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When things go poorly, a natural response is to think of everything that needs to change. The New Jersey Devils are now not at all likely to make the playoffs this season: it would take a near-miraculous winning streak after the Olympic break to vault them back into the mix, especially after losing the four-point swing to the New York Islanders on Thursday. For us watching, it is pretty easy to start thinking up who needs to go from this team, whether it’s on the ice, behind the bench, or in the front office.

But the New Jersey Devils have to keep a certain core of players, as well as some supporting pieces, even through a reset or retooling venture. Whoever the Devils’ GM is in May, June, or July, they need to ask themselves: what should the New Jersey Devils look like?

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Answering that question means starting with the core: Nico Hischier, Jack Hughes, Jesper Bratt, Timo Meier, and Luke Hughes. Depending on how the sitting GM feels about Dougie Hamilton, the other $9 million man might be in that mix, too. Those seven players have the longest, most lucrative, and most iron-clad contracts. Timo Meier and Jesper Bratt both have full no-move clauses. Dougie has a no-move clause with trade protection against the majority of the league. Nico Hischier and the Hughes brothers are the biggest three actually drawing fans to the team, though.

Between those six, the Devils have $49.93 million tied up in the salary cap, per PuckPedia. While the current salary cap is $95.50 million, meaning they make up over 50% of the space combined, next year’s cap will be $104 million. The Devils, however, do not shed a ton of salary this offseason. Currently, they have a total cap hit of $90.88 million on the books for next season, giving them just around $13 million to deal with six roster spots. Let’s start with the player who needs a new contract — and deserves one — soonest.

Arseny Gritsyuk — An Offer Should Be Made Today, if Not Yesterday

As a 24-year old, Arseny Gritsyuk’s entry-level contract is only good for this season. After this, Gritsyuk goes immediately to the arbitration stage of restricted free agency, where he will be for two offseasons. This means the Devils really have two choices with Gritsyuk. They can give him one-year deal to save some space against the cap, followed by a longer-term extension in the 2027 offseason. Or, they can just get it out of the way now and give him somewhere between six and eight years, as this is the last offseason an eight-year contract can be given out.

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