It’s been an up-and-down season for Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Tristan Jarry.
The 29-year-old played in the AHL after struggling through the first half of the schedule. Recalled in early March, he rattled off four straight wins. On Sunday, he got his first shutout of the season in a 1-0 win over the Ottawa Senators.
Mark Madden of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Reviewrecently wondered if Jarry had done enough to save his career with the Penguins. He doubted his recent performance would improve his value in this summer’s trade market.
Madden believes the Penguins can’t afford to keep Jarry and Alex Nedeljkovic, who has a year left on his contract with a cap hit of $2.5 million. Jarry is signed through 2027-28 with an average annual value of $5.375 million.
Buying out Jarry would only count as $1.747 million against the Penguins’ salary cap for next season. However, that cap hit rises to just over $5 million in 2026-27 and $4.5 million in 2027-28, dropping to just $797,000 annually for the remaining three years of the buyout.
Turning to the New York Islanders, RG.Org’s Marco D’Amico cited sources claiming the Edmonton Oilers looked into acquiring Jean-Gabriel Pageau before the March 7 trade deadline.
D’Amico indicated Oilers GM Stan Bowman sought to bolster his depth at center with someone who’d be more than a playoff rental. Pageau, 32, is signed through next season with a cap hit of $5 million. He also has a 16-team no-trade list.
The Islanders reportedly spurned the offers because they didn’t want to retain salary and weren’t interested in a return of draft picks. That could remain their position with Pageau if the Oilers or other clubs make trade inquiries this summer.
Speaking of the trade deadline, Scott Powers of The Athletic thinks some teams might be kicking themselves for not offering the Chicago Blackhawks a first-round pick for Ryan Donato.
The 28-year-old center is enjoying a career-best performance with 29 goals and 59 points in 72 games. He’s reportedly sitting on a three-year contract offer worth $4 million annually.
Powers believes Donato could be interested in returning to the Boston Bruins if he goes to market. He’s a Boston native who began his career with the Bruins. The Blackhawks hope he’ll recognize that the top-six minutes and power-play time he’s getting in Chicago won’t be available to him on better clubs.
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