Ducks keep Leo Carlsson, matching Flyers' 5-year, $90M US offer sheet for young centre
The Anaheim Ducks have matched the Philadelphia Flyers' offer sheet for centre Leo Carlsson, keeping their rising young star at an extraordinary cost.
The Ducks announced their decision Thursday on the 21-year-old Carlsson, who is now the NHL's highest-paid player under the five-year, $90 million deal extended by the Flyers one week ago.
"It's going to be a special feeling, having this pressure," said Carlsson, who wasn't told the Ducks were matching the offer sheet until shortly before the decision was made public. "I always wanted to be a Duck. It's my home, too. I'm just super excited to be back."
Carlsson signed the Flyers' offer sheet as a restricted free agent after a year of fruitless negotiations with Anaheim general manager Pat Verbeek, whose typical hardline approach in contract talks with his restricted free agents backfired tremendously this time.
Carlsson's new contract is worth much more than the league expected the Swedish youngster would get as a restricted free agent, and the $18 million average annual value is significantly more than he had already indicated he would accept. The deal surpasses the salary of Minnesota's Kirill Kaprizov, who would have been the NHL's highest-paid player at $17 million.
Carlsson's first significant contract negotiations landed him a huge payday -- and it might have affected the NHL's entire salary structure going forward, thanks to the Flyers' boldness. He emerged from the experience with excitement about the Ducks' future and no public qualms about the way everything went down.
"It's a lot of business in hockey," Carlsson said. "I knew it, obviously, but it's more business than I thought. [The details are] something for my agent to answer more on, but [the offer


