There’s an update on talks between the Bruins and Jeremy Swayman
Bruins netminder Jeremy Swayman made it known that he was not a fan of last year’s arbitration process.
He’s made it known multiple times, actually. But that ugly experience has not led to any sort of bitterness between the sides clearly, with word that Swayman and the Bruins have officially started talks on a new contract.
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Confirmation of Swayman’s discussions with the Bruins came with a view of Boston’s entire goaltending situation, courtesy of Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman and his latest ’32 Thoughts’ column.
“The reason you’re hearing Linus Ullmark’s name is the calendar will force Boston to make a decision. They’ve begun discussing an extension with Jeremy Swayman and Brandon Bussi soon requires waivers,” Friedman wrote in what’s essentially a trade deadline week primer. “Something’s going to have to give.”
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While Swayman is playing this year on a one-year, $3.475 million salary awarded to him in arbitration, sources have long-believed that a Swayman extension with Boston would come at a cap hit that’s worth at least $6.5 million per season, and could even challenge for $7 million per season.
And with the 25-year-old Swayman in the midst of a season that’s come with an All-Star appearance, as well as the natural ‘make good’ that tends to come with a tough negotiation (let alone arbitration), it’s fair to assume that Swayman’s next deal will likely come on the higher end of that scale.
It’s also worth noting that this has become a housekeeping week for Sweeney in recent seasons, with Jake DeBrusk signed to an extension on trade deadline day in 2022 and David Pastrnak signed to a franchise-record $90 million extension the day before the trade deadline last season.
Should the B’s sign Swayman to a long-term deal with a $7 million cap hit, Swayman would become the fifth-highest paid active goaltender in the NHL based on cap hit, trailing the Panthers’ Sergei Bobrovsky ($10.5 million), Tampa Bay’s Andrei Vasilevskiy ($9.5 million), Winnipeg’s Connor Hellebuyck ($8.5 million), and New York’s Ilya Sorokin ($8.25 million). It would also see the Bruins set their own price come before the goaltender market is reset with new contracts for players such as the Stars’ Jake Oettinger, Nashville’s Juuse Saros, and the Rangers’ Igor Shesterkin, all of whom will be due massive raises when their contracts expire at the end of the 2024-25 season.
But a Swayman extension at that price point would also mean that the Linus Ullmark era would have to come to an end in Boston, as the Bruins simply wouldn’t be able to justify spending $12 million at the goaltending position.
Of course, the Bruins may very well ride it out for one more run with this tandem in goal (Bruins head coach Jim Montgomery has already said that he’s going to use both goaltenders in the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs) before making a summertime call on Ullmark and trading him to the highest bidder within his no-trade list.
Now in his fourth NHL season, Swayman has made 34 appearances this year, and has compiled a 19-6-8 record and .919 save percentage on the year.