I've seen plenty of online speculation that the Avs cut out Rantanen's legs when he was willing to take less than MacKinnon. Imho, that doesn't make sense. If Rantanen had indeed been willing to give Colorado a nice hometown discount, a deal would have been completed a while ago.
I believe this was a case of:
A.) Rantanen staying hands-off in negotiations and not strongly voicing his desire to remain an Av for less money.
B.) Rantanen's agent going against his wishes and not being forthright about where the discussions were headed.
C.) Rantanen's agent guilt-tripping him about leaving money on the table because it hurts other players.
Unfortunately, all of these scenarios are terrible and represent what's wrong with pro sports today. For better or worse, a hard cap exists in the NHL. Because of that, some very talented players will be forced to decide between leaving money on the table to remain on a team with other high-priced talent or making top dollar on a different team. No, it's not "fair" but it's the reality in a cap league. It's also not an indictment on the player or a measure of their worth. I mean, McDavid is likely "worth" 30 million a year but it's impossible to pay him that.
The player has every right to maximize their earning potential and choose dollars over remaining with a winning team. However, I think it's very unfortunate when a player appears sincere when they say they were willing to take less... and they were still traded. That tells me there was a breakdown between the player and the organization... and I blame the agents for that.
In too many cases, agents are too big and egotistical for their own good. And I feel players should be more heavy-handed with how they employ said agents. At the end of the day, it's the player's career and they should be calling the shots... not some agent who has gone rogue for additional fees, industry clout, or ego credit.
If Rantanen wants 14 mil then he should just say so, and stop playing the "I was shocked" victim card. If Rantanen was willing to take less than MacKinnon and he was still traded, then he should have fired his agent immediately when notified... and called Sakic and asked him to nix the deal and work directly with him on an extension, without his crummy agent.
These are the only two ways to look at this, imho... because it makes ZERO sense that Sakic would move a proven megastar like Rantanen (and risk losing his room and killing chemistry) unless the player's agent was demanding top dollar and showing no signs of budging. Players like Rantanen don't get traded if they're loyal soldiers and willing to take less to stay.