The offseason is now fully underway after Vegas took home the Stanley Cup which means that it’s time to examine what each team will need to accomplish over the coming months. Next up is a look at Dallas.
2022-23 was a season of considerable improvement for the Stars. They picked up an extra ten points during the regular season, moving them from a Wild Card seed to having home ice in the first round. In the postseason, they won a pair of series and gave the Golden Knights a decent challenge in the Western Conference Final. As a result, GM Jim Nill doesn’t have a particularly long list of things to try to accomplish this summer but here are some items on their to-do list over the coming weeks.
Add Defensive Help
This is the big one for Dallas this summer. With Miro Heiskanen and Esa Lindell in the fold, the Stars have quality blueliners in the fold. However, things start to unravel from there. Ryan Suter shouldn’t be logging heavy minutes at this stage of his career but played more than 20 a night in the regular season; that number jumped to more than 23 in the playoffs. The bigger workload was problematic for him but the options behind him on the depth chart weren’t any better.
Colin Miller was brought in as a reclamation piece last summer and while he did well in a limited role, he’s not a top-four option. Neither is the rugged Jani Hakanpaa. Nill paid a high price to acquire Nils Lundkvist from the Rangers but he, too, was only able to hold down a limited role during the regular season but was out of the lineup in the playoffs. Thomas Harley has shown some promise but he’s not ready for top-four duty either while Joel Hanley is more of a seventh defender than an every-game one.
All but Hanley are signed for next season but while this group was good enough to have some success, the playoffs showed that another top-four option is needed for them to take that next step. Fitting one in cap-wise could be a challenge as they have around $7MM to work with, per CapFriendly, and several forward spots to try to fill. It might take some creativity to fill this opening as a result but one more impact defender would put the Stars in much better shape for next season.
Re-Sign Or Replace Domi
Dallas wasn’t overly active at the trade deadline but they did make a late move to add Max Domi as a rental from Chicago. There weren’t immediate dividends as he managed just seven points in 20 games down the stretch but was more productive in the playoffs, picking up 13 points in 19 contests. The lineup was deeper with Domi in there and finding a way to keep him would extend that boost over a full season.
Of course, this is again easier said than done, especially if they opt to prioritize adding on the back end. On top of that, Domi is set to benefit from what is a very thin free agent center market. Taking out Boston’s two veterans that are likely to either re-sign or retire, Domi is one of the top few middlemen available. In a position that is always in short supply and high demand, the 28-year-old is well-positioned to land a raise on the $3MM he made this past season. Perhaps more importantly, Domi should finally be able to land some long-desired stability; he hasn’t signed a contract longer than two seasons since his entry-level deal.
It will take more than half of Dallas’ existing cap space to get something done. But if they can’t land a defenseman and shore up a weakness, shoring up a strong spot is the next best thing. Keeping Domi around to deepen the attack – or signing someone else to take that spot – is certainly a workable Plan B.
Bridge Deal For Dellandrea
Dallas only has one regular player set to reach restricted free agency this summer, forward Ty Dellandrea. The 22-year-old played his first full NHL campaign in 2022-23 and acquitted himself well, picking up 28 points in 82 games while getting into 15 of their playoff contests where he notched three goals. Certainly not a bad first taste of full-time action for the 2018 first-round pick.
However, with his games this past season comprising the bulk of his experience thus far, Dellandrea certainly isn’t in a position to command a long-term contract. Nor should the Stars be inclined to hand him one. As a result, he’s a lock to sign a short-term bridge deal.
Dellandrea isn’t eligible for salary arbitration and it’s post-entry-level players that often take time to sign but he shouldn’t be in that situation. Instead, a two-year deal around $1.5MM should be workable for both sides. Getting that deal done sooner than later would also be beneficial, allowing Nill to know exactly what he’ll have to work with this summer rather than working off a range estimate. It’s not a top priority necessarily but it’d help if they could get this done over the next week or so.
Rebuild Forward Depth
On top of Domi, Dallas has three more forwards heading for unrestricted free agency – wingers Evgenii Dadonov and Joel Kiviranta plus center Luke Glendening. If those players aren’t re-signed, they’re going to have to be replaced which is also going to cut into that $7MM in cap flexibility.
If the Stars want to fill internally, they could look to wingers Mavrik Bourque and Logan Stankoven. Bourque, a 2020 first-round pick, was actually up with Dallas late in the playoffs although he didn’t see any game action. The 21-year-old had 47 points in 70 games with AHL Texas and could hold down a bottom-six spot next season. As for Stankoven, a 2021 second-rounder, he averaged more than two points per game during the regular season with WHL Kamloops (and somehow bested that in the playoffs). If he’s ready to make the jump like Wyatt Johnston was this past season, he could give the offense a boost and perhaps fill the role Domi held. Most importantly, Bourque and Stankoven have cap hits under $900K; their presence on the opening roster would give Nill a bit more wiggle room to work with.
While Glendening doesn’t provide much offensively, he can kill penalties and win faceoffs at a well above-average rate so Dallas will need to find a player to fill that role while Kiviranta provided some physicality from the fourth line. These are spots that can be filled in free agency but they’ll be shopping at the bargain bin like many other teams. With that many veterans possibly leaving on the open market, Nill will be rebuilding the bottom end of his forward group over the next few weeks.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
User 318310488
Nill likes the old players. The Stars have to get younger and faster.
sippycups
would love to see the young’ns get reps in the league next season.