The most famous offer sheet that was probably the Brendan Shanahan with the Blues, which landed Scott Stevens to New Jersey as compensation.
Stevens was unhappy to move to New Jersey and the Blues tampered with him in trying to sign him back, and the league came down hard on St. Louis as a result. It’s no surprise the Blues were also behind the McSorley offer sheet.
Here’s an article on the tampering fiasco.
HOCKEY; Devils Get $1.4 Million and Draft Pick in Tampering Case
Since it happened before my time, I was always curious why the Devils didn't match the offer on Shanahan. I was surprised to learn that there existed a thing called Group I free agency back then (off the top of my head, it was like under 25 years old but with at least 3 years of NHL experience). The odd thing was that the original team had no right to match. The two sides would get a window to negotiate a trade. If they couldn't work something out, the league would have an arbitrator decide between the offers.
St. Louis offered a package centered around Rod Brind'Amour and Curtis Joseph. Brind'Amour was a year younger than Shanahan and had put up similar numbers in their young careers. CuJo had just completed his second season as a backup goalie, so he wasn't as valued yet.
Those around the league were shocked when the arbitrator ruled in favor of the Devils who requested Scott Stevens. While today it looks like a fair swap, Shanahan hadn't quite broken out while Stevens was a perennial All-Star.
St. Louis was salty at the ruling, I think Brett Hull accused the arbitrator with being in bed with the NHL. Ie, the arbitrator was punishing St. Louis for signing Stevens to the Group II offer sheet the previous season.
Looking back at it now, I can understand why Stevens tried to sign an offer sheet to go back to St. Louis in 1994. When he signed with them initially, he and his wife built their dream house in St. Louis and were getting ready to start a family. Then all of a sudden, that got taken away from them.
The ruling was kind of a wet blanket on the Group I free agent market for awhile since teams had no faith in the arbitrator (usually a judge without any particular hockey background). The day that the Shanahan ruling was handed down, the Rangers signed Adam Graves to a Group I offer sheet.
The last Group I offer sheet from that era involved (surprise surprise) St. Louis. Petr Nedved had been holding out in Vancouver during the 1993-94. Nedved signed a Group I offer with St. Louis and the two sides were unable to come to a deal.
St. Louis offered Craig Janney and a draft pick while Vancouver requested Shanahan. The timing was different since this happened while the season was happening. So it took over a week for the dust to get settled, meanwhile Janney/Shanahan were linemates and playing knowing that one of them was about to be shipped out.
Eventually the arbitrator sided with St. Louis, but Janney refused to report to Vancouver. The Canucks would trade Janney back to St. Louis for Jeff Brown, Bret Hedican, and Nathan Lafayette. Vancouver would make an unexpected run to the Cup final after that.
And it's interesting to see how that series of transactions led to off ice drama:
https://www.foxsports.com/detroit/story/regner-hall-sends-shanny-message-062612
So you have to wonder if his relationship and then marriage to the wife (eventually ex-wife) of former St. Louis Blues teammate Craig Janney caught up with Shanahan on Tuesday, when he was denied first-ballot admission into the Hockey Hall of Fame.
Even though the Shanahans have been married for 14 years now and have three children, how else can you explain this jarring snub?
Shanahan has always marched to a different drummer. Although he was respected by his Red Wings teammates for his play, he wasn’t the most popular guy in the room.
Many thought that it was too much Brendan Shanahan and not enough Detroit Red Wings. This frustrated his Detroit teammates because — despite his bravado and the Janney thing — when they were all on the ice together, they became champions.
But apparently the Jeff Brown/Kirk McLean rumor was false:
I was a hockey wife — and it just about killed me: My stint with NHL veteran Kirk McLean
To this day, I get asked about a rumour involving infidelity with a man I’ve never met — Jeff Brown, for those of you who follow hockey lore.