Skip to content

Report: Senators' offer to Karlsson short on signing bonuses

Andre Ringuette / National Hockey League / Getty

The Ottawa Senators apparently didn't include much bonus money in their offer to Erik Karlsson.

While the club's contract-extension pitch to the superstar defenseman was closer to $11 million than $10 million per season, it came up short in the area of signing bonuses, a source with knowledge of the offer told The Athletic's Chris Stevenson for a story published Friday.

The Senators reportedly made the offer to Karlsson on July 1, and Ottawa reportedly gave other teams permission to negotiate with the stud blue-liner shortly thereafter.

The lack of sizable signing bonuses would run in stark contrast to the deal John Tavares signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Tavares will receive more than half of his new $77-million contract ($44 million) in the first three years of the seven-year pact, and he'll earn less than $1 million per campaign in terms of actual salary in all seven of those years, with the vast majority of his earnings coming by way of bonuses.

The Leafs' newest star forward isn't the only player to sign a bonus-heavy deal in anticipation of a potential work stoppage in 2019, as most of Connor McDavid's $100-million contract with the Edmonton Oilers will be paid by way of upfront money over an eight-year term when it kicks in during the upcoming season.

Talk of a possible lockout or strike in 2019-20 has persisted because both the NHL and the NHLPA can opt out of the current collective bargaining agreement on separate dates in September 2019, even though the CBA runs through the 2021-22 season.

Daily Newsletter

Get the latest trending sports news daily in your inbox