Mike Yeo and Doug Armstrong met with the media today during the St. Louis Blues locker cleanout, and provided some details on several issues. One of those was the situation they found themselves in regarding Vladimir Sobotka before he finally decided to return to the NHL. Jeremy Rutherford of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that Armstrong had multiple offers of a second-round pick for the rights to Sobotka, but held on hoping that he’d eventually return. Return he did, as Sobotka was a key player for the team in the playoffs and now heads into next season with a new three-year contract.
While there is no word who would have offered a second for Sobotka, it doesn’t come as any surprise that there was an appetite for the 29-year old around the league. Even before he left for the KHL, Sobotka looked like a capable third-line center or middle-six winger capable of defending well and adding some secondary scoring. After putting up strong offensive numbers in Russia front offices around the league likely thought there was perhaps even more skill in him than he’d previously shown. In the playoffs, Sobotka scored 6 points in 11 games and was one of the Blues’ best forwards at times. His physical style and elite faceoff skill was on display, winning 54% of his draws and recording 21 hits.
Now that Sobotka will be starting a new three-year deal that will pay him $3.5MM, the Blues have some decisions to make about their depth chart down the middle. They now have Sobotka, Paul Stastny, Alex Steen, Patrik Berglund, Kyle Brodziak, Jori Lehtera and Ivan Barbashev all with plenty of experience in the middle, and though most have been effective on the wing at times, would carry value on the open market to other teams looking for center depth. With players like Zach Sanford and Robby Fabbri expected to step into even bigger roles next season, there may not be enough room for everyone up front. The fact that they need money for a Colton Parayko extension nags even more at the idea that someone may be on their way out in St. Louis.