The Buffalo Sabres got people thinking Thursday when they sent JJ Peterka to the Utah Mammoth.
In return for the up-and-coming left winger, Buffalo received right winger Josh Doan and defenseman Michael Kesselring. The deal didn’t come as much of a surprise, given that Peterka – an RFA heading into the off-season – had yet to sign a contract extension with Buffalo. But the return the Sabres got for Peterka had us asking one question – that can’t be it, right?
While Doan and Kesselring may eventually evolve into important pieces of the puzzle for the Sabres, this lineup hasn’t changed nearly enough for a franchise that hasn’t made the Stanley Cup playoffs for the past 14 years.
Although the 23-year-old Doan has some promise as a power forward, he won’t replace the offense Peterka brought to the table for the past two seasons, when he had a combined 55 goals and 118 points. Not yet, anyway.
So yes, we must ask whether the Sabres have more moves coming besides that trade and re-signing Jack Quinn to a two-year contract with a $3.375-million cap hit on Friday.
All eyes in Buffalo are now trained on RFA defenseman Bowen Byram, who seems less likely to sign an extension with each passing day.
Adding Kesselring helps deepen Buffalo’s defense on the right side, but only intermittently until Byram is dealt, or if he’s dealt. Drafting right-handed blueliner Radim Mrtka ninth overall at the NHL draft is great, but if he’s not playing in the NHL in October, there must be additional moves for the Sabres to ensure they’re building playoff-caliber depth.
Peterka’s immediate signing with the Mammoth tells you one of a few things: either he wasn’t willing to sign a long-term deal at $7.7 million per season with the Sabres, vice versa or both. None of those possibilities paint Sabres GM Kevyn Adams or team ownership in a positive light.
There are too many instances of players wanting out of Buffalo in their playoff drought, and that means Adams must be cold-blooded and doggedly determined to put together a roster that can legitimately compete for a playoff spot.
With that in mind, Sabres fans should absolutely be expecting more moves to come for this franchise. Dealing Byram almost seems like an inevitability at this point, but even beyond that, there must be some fundamental changes for the organization.
Simply put, the status quo cannot be an option for Buffalo. So many years of losing have created an odor around this franchise that can’t be easily perfumed. But that doesn’t give Adams a free pass to essentially run it back with more or less the same level of talent.
If these Sabres don’t make upgrades this summer, there should be even greater unrest among the Sabres’ fan base. The message to Adams is clear: get to moving some players of note off this roster, and bring in some better players in a hurry. And no excuse that leads to Adams not doing anything in that respect will keep Sabres fans from lashing out in anger and frustration.
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