Kraken anxiously await player lists ahead of expansion draft
Lists to be released Sunday; Seattle's roster to be announced Wednesday
The memory and feeling is still fresh a few years later for Kelly McCrimmon and he's sure it will be for Ron Francis, too.
It's very surreal, McCrimmon recalled, to have the entire NHL hit pause and wait for your decisions that will influence the rest of the league's landscape. It happened four years ago for McCrimmon and the Vegas Golden Knights ahead of their expansion draft.
And it's about to happen for Francis and the Seattle Kraken.
The NHL pause arrived Saturday after a busy day of league-wide deals that helped teams solidify rosters and make decisions on what players would be exposed to Seattle ahead of next Wednesday's expansion draft.
Teams submitted their protected player lists to the league Saturday and those who are protected — or more importantly left unprotected — will be released early Sunday. From there, it will be a three-day whirlwind of decisions, phone calls and likely some deals on the side that will eventually make up the Kraken roster that gets announced.
'Long journey'
"This has been a long journey," Francis said Saturday. "Our people have worked extremely hard in some tough situations, with COVID and having to watch certain things on video versus live. Finally getting to watch some stuff live. The introduction of a taxi squad changed things dramatically ... and ultimately it challenges us a little bit more of what we're doing. But our guys have worked extremely hard to get to this point and I think everybody's just excited that tomorrow morning we're going to get these lists and in three days we're gonna announce it."
Francis, who was hired two years ago Sunday as the first GM of the Kraken, said his staff has gone through hundreds of mock drafts over the past 18 months building toward the decisions that will be made this week. Seattle has certain minimums it must meet in the expansion draft, including selecting at least 20 players who are under contract for next season and have salaries totaling at least $48 million US.
Plenty of cap space
But one of Seattle's biggest benefits going into the draft is its salary cap space.
While most of Francis' front-office staff has been in place for close to a year, he said the input of new coach Dave Hakstol, who was hired late last month, has been and will be important over the next few days.
Ultimately, those 80 or so hours between the release of the protected lists Sunday morning and the announcement of Seattle's roster on Wednesday night will show how well other general managers learned from what Vegas accomplished four years ago and how well Francis and his staff were able to counter.
"Teams knew we were coming and they've had four years to prepare," Francis said.
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