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What Nylander’s Deal Means for Draisaitl and McDavid Contracts

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If there’s one thing the William Nylander deal just proved, it’s that Leon Draisaitl is going to get paid. Nylander’s eight-year, $11.5 million AAV extension has put Draisaitl into an entirely new echelon of the NHL contracts. How the Edmonton Oilers navigate that will be a huge issue. Then, when you factor in Connor McDavid’s deal, the situation in Edmonton over the next few seasons is downright scary.

Draisaitl, a bona fide superstar, and whose current eight-year, $8.5 million AAV contract signed in 2017 concludes after the upcoming season and is a steal of a deal. It’s also a deal that is close to needing an extension. When it comes to his next contract, an average annual value (AAV) starting at a minimum of $12.5 million for a similar duration, might be the best-case scenario. The possibility of a $13 million per season deal, maybe even $14 million isn’t a stretch.

Leon Draisaitl Edmonton Oilers
Leon Draisaitl, Edmonton Oilers (Photo by Curtis Comeau/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

As Daniel Bugent-Bowman of The Athletic writes:

The Oilers were always going to have to pay handsomely if they wanted any hope of retaining Draisaitl beyond June 2025. It appears the Nylander contract has only driven up that price point. Oh, and lest anyone forget, McDavid needs a new contract by July 1, 2026.

source – ‘Projecting the Oilers’ 2025-26 salary-cap situation with a Leon Draisaitl extension’ – Daniel Nugent-Bowman – The Athletic – 01/09/2024

Nylander’s eight-year, $11.5 million cap hit serves as merely the baseline for Draisaitl, 28, who is only six months older. With an impressive resume boasting three 50-goal seasons, a Hart Trophy, and a scoring title, Draisaitl is expected to command essentially whatever he wants. If the Oilers won’t give it to him, someone will.

Draisaitl Starts at Auston Matthews’ Number

Rob Brown was asked for a projection during Monday night’s Got Yer’ Back show and said that Draisaitl’s ask will start at Auston Matthews’s number, which is $13.25 million per season. “Over the last five years, Leon has been the second-best player in the world.” He adds that it won’t be less than $13-$14 million and notes that a team-friendly deal is unlikely because he’s been playing on a team-friendly deal for years now.


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