Shortly after announcing the trade of goaltender Chris Mason
to the St. Louis Blues, the Nashville Predators announced the re-signing of
goalie Dan Ellis to a two year, $3.5 million contract, paying him $1.5 million next season and $2 million in 2009-10.
Don’t be surprised if Ellis ends up with roughly the same
salary ($3 million per season) that Mason made. Actually it's less and quite affordable, breaking down to around $1.75 million per season.
Ellis was a pleasant surprise for the Predators last season,
for with only one previous NHL game under his belt ( in 2003-04 with the Dallas
Stars), the 27-year-old made a sensational debut in 2007-08, posting a
23-10-3 record in 44 games, with a 2.34 goals-against average, 6 shutouts and a
league-leading .924 save percentage.
It was that performance which wrested the starting
goalie job away from incumbent Chris Mason, and in the Predators six-game
opening round elimination to the Detroit Red Wings Ellis was outstanding,
stealing two wins for the over-matched Preds in a series that was much closer
than it should’ve been.
Due to his age and years in the minors Ellis was
eligible for unrestricted free agency this summer, and in order to retain him
and elevate promising Pekka Rinne the Preds had to deal away Mason to free up
the necessary cap space.
The Predators are taking a gamble here as there’s always the
possibility Ellis could turn into a one-year wonder, but given his amazing
2007-08 performance it’s a gamble worth taking.
The St. Louis Blues have been the busiest team thus far in
the final 24 hours heading into the start of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.
On Thursday night the Blues dealt veteran forward Jamal
Mayers to the Toronto Maple Leafs in exchange for a third round pick in this
year’s entry draft, and on Friday obtained goaltender Chris Mason from the
Nashville Predators for a fourth round pick (111th) overall , also
in this year’s draft.
The Mayers trade signals the continuation of the Blues rebuilding with youth, and by acquiring Mason they get an experienced backup for Manny
Legace who could challenge for the starting goalie role.
Moving Mayers also freed up $1.4 million per season, which
will alleviate the cost of Mason’s $3 million per season for the same
period.
These moves also have consequences for the Maple Leafs and Predators respectively.
The Mayers acquisition could signal the end of Darcy Tucker’s
tenure as a Maple Leaf. Mayers doesn’t have Tucker scoring touch but both play
a similar style of physical game, plus his $1.4 million per season salary is
more affordable than Tucker’s $3 million per.
If Tuckers bought out as has been oft-rumored the $1 million cap hit plus Mayer’s
salary for the next two seasons equates to around $600K in savings for the next two years.
Trading Mason to the Blues not only frees up $3 million
in cap space for the Predators but is also a likely signal that their anticipated re-signing of
impending UFA goalie Dan Ellis is imminent, probably for around the same as
Mason’s salary.
I'm Lyle Richardson, also known as Spector, Foxsports.com 's "Prince of Pucks".,which is based on the fact I live in Prince Edward Island, Canada and I couldn't think of a better byline. I've been an NHL hockey commentator since 1998 on my website, Spector's Hockey, and I'm a contributing writer for Foxsports.com , The Hockey News and Eishockey News. I'm also a regular on The Faceoff Hockey Show and a frequent guest on "The Late Crew" on The Team 1200 Ottawa.