frightenedinmatenum2
Registered User
Karlsson is owed less money than his cap hit for the last 2 years of his deal, so if anything it makes more sense doe the Penguins to keep him based on money. They have to hit the cap floor somehow and paying Karlsson a $10 million AAV but only $7.5 million salary is a net benefit for that.
There’s no purpose for the Penguins to trade Karlsson just to trade him. If they can’t get any value by trading him now, they’d just keep him and try trading him again when he’s a rental.
He is also owed 11M in signing bonuses over those two remaining seasons. Those are buyout proof.
There is no guarantee that there will be a market for him as a rental. You're talking about trying to move a near 37 year old player who already had significant injury issues throughout his career. Not to mention how his cap hit would complicate the rental market for him since you can't do the traditional double-retention (you can bring it down to prorated 5M max). While the Penguins aren't a Coyotes or Melnyk-Sens type budget team, most owners are cash conscience to the extent that they don't like to burn money. Imagine trying to convince Penguins ownership that you're going to pay the better part of 16.5M over the next two seasons (11M of that in lump sum signing bonuses) to maybe get a 3rd round pick. That's just not reality.
The reality is that a rebuilding team would see the value in dumping money off the books for a player who they won't accrue any value from if they don't expect to win a lot of hockey games. Paying Karlsson 5M on July 1st 2025, and then another 6M on July 1st 2026 is asinine.
What will happen is that they will retain a portion of his salary, and they will take back bad contracts that either have less real dollars owing, or aren't buyout proof. They might get a few minor picks or prospects back, but the main value will be passing on 50-75 percent of the buyout proof contract to a different org'. Using the previous example of Anderson for Karlsson, buyout out Josh Anderson costs them 6M. If they dump Karlsson at 25 percent retained, they save 12.375M. So that's 6M in savings, along with lowering the big lump sum signing bonuses owed by 75 percent, and acquiring whatever B or C assets that Montreal would kick in, which would likely be similar or better to what they'd get anyways by keeping him and trading him at 37.
They will basically trade him by proxy for cash. I can guarantee you this. The return will be minimal. A 2nd round pick would be a homerun. There might be conditional elements that make it look better, but they would just be to save face and would be unlikely to be met.