Training camps are fast approaching, and PK Subban remains unsigned.
How much longer will that be the case?
While Subban is no longer one of the NHL’s top defensemen, the 33-year-old still has some gas left in the tank as he reaches the twilight of his career, and could assuredly help whichever team is willing to sign him next season.
Where will the former Norris winner land? Let’s take a look at the three best fits.
Seattle Kraken
2022-23 Cap Space: $1,010,834
Name a player whose arrival would do better in building the newest fanbase in the league. I’ll wait.
The Seattle Kraken have made a concerted effort throughout their existence to do the legwork off the ice to lay the roots for a new generation of hockey fans. However, the team on the ice has not exactly pulled its weight, topping out as a thoroughly mediocre and unimpressive unit in its debut season.
Adding PK Subban to the mix would be a jolt to the system, one that just might kill two birds with one stone, too.
Despite being far removed from the Norris-winning form he displayed in his prime, Subban still has something to give in the modern NHL, serving as a puck-moving depth defender who can eat up bottom-pair matchups.
Off the ice, Subban is the consummate team ambassador — a fan favorite wherever he goes who is undeniably the most charismatic personality in the NHL. Having a presence like that around the Kraken as they look to build an enduring fanbase with a much-improved roster could do wonders for the organization’s brand recognition.
If Subban accepts a one-year flier at slightly above league minimum, which seems to be where he’s headed based on the free agent market and the cap crunch felt around the league, the Kraken have just enough space to fit him in.
Frankly, Subban might not even be an everyday player in Seattle. But he doesn’t really need to be. With him on the roster, the Kraken have a player worth marketing and someone capable of stepping into a regular role whenever needed.
Washington Capitals
2022-23 Cap Space: -$6,321,666
Ovechkin and Subban on the same team would be extremely fun.
At the moment, the Capitals’ right-shot options on D outside of John Carlson and Nick Jensen stand as Trevor van Riemsdyk, Erik Gustafsson, and Matt Irwin.
Frankly, Subban is a better player than that entire trio, and his arrival would inject a healthy dose of levity into a Caps team that is currently reeling from a string of postseason letdowns in…
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