Two hours after agreeing to a three-year, $19.5 million contract, Thomas Vanek slipped on a Minnesota Wild jersey for the first time. Vanek, who makes his home about 20 minutes east of Xcel Energy Center in Stillwater, Minn., chose to take less money, over fewer years, to stay home and reap all the benefits that has to offer. The process that brought the forward to the Wild began last year. Offered a long-term contract extension by the New York Islanders, Vanek turned it down and instead chose to gamble on himself and perhaps a chance to return to the place he first came to in 2002 as a freshman at the University of Minnesota.
"Feels good. Looks good. It's beyond my
wildest dreams," Vanek said. "It's still hard to put
into words. This is a place I have spent a lot of time the last 10
years or so. What intrigued me the most was Zach [Parise] signing
here and [Ryan] Suter signing here (prior to the 2012-13 season).
This team was getting very good. About a year ago, when I made my
decision to go to free agency, this was definitely a team I had in
mind."
Coming off a seven-year contract worth $50 million
he signed with the Buffalo
Sabres in 2007, Vanek had several intriguing options when free
agency began Tuesday, including one from the Islanders in an attempt
to bring him back to New York, where he spent much of last season
before being acquired by the Montreal
Canadiens at the NHL Trade Deadline.
"I'm not going to sit here and say it was
easy [turning down longer contracts]," Vanek said. "I
really liked it on the Island and they were in the mix again today. I
thought the line I played on there with John
Tavares and Kyle
Okposo was the best line I've been on. But at the end of the day,
I made my decision and I'm not going to regret it."
What made the decision easier for Vanek, a native
Austrian, is the presence of his family. His wife Ashley is from the
area, and their home in suburban St. Paul is where she and their
three sons have lived while Vanek has been away. Last season, as he
was shipped from Buffalo to Long Island in October then from Long
Island to Montreal in March, Vanek said he realized how much he
missed his family, admitting it may have played a role in a subpar
Stanley Cup Playoff performance with the Canadiens. Also playing a
role in bringing Vanek to Minnesota was Wild forward Jason
Pominville, one of his best friends and a former Sabres teammate,
who will start a five-year contract extension he signed in Minnesota
a year ago. Defenseman Keith
Ballard, with whom Vanek won a national championship with the
Golden Gophers in 2003, played a behind-the-scenes role in selling
the Wild. Minnesota, at 2.43 goals per game, finished tied for 24th
in the NHL last season. Since 2005-06, Vanek has been one of the
League's most prolific goal-scorers, ranking eighth in goals (277)
and 17th in even-strength goals (113). The Wild also hope their
16th-ranked power play unit will get a boost. Vanek's 161 power-play
goals over that span rank third in the League.
"It certainly wasn't my best one,"
Vanek said of his playoffs. "I'll take the blame for that.
It's not always easy moving around and being away from my family like
I have been. Those aren't excuses, those are just factors that factor
in for me … family is big for me. I didn't need much of a sales
pitch. I remember when [Pominville] got traded here and he was, I
wouldn't say disappointed, but shocked because he loved Buffalo. I
told him, 'You'll like it there,' and about a week or so later, he
called and said, 'You're right, I do like it here a lot.'"
"This guy has been a premier scorer since
he entered the League," Wild general manager Chuck Fletcher
said. "He still managed to have 68 points despite playing in
three cities. We really wanted a [right-handed] shot, we wanted
someone who can play with top players, and we wanted someone who can
help our power play."
Vanek's three-year contract carries an annual NHL
salary-cap charge of $6.5 million and will pay him $5.5 million in
2014-15, $6.5 million in 2015-16, and $7.5 million in 2016-17, when
he will be 33 years old. The Wild also signed defenseman Stu
Bickel to a one-year, two-way contract; forward Brett
Sutter to a two-year, two-way contract; and Guillaume
Gelinas to a three-year, entry-level contract.
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