Martin Necas Signs 8-Year Extension With Colorado Avalanche

The Colorado Avalanche and Martin Necas have reportedly agreed to an eight-year, $92 million contract extension. The Avalanche acquired Necas in a three-team deal back in January, and finally got a long-term deal done.
Necas Stays With Avalanche
The Colorado Avalanche traded for Martin Necas in a blockbuster deal in January, due to contract negotiations stalling with long-time star Mikko Rantanen. He was reportedly seeking a deal worth $14 million annually. Rantanen ended up being dealt again to the Dallas Stars, as he was unwilling to sign a long-term deal with the Carolina Hurricanes.
Rantanen would eventually sign an eight-year, $96 million deal with the Dallas Stars. Compared to Necas’ extension, he’s making an extra $500,000 per year. Looking back, I think most people can agree that Rantanen is worth the extra money, but it wasn’t clear that he would’ve signed that deal when the Avalanche dealt him to Carolina.
The Avalanche did a nice job of securing their star winger at a reasonable price, putting Martin Necas and Nathan Mackinnon together for a long time. The young star has been fun to watch in Jared Bednar’s system, showing how much value he holds on the offensive side of the ice.
In Martin Necas’ new deal, he’ll make $11.5 million per season and will receive $60 million in signing bonuses. In his new deal with Colorado, he will receive a no-movement clause up until the seventh year.
Avalanche Got Great Value
The Colorado Avalanche did a nice job overall when looking back at this deal in the bigger picture. Necas is three years younger than Rantanen, a better facilitator, and they were also able to acquire Jack Drury in the trade.
When comparing this deal against Rantanen’s, you can’t focus on the one-for-one aspect of it. Colorado was able to move off a player who wanted a long-term deal with an annual value of $14 million, which he didn’t get when he signed an extension with the Dallas Stars. The Avalanche were also able to acquire more assets while bringing an elite offensive player.
Getting an extension done now was key, as he’s off to a hot start with Colorado this season and was set to hit the open market. So far this season, he has 13 points in just 11 games, scoring 7 goals and 6 assists. He and Nathan MacKinnon have been an extremely exciting duo to watch, combining for 30 points already this year.
What Flyers’ lineup might look like with Sean Couturier out injured

The Philadelphia Flyers lost their captain to injury on Thursday night and while we don’t know the timeline, if he’s out for a while, what could the lineup look like?

The Philadelphia Flyers might have won the game Thursday night’s showdown against the Nashville Predators, but they did lose something incredibly important to their season. In the middle of what ended up being a one-sided affair for the final two periods (on the score line anyways, maybe not the shot total), Flyers captain Sean Couturier went down with an injury.
Couturier did not return to the game as almost immediately after he went down the tunnel, the Flyers put out an announcement that the first-line center was staying out. Nothing official was said as to what caused the injury, but as many speculated and as head coach Rick Tocchet somewhat referenced in his post-game media availability, Couturier took a bad shot from teammate Noah Juulsen in the first period and
No one knows how long Couturier is going to be out. The Flyers do not practice Friday, so at the very earliest we’ll find out something during Saturday’s morning skate before they host the Toronto Maple Leafs. Until then, all we can do is guess and with Couturier’s injury history (albeit, recovering from multiple back surgeries is not comparable to taking a puck in your torso) there is a little bit of hesitation to think that he’s completely fine.
So, what does that mean for the Flyers while Couturier is out? The 32-year-old has averaged the most time-on-ice among any center on this team and has been cemented on the first line ever since the season started. Couturier has become more important than even some of the most optimistic followers of this team predicted before this season, as he currently sits second on the team in scoring with two goals and nine points in his 10 games played.
If Couturier is out for an extended period of time, who could we see take his place on the first line, and what could the lineup even look like? We have some guesses.
Keep the status quo as much as possible
Ultimately, the Flyers are winning hockey games and looking good while doing it. Sean Couturier no doubt has contributed to a whole lot of that but it could make sense in head coach Rick Tocchet’s mind to not change a thing. The classic trope of not fixing anything that’s broken or changing a winning lineup is too applicable in this situation, so it’s an option.
What that would end up entailing is trying to re-create Couturier in some sort of way — or at the very least make his replacement have as many similar attributes as he does. Among all potential centers on the roster, that has to be Christian Dvorak.
While obviously not at the same level on either side of the puck, Dvorak was brought in this summer to be a stabilizing force for the Flyers and wouldn’t look completely out of place if he was just given the reins on the top line between Owen Tippett and Travis Konecny. It would most likely make the majority of the fan base unhappy and missing the toothless smile of the captain even more than they already will, but it is something we could certainly see happening.
This would then mean Trevor Zegras moving to be a full-time center — that is something most people have already guessed is going to happen after losing Couturier — and then someone like Nikita Grebenkin, who Tocchet has put with Zegras and Michkov in spurts, or even a minor-league recall like speedy Anthony Richard, for example.
Zegras gets the big promotion
It’s something most people are clamoring for. After his three-point performance against the Predators and looking like he is out for vengeance — to show the hockey world that he truly is a very good all-around player in addition to his overwhelming skill — Trevor Zegras might take the first-line role. We’ve seen Tippett and Zegras connect ever so briefly to mixed results, and we’ve seen Zegras and Konecny on the same line for similarly mixed results.
We’ve seen this exact trio together for about 12 minutes in the preseason and 12 minutes in the regular season during some line-jumbling, so it’s at least popped in Tocchet’s head for a second. And maybe, with Zegras breaking out as of late, he can be freed from the shackles of needing some sort of defensively reliable (boring) linemate.
It would get rid of our loveable Michkov-Zegras connection, but just for a short amount of time and the newcomer deserves to get the push up the lineup. Nikita Grebenkin probably easily falls in line with Dvorak and Michkov on the Flyers’ “third line” but that doesn’t create a whole lot of offensive opportunities for the Russian phenom.
Noah Cates gets his opportunity
It would be very controversial considering how well they have played ever since they were put together last season, but in this time of need, if we’re talking about a player that brings the same defensive acumen as Couturier, it’s all about Noah Cates.
Moving Dvorak up to the first line, like we said, we be keeping the status quo in the sense that the Flyers’ best forward line would stay in-tact. But if Tocchet is less concerned with maintaining Cates, Brink, and Foerster as a unit to suffocate opposing offenses and score timely goals, then the 26-year-old center could move up to the first line.
Cates would provide a perfect balance of skill and tenacity to let Tippett and Konecny go bananas. He might not have the hockey brain that Couturier does, but he can play effective hockey and that might just be what is needed to get Konecny going offensively.
Foerster and Brink would most likely stay together, but if the group of centers are Cates, Dvorak, Zegras, and Abols, then it might make the most sense to put Dvorak with those two wingers, and then have Grebenkin with Zegras and Michkov full-time.
There’s no specific way of determining what is going to happen if Couturier is out for an extended period of time. There could even be a recall for a Phantoms forward and Grebenkin and the unnamed minor-leaguer would be in the lineup over Nic Deslauriers.
No one knows but we can just guess how Tocchet is going to approach his lineup if the captain is on the sidelines.