Paves the way for him to take over from Allen after this season. Good signing.
It's hard to see them paying him that much in the second year to play in the AHL. Hopefully he plays well enough it isn't an issue.But also low enough that if he isn’t ready for that, keeping him in the AHL results in zero cap impact.
I’m admittedly not the most educated in terms of contract technicalities (at least compared to plenty of people on this board), but how often do we see a multi-year contract where the first half is two-way and the second half is one-way? Curious as to other examples.
From a management perspective, I almost feel like I’d like to negotiate it the other way around. First year one way, second year two way. Easier to unload the contract (in theory) during the second year if the player isn’t up to expectations.
He will be in the AHL this year, so they want to pay him an AHL salary. He will presumably be in the NHL next year so he will make an NHL salary regardlessI’m admittedly not the most educated in terms of contract technicalities (at least compared to plenty of people on this board), but how often do we see a multi-year contract where the first half is two-way and the second half is one-way? Curious as to other examples.
From a management perspective, I almost feel like I’d like to negotiate it the other way around. First year one way, second year two way. Easier to unload the contract (in theory) during the second year if the player isn’t up to expectations.
I've seen this type of deal enough times that I think a few players per season sign something along these lines.
There's no reason to give Daws a one way deal for this upcoming season when he doesn't have to pass through waivers and is expected to be in the AHL for the season, barring injury to Markstrom and/or Allen. The contract pays Daws a salary of $775K in the NHL / $350K in the AHL with $465K guaranteed for the upcoming season and $850K for the 2025-2026 season.
It's a 2 year deal for a 23-year old goalie that basically carries zero risk to NJ. If he's not good enough to make the NHL club in 2025-2026, they can just bury his full cap hit in the minors. Sure it costs the team an extra $385K in real dollars, but that's a small drop in the bucket of the team's total expenditures for the season, so it's not a big deal.