Porous Five Hole Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago The 2025-26 thresholds are as follows: ≥ $11,700,193 4x 1st Round Picks $9,360,154 - $11,700,192 2x 1st Round Picks, 1x 2nd Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick $7,020,114 - $9,360,153 1x 1st Round Pick, 1x 2nd Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick $4,680,077 - $7,020,113 1x 1st Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick $2,340,038 - $4,680,076 1x 2nd Round Pick $1,544,425 - $2,340,037 1x 3rd Round Pick ≤ $1,544,424 No Compensation BUT HERE’S THE THING. You must keep in mind that if the length of the offer sheet is longer than 5 years, they divide the total contract value by 5 for AAV tier & not the actual length. If the term is less than 5, they divide by actual length for AAV. I think this rule probably keeps Peterka here. Say he goes for an 8MM offer sheet for 6 years , that is 48MM in total value. 48MM / 5 years =9.6MM/year AAV. The compensation for not matching would then be 2x 1st Round Picks, 1x 2nd Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick. And that’s a ton of compensation for a team to give up for a guy like JJ Peterka. I think he’s here on a bridge deal next year. Related, it also makes the Leafs Matthew Knies very expensive to acquire via offer sheet. 1 Quote
dudacek Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago Basically, it’s only the 3rd tier you’re worried about. You match the 4th and you take the picks with the 2nd. And that goes for both Byram and JJ. The danger spot is anything that translates to over $8M AAV from a team in the upper half of the league. That’s where you’re paying more than you want in contract, but getting less in compensation than you probably could have in trade. Remember, it’s not just the draft picks you’re getting in compensation, there is also the cap space you get to backfill. 1 Quote
Taro T Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 5 minutes ago, dudacek said: Basically, it’s only the 3rd tier you’re worried about. You match the 4th and you take the picks with the 2nd. And that goes for both Byram and JJ. The danger spot is anything that translates to over $8M AAV from a team in the upper half of the league. That’s where you’re paying more than you want in contract, but getting less in compensation than you probably could have in trade. Remember, it’s not just the draft picks you’re getting in compensation, there is also the cap space you get to backfill. To the bolded: you a veddy funny man Mr. Dudacek! Quote
Mr. Allen Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago All depends what team it is and where we think their 1st is going to be. But still, let’s say we get a lower tier team to offer sheet Peterka. And let’s say that pick becomes the 10th overall selection. Not only are we basically hoping that pick becomes a player close to as good as Peterka, but also waiting 3 plus years for him to get to Petrekas level. Quote
bob_sauve28 Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago He has such crazy good chemistry with Quinn that he is probably worth more to us than to another team. Quote
LGR4GM Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago We could also offer sheet other players. 1 1 Quote
Mr. Allen Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 22 minutes ago, LGR4GM said: We could also offer sheet other players. I feel like we are the team that other teams would JUMP on our pick and let us have the player. We could be the McKenna lottery ticket. Quote
Archie Lee Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 36 minutes ago, LGR4GM said: We could also offer sheet other players. We could, but it is nearly impossible to imagine Adams doing so. Also, we don’t have our 2nd in 2026 (included in the Norris trade), which limits the options. Quote
Wyldnwoody44 Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago We could offer sheet other players, and I could also become an Olympic gold medalist 😂 Adams is an Ameoba, just kinda exists, has no backbone and is slimy. Quote
Mr. Allen Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago There’s some good options this year. Bouchard, Dobson Knies, Rossi, McTavish and a couple other good players. Quote
Taro T Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 53 minutes ago, LGR4GM said: We could also offer sheet other players. While technically true, the same GM from the past 5 years is still on the job. So ... Quote
klos1963 Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago 1 hour ago, LGR4GM said: We could also offer sheet other players. But the player would have to sign it, right? I doubt that happens. 1 Quote
SABRES 0311 Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago 5 hours ago, Porous Five Hole said: The 2025-26 thresholds are as follows: ≥ $11,700,193 4x 1st Round Picks $9,360,154 - $11,700,192 2x 1st Round Picks, 1x 2nd Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick $7,020,114 - $9,360,153 1x 1st Round Pick, 1x 2nd Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick $4,680,077 - $7,020,113 1x 1st Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick $2,340,038 - $4,680,076 1x 2nd Round Pick $1,544,425 - $2,340,037 1x 3rd Round Pick ≤ $1,544,424 No Compensation BUT HERE’S THE THING. You must keep in mind that if the length of the offer sheet is longer than 5 years, they divide the total contract value by 5 for AAV tier & not the actual length. If the term is less than 5, they divide by actual length for AAV. I think this rule probably keeps Peterka here. Say he goes for an 8MM offer sheet for 6 years , that is 48MM in total value. 48MM / 5 years =9.6MM/year AAV. The compensation for not matching would then be 2x 1st Round Picks, 1x 2nd Round Pick, 1x 3rd Round Pick. And that’s a ton of compensation for a team to give up for a guy like JJ Peterka. I think he’s here on a bridge deal next year. Related, it also makes the Leafs Matthew Knies very expensive to acquire via offer sheet. Good job on this. Quote
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