 27-year-old centre/left winger a one-year contract worth $850,000, and he looks like a bottom-six or depth option.
Last season he split time between the Florida Panthers and Charlotte Checkers, recording four goals and five assists for nine points in 37 NHL games. Originally a fourth-round pick by San Jose in 2016, the Edmontonian has played 330 career NHL games with the Sharks, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, and Panthers, producing 40 goals and 39 assists for 79 points.
Skinner is the one tied most directly to the bigger-picture questions around Winnipeg’s crease. The Jets signed the 27-year-old goalie to a two-year deal carrying a $3.75 million AAV, a move widely viewed as insurance if Connor Hellebuyck is eventually traded after all the rumors. Skinner is a 6-foot-4, 215-pound netminder with durability and competitiveness, but he’s also carried plenty of criticism for soft goals and shaky technical details.
The hometown Edmonton Oilers drafted Skinner 78th overall in 2017, and he spent the first five-and-a-half seasons there before becoming the starter in 2022-23. His time in Edmonton brought both strong stretches and difficult ones, including the Oilers’ back-to-back Stanley Cup Final runs, and the scrutiny only intensified until he was traded to the Pittsburgh Penguins last December. Across 50 starts between the two teams, he went 23-17-9 with a 2.92 goals-against average, .891 save percentage, and two shutouts.
For his career, Skinner owns a 121-73-23 record with a 2.77 GAA, .901 SV%, and nine shutouts in 224 regular-season games. In 53 playoff appearances, he’s 26-25 with a 2.89 GAA, .892 SV%, and four shutouts.
Those aren’t elite numbers, but Winnipeg is betting that the defense in front of him will help, and at the very least, he’s a clear upgrade over Eric Comrie as a backup if Hellebuyck stays. Comrie signed with the Sharks.
“As of right now, me and ‘Helle’ are teammates, which is so exciting,” Skinner said Wednesday afternoon on a Zoom media availability. “I mean, he’s the best goalie in the world, so it’s a great opportunity for me. I think, again, with the thought process of growing my game and just becoming a better goalie and the type of culture that Winnipeg brings, it’s extremely exciting.”
“Looking at the track record and just the years before, you look down their lineup and they’re a scary team to play against,” he continued. “Whenever I played against them, it was a tough matchup.
They are an incredible team, I think they’re extremely well-coached. You look down the lineup and we have some incredible players.
Some of the best in the world. I also believe the depth the team has is very impressive.
For my mind, I truly believe this team can do amazing and special things. I’m honoured to be a part of that.”
It’s a solid opening day for Winnipeg, especially with Ferraro and Skinner both capable of moving the needle. But Cheveldayoff still has work to do. The Jets have $10.68 million in cap space remaining, and there are still useful players out there as the market settles after the July 1 rush.
In Other News...
Cheveldayoff Just Turned Up The Pressure On Jets Biggest Offseason Questions
Kevin Cheveldayoff spent his latest update doing what general managers often do in early July: drawing a line between what the Jets wanted in free agency and what they actually landed. He pointed to defenseman Mario Ferraro and goaltender Stuart Skinner as the clubs top targets, a useful snapshot of the type of players Winnipeg is chasing as it tries to reshape the roster around speed and youth.
The bigger immediate issue, though, is still internal. Cole Perfetti remains the key restricted free agent on the board, and the Jets want to get that situation settled as they keep sorting through the rest of the offseason picture. Cheveldayoff also left the door open on the broader roster build, stressing a preference for younger, faster players while the front office continues to weigh its next moves. [Read more 🡒]
Wild Suddenly Tied To A Franchise Shaping Move Fans Feared Missing
The Jets are still in the kind of offseason spot where one move can ripple through the rest of the roster, especially with a front office that has made clear it wants to keep the group competitive while also getting a little younger and faster. Winnipeg has already been mentioned as a team that could shift some forward depth to open up that path, while also looking for more help on the blue line, which makes every bit of league-wide maneuvering worth watching.
Around the Central Division, the pressure points are starting to show elsewhere too. Minnesota has had preliminary extension talks with Quinn Hughes camp, even if real negotiations have not begun, and Nashville is facing a more immediate roster crunch with too many players under contract and decisions looming, including signing Mavrik Bourque and finding more puck skill on defense. For the Jets, the bigger question is how aggressively they want to reshape the middle of the roster before the market tightens. [Read more 🡒]
