Avalanche Journal: Colorado needs its value-rebuilding factory to produce the next Jonathan Drouin
Sports Game · 2024-05-26

Avalanche Journal: Colorado needs its value-rebuilding factory to produce the next Jonathan Drouin

Zach Parise called his time with the Colorado Avalanche amazing and special and said it “pushed me to a spot I didn’t feel I could still (get to)” shortly after a double-overtime Game 6 loss to the Dallas Stars last week.

A few minutes later, Jonathan Drouin deemed his experience awesome and said, “It’s a great place to play hockey.”

The Avs are going to have some recruiting to do this offseason, and those five-star reviews might come in handy. Colorado is short on salary cap space and long on uncertainty, with more than $13 million committed to forwards Gabe Landeskog and Valeri Nichushkin and no idea when or how much they will contribute during the 2024-25 season.

That means it is time for another summer of bargain hunting. The Avs signed Drouin to a one-year, $825,000 contract last offseason and it was the best value deal in the NHL among non-rookie contracts that cost less than $1 million. They won the recruiting battle for Parise when he came out of semi-retirement in late January.

Not every low-risk gamble worked. Tomas Tatar was a late addition on a one-year, $1.5 million contract, but was traded to Seattle in mid-December.

Still, the success stories should help. Denver has become a welcoming place for wayward skilled hockey players.

Drouin finished with 19 goals and a career-high 53 points this season and should be compensated handsomely for it. Evan Rodrigues signed for one year and $2 million two years ago, had 16 goals and 39 points and parlayed that into a four-year, $12 million deal with Florida.

Even Nichushkin, before his availability issues, was a great example of Colorado’s value-rebuilding factory. Dallas bought out Nichushkin after he had zero goals in 57 games in 2018-19.

He signed a one-year, $850,000 deal with the Avs for 2019-20. Since then, he’s become one of the top power forwards in the sport and signed two contracts worth a combined $54 million.

“Evan signed for $2 million, so that’s not quite in the realm for us at this point in time,” Avs general manager Chris MacFarland said. “I think our situation has proven to be a boon for that type of scenario, but there’s a lot that has to go into it. It’s got to be the right player and the right fit in the situation.”

Part of the recruiting pitch can be rooted in the club’s recent success and the city of Denver as a place to live, but the biggest selling points are who a free agent might get to play with to help rebuild his stock. The uncertainty with Landeskog and Nichushkin might actually help a little in this scenario because the Avs can offer increased chances to play with some of their world-class players.

“It’s an attractive place to play for a variety of reasons,” MacFarland said. “Denver is a great city. We’ve got an incredible fan base. What Gabe, and Nate (MacKinnon) and Cale (Makar) and Mikko (Rantanen) and our group over the last number of years have been able to do, they’ve set an incredible standard. It’s a great place to play. I think players around the league recognize that.”

That certainly worked out for Drouin. Now the Avs need to find the next version of him.

Trying to pick out who that player might be is hard enough for the 32 NHL teams, let alone people on the outside. Drouin’s circumstances are hard to replicate, given how things went wrong in Montreal and his ties to MacKinnon.

Drouin and Nichushkin were both top-10 draft picks, and the Avs banked on that high-end skill still being in there. Rodrigues was an undrafted player.

The Avs scooped up Drouin on July 1, but they added Nichushkin in August and both Rodrigues and Tatar in September. The bargain-bin market often doesn’t take shape until after the dust settles in early July.

Could a player like Jack Roslovic or Alex Wennberg, both first-round picks who have had disappointing years, be left without a home when the free-agent faucet turns off after the first few days in July? Another interesting name might be Alex Barabanov, who had a couple of solid years for San Jose as a connector type playing with skilled players before this year went sideways with injuries.

It’s probably too early to tell, but the Avs will have their recruiting pitch ready. And they have receipts to show as well.

Want more Avalanche news? Sign up for the Avalanche Insider to get all our NHL analysis.

Copyright © 2024 MediaNews Group

热门文章
新泽西州7月博彩收入创6.06亿美元新高,颁布禁令
游戏风向
PropellerAds 分享了新的 iGaming 案例研究:在 3 个月实现 97,674 次安装和 12,701 笔存款
广告营销
菲律宾博彩技术赛道迎来新变局,B2B 供应模式加速渗透
东南亚资讯
亚洲顶尖游戏供应商多寶游戏 DB GAMING,开创亚洲市场的唯一首选
广告营销
超级PAC筹资4800万美元:体育博彩势力加码
游戏风向
张侨伟参议员排除全面禁止,敦促菲律宾规范网络赌博
东南亚资讯
Zenith携手HUIDU,冠名赞助2026年世界杯嘉年华官方巡回活动
线上游戏
BETFAIR 网络攻击80万用户资料泄露
游戏风向
巴西颁布新法赋权央行封锁非法博彩账户及 Pix 交易
支付动态
越南在线博彩业政策收紧 催生市场新机遇
东南亚资讯
准备好了将你的收益最大化吗?尝试ProPush.me Constructor!
广告营销
印度最高法院受理公益诉讼,要求全国禁封“伪装”成社交游戏的赌博平台
游戏风向
JILI 宣布与全球板球传奇 AB de Villiers(ABD)达成重磅战略合作
体育游戏
越南博彩管控逐步放宽,惟本土需求仍显乏力
东南亚资讯
哈萨克斯坦计划对在线赌场促销活动进行处罚
游戏风向
首页
游戏
合作
发现
我的