Reports: Mason McTavish Prefers a Long-Term Contract while Pat Verbeek Prefers a Bridge, where Talks Stand

The Ides of August have arrived, and the Anaheim Ducks, along with general manager Pat Verbeek, still have one outstanding order of business in which to attend: the signing of RFA center Mason McTavish.

McTavish (3rd overall in 2021) is the third player considered (at the time of the negotiation) to be part of the long-term outlook of the organization that Verbeek has negotiated with after the expiration of their ELCs. The first two were notoriously Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale in the summer of 2023.

Both Zegras and Drysdale’s negotiations bled into training camp, the Ducks’ first with then-new head coach Greg Cronin. After finally signing, they both sustained injuries in camp while attempting to get up to speed, which impacted their output early in the 2023-24 season and likely had a lasting effect. Both players are no longer part of the organization.

McTavish’s situation is eerily similar, and as the saying goes, “twice is a coincidence, three times is a pattern.”

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Verbeek and assistant general manager Jeff Solomon now have reputations league-wide as tough negotiators who are willing to play “hardball” with RFAs, especially in situations where they hold all leverage, like with players coming off ELCs. Verbeek has also verbalized his desire to bridge young players, counter to recent trends of teams extending core pieces who are 21-24 years old to seven or eight-year contracts.

“Part of my philosophy is I like to do bridge deals with players,” Verbeek said at the annual post-trade deadline ‘Ducks Migration’ event for season ticket holders. “It allows the players two things. It allows them to have no pressure to grow and get better before they have the long-term contract. It also allows the team to assess them over the three years of how good they are really going to be. From a team approach, I prefer to do bridge deals, two to three years, and then if it warrants, a seven to eight-year deal after that.”

That sentiment has echoed through the summer, beginning with premier NHL insider Elliotte Friedman in early July.

“Verbeek, he’s careful. I don’t think he wants to hand anybody money too quickly. If you want the money, you’re going to have to earn it,” Friedman said on his “32 Thoughts” podcast on July 6. “I think if there’s long-term extensions, they’re at numbers that are very favorable to the Ducks, to the point where I’d be surprised. I would be shocked if they got long-term deals done at big numbers.”

Since then, and as the summer has gotten longer with endless trade and/or offer sheet speculation, reports have surfaced of McTavish and his camp’s preference for a long-term contract with Anaheim.

“He’s not being shopped by any means,” Jimmy Murphy of RG Media said on ‘The Sick Podcast with Tony Marinaro’ on Aug. 8. “Pat Verbeek wants a bridge deal, (a) two to three-year deal. McTavish wants a longer deal; he wants more AAV than they’re offering.”

“With McTavish, I’ve always felt he’s going to stay in Anaheim, and I still do,” Cam Robinson of Elite Prospects stated while on the ‘Sekeres & Price Show.’ “I think the issue with them is that (McTavish) would like a nice, big, fat, long-term deal that pays him out, and I think Anaheim would like to bridge him.”

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The benefit and the prominent reason teams have favored signing their young core pieces to long-term contracts early lies in the potential that they will outplay their AAV and their contract will become a positive value for the team.

In a landscape like the one the NHL finds itself in, now with a seemingly ever-rising salary cap ceiling, players are likely to outperform their salary far quicker, like Lucas Raymond, Jack Hughes, Matt Boldy, etc.

It will likely never be reported, but if McTavish were willing to sign a seven or eight-year contract at an AAV under $8 million, he would likely eclipse that value in short order.

McTavish (22) has improved his on-ice play and production in every one of his three seasons in the NHL. He followed up a 43-point (17-26=43) performance in 82 games (.54 points per game) in his 2022-23 rookie year with 42 points (19-23=42) in 64 games (.66 points per game) in 2023-24 and 52 points (22-30=52) in 76 games (.68 points per game) last season, stats made more impressive considering where the Ducks finished in the standings and how poor their offensive totals have been to this point in his career.

McTavish has elevated his two-way and detailed play in all three zones year after year as well. He has become the high-motor, small-area creator he was projected as when he was drafted. Defensively, where he was once a considerable liability in coverage, his mistakes diminished in 2024-25, and his diligence was more pronounced.

He’s also shown improvements in terms of play-dictation and vision with the puck on his stick, driving play on a more consistent basis. He will likely never have the foot speed to become a transition ace, but he has more than enough capability to connect, build, and extend plays from goal line to goal line.

With a new incoming head coach who carries the second-best resume in NHL history in the form of Joel Quenneville (along with an elite staff), and a roster more populous with insulating forwards, McTavish is primed for a true breakout season in 2025-26. It’s shaping up to be a season where, behind Leo Carlsson, he won’t face opposing shutdown lines, and ahead of centers like Mikael Granlund, Ryan Strome, and/or Ryan Poehling, he won’t face opposing top scoring lines either.

If Verbeek truly intends to repeat his negotiating tactics from two summers ago, where talks extend into training camp, one hopes lessons were learned and McTavish is gradually reintroduced to the rigors of camp under a new coaching regime to avoid related injury.

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