The Blue Jackets signed Aston-Reese to a one-year contract extension that will pay him $775,000 through next season. That salary, the NHL’s minimum, is the same he’s making this season. A raise would have been nice, but he was looking for stability.
A two-year contract was discussed between Waddell and Aston-Reese’s agent, Dan Milstein, before they settled on the one-year deal on Sunday.
“It feels really good,” Aston-Reese told
The Athletic. “I’ve always believed in myself, but it’s nice to have a staff that believes in me as well. They’ve given me an opportunity. I’m so grateful and happy to be here. I love this team, and I’m proud to be a part of it.
“It’s so good to know where I’m going to be. It’s not just me anymore, either. I’ve got a girlfriend (Sasha) and we have two dogs, so that (stability) is really nice.”
“During the summertime, as a GM, maybe you think you could do better, and you want to think you’ve got young guys in your organization who could do the job,” Waddell said. “But then you watch him day in and day out — like we have here this season — and you find out why he’s hung around for so long.”
Aston-Reese’s signing takes one of the Blue Jackets’ pending unrestricted free agents off the market heading into the March 7 NHL trade deadline.
It’s a balance, Waddell said, wanting to keep the right veteran players while still allowing room for the young talent that’s percolating at AHL Cleveland and in the junior ranks across North America. The closest to the surface would appear to be winger James Malatesta and Del Bel Belluz, who was called up following an injury to veteran
Sean Monahan.
“We have a few guys coming,” Waddell said. “But I don’t see (Aston-Reese’s) signing as any kind of a roadblock.”
Aston-Reese said he was excited when the Blue Jackets claimed him on waivers on Oct. 7, three days before the season opener. He wasn’t quite sure what to expect, but he saw an opportunity on a club that has finished near the bottom of the standings the past two seasons.
“But after that first game (a 3-2 loss in Minnesota) this season, the way that we played, the pace and the skill that was right there … I was like, ‘Man, we could be really good,'” Aston-Reese said. “It’s a great group of guys. It’s a really close room. Yeah, it’s a place I want to be.”