The Canucks announced on Thursday that they have . Consistent with recent signings around the league, the Canucks officially announced the terms of the deal instead of them getting “leaked” via other means.
It’s a one-way contract worth $3.5 million, a raise from the $2.5 million per year on his last deal. The money and term mean Jim Benning avoided making two major mistakes: paying too much for too long.
The ingredients were there for an overpayment: the Canucks appear to overvalue Gudbranson’s physicality and stay-at-home game; the loss of Nikita Tryamkin to the KHL leaves the Canucks without much in the way of size on the blue line; the team may lose another defenceman in the expansion draft; and Gudbranson’s last contract was his bridge deal that was supposed to lead to a larger payday.
With those things in mind, it would have been really easy for Jim Benning to justify a more expensive long-term deal. Instead, he signed Gudbranson to a show-me deal: a one-year contract to prove he’s capable of being the top-four defenceman they believe him to be.
The deal makes sense for Gudbranson too, since he'll be looking to prove he's worth a lot more when he becomes an unrestricted free agent next summer. He's coming off an injury-plagued season that saw him miss 52 games and in the 30 games he played, he did not look like a second-pairing defenceman.
Gudbranson finished second-last on the Canucks in corsi percentage, ahead of only Luca Sbisa, and was dead last in goals-for percentage. The Canucks got badly outpossessed and outscored when Gudbranson was on the ice. And, in the small sample of passing data we have for last season, he also .
It should be noted, however, that Gudbranson was playing through his injury before it ended his season. There’s a possibility that he has more to show and that another year of familiarity with his teammates and a new coaching staff will bring out the best in him. Or maybe we'll find out that he is the third-pairing defenceman he appears to be.
The one-year deal gives Gudbranson the chance to prove himself and it gives the Canucks a chance to walk away at the end of the season (or trade him at the deadline) if it isn’t working out.