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Madferret
7-27-05, 10:56 AM
Bruins offer deals to Thornton, Gonchar
Sports Ticker

BOSTON (Ticker) - The Boston Bruins are making a concerted effort to retain the core of their team. The Bruins on Tuesday made contract offers to five of their free agents, including captain Joe Thornton and defenseman Sergei Gonchar.

Also receiving offers were restricted free agent left wings Sergei Samsonov and P.J. Axelsson and right wing Martin Lapointe, who is unrestricted. Teams exclusively can negotiate with their free agents through July 31. "These players have made valuable contributions to our team," Bruins general manager Mike O'Connell said. "We hope these offers make clear to them how much we want them to be a part of building a championship team in Boston."

A restricted free agent, Thornton was offered a five-year contract. The 26-year-old made $5.5 million in 2003-04 and was awarded a one-year, $6.75 million deal after winning his arbitration case last summer. An All-Star each of the last three seasons, Thornton was selected first overall by the Bruins in 1997. He was named team captain prior to the 2002-03 season, a campaign in which he collected a career-high 101 points.

Gonchar, who is an unrestricted free agent, was given a four-year offer. Acquired from Washington in March 2004, the Russian blue-liner also won an arbitration case last summer, receiving a one-year, $5.5 million contract after making $3.65 million in 2003-04.

The 14th overall pick by the Capitals in 1992, Gonchar recorded a career-high 67 points in 2002-03, one season after netting 26 goals, also a career best. The 31-year-old has appeared in three All-Star Games.

Samsonov, Axelsson and Lapointe each received three-year contract offers.
Samsonov, who made $3.65 million in 2003-04, reached an agreement on a one-year deal for the same amount last summer. Selected eighth overall in 1997, the 26-year-old Russian won the Calder Trophy in 1998 and appeared in the 2001 All-Star Game.

Signed to a lucrative free-agent contract in 2001, the 31-year-old Lapointe made $5.5 million with the Bruins in 2003-04. He scored a career-high 27 goals in his final season with Detroit in 2000-01 but has not netted more than 17 in any of his three campaigns in Boston.

A native of Sweden, Axelsson made $1.3 million in 2003-04. The 30-year-old enjoyed his best season in 2002-03, when he recorded career highs of 17 goals and 36 points.

Newfie John
7-27-05, 11:22 AM
Glen Murray not offered one? Hmm.. he's definately going to test the market.

Madferret
7-27-05, 11:47 AM
Glen Murray not offered one? Hmm.. he's definately going to test the market.

They can't offer Murray anything until August 1st John, he's a UFA...

Meanwhile, according to the Herald, rules prohibit O'Connell from contacting UFA Glen Murray, since his final B's contract expired after the 2003-04 season

Newfie John
7-27-05, 11:54 AM
They can't offer Murray anything until August 1st John, he's a UFA...

That quote is wrong, IMO. Roberts, Newy, and Mogilny are all UFA's for Toronto and the leafs are negotiating with them now. Murray last played for Boston so he is allowed to negotiate with Boston, but Boston only. I know this for a fact, unless this is a new clause in the new CBA.

Madferret
7-27-05, 12:01 PM
That quote is wrong, IMO. Roberts, Newy, and Mogilny are all UFA's for Toronto and the leafs are negotiating with them now. Murray last played for Boston so he is allowed to negotiate with Boston, but Boston only. I know this for a fact, unless this is a new clause in the new CBA.

Hmmm, good point. I dunno then..

:shrug:

Leafs_Fa_Life
7-27-05, 1:19 PM
John, players who were UFAs on July 1st 2004 aren't allowed to negotiate with anyone. Not even the team they played for last season. Guys like Gary, Joe, and Tie all had their contracts expire on July 1st 2005 so they can negotiate with the team they played for last season.

PDO
7-27-05, 3:39 PM
John, players who were UFAs on July 1st 2004 aren't allowed to negotiate with anyone. Not even the team they played for last season. Guys like Gary, Joe, and Tie all had their contracts expire on July 1st 2005 so they can negotiate with the team they played for last season.

