The Philadelphia Flyers offseason went from what should have been a dull one to a being a potentially intriguing one in the drop of a hat.
A veteran defenseman retiring wouldn’t be a big deal in the NHL, but this is 2020. Matt Niskanen decided to retire even though he still has one year left on his current contract at a $5.75 million cap hit. Sure, with Niskanen retiring, it frees up that cap space, which almost every team will be looking for with a flat cap for the next few years. The Flyers have also re-signed veteran defenseman, Justin Braun. Braun was an unrestricted free agent, the Flyers would have let go, but with Niskanen retiring, the team didn’t want to lose another piece of the penalty kill. Braun signed a new two-year contract worth $3.6 million to go with a $1.8 million cap hit. The team will miss the leadership and experience that Niskanen brought to the team.
Niskanen’s retirement will have an impact in the long run that fans may think. The team was in a much better position for the expansion draft, but now that could change. If the team goes and acquires or signs a free agent to a longer-term deal, it may force them to have to make a tough decision as to which blueliners to protect come the expansion draft. The biggest question in all of this is who is Ivan Provorov’s partner this season? Can Provorov has the same success he did this season without Niskanen as his partner?
Who is Ivan Provorov’s Defense Partner Next Season?
It is one of the longer-term questions that Niskanen’s retirement brings to the table. Do Chuck Fletcher and the Flyers go out and sign someone like Alex Pietrangelo, or maybe try to acquire someone like Matt Dumba? This blue line will be young next season, but there is experience there. I feel like if the Flyers do anything at all, it will be to acquire a top pairing, veteran defenseman. The team could do this via trade or free agency. The team should go after someone who is a decent defender, so Provorov doesn’t have to worry about defending all the time and can maybe pick up some points in the offensive zone.
Sure, the Flyers very well could stand pat and go with who they have on the current roster. The defensemen on the current roster are Provorov, Braun, Shayne Gostisbehere, Robert Hagg, Travis Sanheim, and Phil Myers. They could bring up a guy like Mark Friedman, who could rotate in and out as the seventh defenseman, but I’d rather have Friedman getting some ice time with the AHL club than being the seventh for the Flyers. If everything stands pat, who moves up to play with Provorov? Sanheim played with him for a bit during the 2018-19 season, but that breaks up the Sanheim-Myers pairing. I don’t think Gostisbehere would even be an option to play top-pairing minutes at this point since he’s been so inconsistent and injury-prone the past few seasons.
Gostisbehere has had one good NHL season and that was his rookie one. Granted, the injuries have started to pile up in the last few years. It seems like even when he is healthy, he is a risk on the ice. And yes, I get that those fakes and moves he makes at the offensive blue line are something that most defensemen can’t do, but he is unreliable in the defensive zone. He takes chances with the puck, when he should just clear it or get it to a teammate to clear.
WHAT IMPACT COULD THIS HAVE ON THE EXPANSION DRAFT?
If Niskanen decided to play out the season and not retire, the Flyers would have been in good shape going into the NHL Expansion Draft for the Seattle Kraken. The decision on which defensemen to protect would have been an easy one with Provorov, Sanheim, and Myers. If the Flyers have to sign or acquire a defenseman with some term to his contract, this will make it more difficult for the team. Yes, they could protect four defensemen, but then that would only leave four forwards to protect.
Two of those forwards, Claude Giroux and Kevin Hayes, have no-movement clauses, which means the Flyers would have to protect them. That would leave two players to protect, and they would likely be Sean Couturier and Travis Konecny. If the Flyers had to go this way, then they risk losing Oskar Lindblom. Another option would be for the Flyers to make a deal with the Kraken to take James van Riemsdyk off its hands, but at what cost? It still may cost them either some draft picks or a young player that is NHL ready.
Niskanen’s retirement doesn’t just have short-term effects, but also provides some longer-term ones, but I’m sure Fletcher and the Flyers will figure it out, and if they don’t, the fans will have some younger players to look forward to seeing in the future.