There was a recent push on extension talks between the Canucks and center Elias Pettersson, and it appears that push helped get a deal over the finish line. The team announced that they’ve inked Pettersson to an eight-year contract extension. The team did not disclose the contract’s financial terms, but Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli reports that the deal is worth $92.8M in total for an AAV of $11.6M.
Vancouver drafted the 25-year-old in the first round (fifth overall) back in 2017, and since then, he has gone from being a key core piece to a legitimate franchise player. Pettersson won the Calder Trophy in his rookie campaign in 2018-19 where he had 66 points and followed that up with 66 more the following season. However, an injury-riddled 2020-21 season ultimately resulted in the two sides settling on a three-year bridge deal, which was set to expire this summer where he would have been a restricted free agent with salary arbitration eligibility and a year away from unrestricted free agency.
This season, Pettersson’s per-game averages are down just slightly as he’s on pace for 38 goals and 61 assists, which are still upper-tier league-wide while he is an all-situations player. That had only helped spur on speculation about his willingness to sign long-term with the Canucks since he was still wanting to wait until the offseason to put pen to paper on his next contract. That speculation got to the point where Vancouver and Carolina reportedly entered into serious discussions about a potential trade before Vancouver and Pettersson took a step back and opted to take a real run at hammering out a new deal, which proved fruitful.
The contract is by far the richest in franchise history, an outcome that shouldn’t come as much of a surprise considering Pettersson’s recent performance and the high demand for top-end centers. The deal will make him the fifth-highest-paid player AAV-wise in the NHL next season behind only Auston Matthews, Nathan MacKinnon, Connor McDavid, and Artemi Panarin.
Vancouver has a little over $60M in spending on the books for next season per CapFriendly to just a dozen players with Filip Hronek headlining their crop of restricted free agents. Of note, only two full-time regular defensemen are under contract for 2024-25 so GM Patrik Allvin will need to allocate a lot of their remaining money to filling out the back end. Meanwhile, Pettersson is now one of just three Canucks under contract past the 2026-27 campaign, joining center J.T. Miller and blueliner Quinn Hughes.