Beat me too the punch, but that's exactly what it is.

Madferret
7-27-05, 5:52 PM
Thornton camp not thrilled with offer
Canadian Press

The Boston Bruins have a vision of how they hope to build a winner in the NHL's new limited economic landscape. Whether franchise player Joe Thornton buys into that plan remains to be seen.

Bruins GM Mike O'Connell has made long-term contract offers to five of his core free agents, including Thornton. It's believed the Bruins offered the restricted free agent a five-year deal around $25 million US, which averages to less than Thornton's qualifying offer of $5.13 million.

Stealing a page perhaps from the championship NFL club in his own city, O'Connell believes a winning team needs a star player to be surrounded by talented teammates. That also means a player can't take up too much of the overall payroll if there's going to be balance. Star quarterback Tom Brady takes up 10 per cent of the Patriots' payroll and not a penny more.

At $5 million a year, Thornton would make 14 per cent of a $35-million payroll if that's where the Bruins end up.

''Do we want Joe Thornton on our team? Of course we do,'' O'Connell said Wednesday from Boston. ''Do we want to surround him with top-notch players? Of course we do. How to accomplish that, no one knows yet but we are trying to establish that and that was the reason for the offers we made.''

Yes, it's a new landscape, but Thornton has some major leverage on his side. He can become an unrestricted free agent next summer as an eight-year NHL veteran. The Bruins would likely have to pay Thornton closer to $7 million a year to skip that scenario.

''Joe Thornton is one of the very best hockey players in the world,'' his agent J.P. Barry of IMG said Wednesday from Calgary. ''He is an elite franchise player and if he accepts his qualifying offer, he will be an unrestricted free agent next summer at only 26 years old. This is a very unique situation. The multi-year offer Boston has made is actually less than Joe's qualifying offer. It makes you wonder if they truly understand what kind of hockey player they have with Joe.

''We'll see where this is going very soon. I'll speak with Joe and we will be in contact with Boston to discuss this further.''

Unless the Bruins improve their offer, expect Thornton to accept his qualifying offer, which would take him through to next summer's unrestricted status.

O'Connell was busy Tuesday, also making long-term offers to winger Sergei Samsonov (three years), winger P.J. Axelsson (three years), defenceman Sergei Gonchar (four years) and winger Martin Lapointe (three years). Like Thornton, Samsonov and Axelsson are restricted free agents while Gonchar and Lapointe will be unrestricted free agents as of Monday.

''What is the market for a well-put together hockey club that is balanced throughout its lineup? None of us really realize what that is and we might not know for 2-3 years,'' O'Connell said. ''In making these offers to these players, that was part of our thinking.

''I think we made a substantial offer to try and get what we consider our best player but also try to surround him with the necessary players to win. That's the goal.''

Barry also represents Gonchar and was clearly irked at how news of the Bruins' offers got out quickly to the Boston media.

''It was an interesting approach to fax the offers and then immediately contact the press to reveal that the offers were sent before discussing them together,'' Barry said. ''That isn't textbook negotiation strategy so I don't know what this means for how this will proceed from this point forward.''

It appears unlikely Gonchar will re-sign with Boston before testing the free-agent waters next week.

''Sergei Gonchar is the highest-scoring defenceman in the league for the past five years,'' Barry said. ''He will be an extremely valuable player in the new environment with the red line removed and a renewed emphasis on offence. The offer that Boston provided was not indicative of what we believe Sergei's value will be as an unrestricted free agent this summer. We will discuss this further with them through the weekend.''

Leave it to Sinden to lowball his best player(s) and Captain...

Newfie John
7-27-05, 7:55 PM
That was just an act of pure stupidity by Sinden.

PDO
7-27-05, 8:02 PM
Lowball Thornton.. absolutely brilliant.

Never ceases to amaze me the stupidity of Bruins management.