Rangers Team Notes

Rangers must pay pending RFA K’Andre Miller based on track record, not potential

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers

Danny Wild-Imagn ImagesDanny Wild-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers are facing a decision on whether to re-sign young defenseman K’Andre Miller for the long term. Ultimately, the choice for the Blueshirts should be an easy one – as long as they enter into such an agreement with clear eyes on what it is they’re paying for.

Miller has flashed his amazing physical gifts and tantalizing skill set off and on since former general manager Jeff Gorton traded up four spots in the 2018 NHL Draft to select the University of Wisconsin product No. 22 overall. Miller never played in the minors, making his debut in the pandemic-altered 2020-21 season and playing 53 games. He’s now 343 games — and counting — deep into his NHL career.

In that time, fans, media and perhaps the front office have often viewed him as a top pair defenseman-in-waiting. Miller’s size (6-foot-5, 210 pounds), strength, mobility and supposedly untapped offensive potential surely are tantalizing, as his play. Sometimes.

Related: Rangers coach provides positive Igor Shesterkin update for games after 4 Nations break

K’Andre Miller hasn’t reached elite status – and might never do so​

NHL: New York Rangers at Columbus Blue Jackets

Samantha Madar/USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images

Miller, of course, has yet to cooperate with that narrative. He took a step back after a 43-point 2022-23 season, compiling 30 points last season and struggling with his play and life off the ice, stepping away from the team briefly for what was termed “personal reasons.” He later courageously opened up about his battles with mental health.

It was more of the same early in 2024-25, Miller being unable to maintain consistency and sometimes making costly gaffes, even as he also turned in games that again evoked the potential promise of a star blueliner waiting to get out. He has a disappointing 13 points (four goals, nine assists) in 49 games this season.

Unfortunately for the Rangers, time has all but run out on their evaluation period of this polarizing player. Miller’s two-year, $7.7 million bridge contract expires this summer, making him a restricted free agent with arbitration rights. The Rangers can either tie the 25-year-old up for the long haul at fair value or trade him.

The choice, though, shouldn’t be difficult. Parting with Miller would leave a massive void on the left side of the top four, one that perhaps could start to resemble the sinkhole at top-six right wing that has forced the team to spend resources at the trade deadline to fill it for three years now. With their entire left side facing uncertainty – Ryan Lindgren seems likely to be traded or leave as a UFA this summer, and Zac Jones and Urho Vaakanainen project as third-pair players at best – the loss of Miller’s durable, consistent presence seems all but unthinkable.

The caveat here is that the Rangers should at least attempt to pay Miller for what he is now, as opposed to what they think he could become. There’s a good chance that Miller’s ceiling is that of a solid, minutes-eating, second-pair defenseman – not a Victor Hedman clone-to-be. The Blueshirts would have to be fully aware of what they’re buying, which could be a player that never fully puts all of his considerable talents together.

Miller’s camp is sure to disagree with such an assessment of his value. Agent Ian Pulver – who also represents jilted ex-Rangers forward Barclay Goodrow – can point to Miller’s analytics this season as evidence of his indispensability. Through the season’s first 28 games, Miller posted an expected goal share of 50.0 – respectably breaking even, with the Rangers also getting outscored 27-21 with him on the ice at 5-on-5, per Natural Stat Trick.

Since Dec. 20, though, Miller has posted an individual 69.2 expected goal share over 21 games covering 72 minutes, with the Blueshirts out-chancing opponents 43-24 and 19-5 in the high-danger category. That date represents the first game for Miller’s new defense partner, Will Borgen, in a Rangers sweater. Much has made of how Miller has settled down since the arrival of the former Seattle Kraken, who signed a five-year extension not long after being acquired in the Kaapo Kakko trade.

Borgen has posted a 46.8 expected goal share in 84 minutes without Miller since arriving, strongly illustrating that it’s Miller who has carried the partnership. The duo has a combined 48.2 expected goal share in 332:36.

Related: Rangers assign disgruntled, seldom-used defenseman to AHL Hartford on conditioning stint

Polarizing play of K’Andre Miller will make this a complex contract negotiation​

NHL: Philadelphia Flyers at New York Rangers

Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

Ultimately, this negotiation jumps out as a textbook instance of the need for healthy compromise. The Rangers will be in a serious spot without Miller’s contributions next season and going forward. At the same time, Miller’s representatives lack any sort of irrefutable evidence that the player is an emerging star. He’s yet to fashion a dominant season, and there is simply too much up-and-down in his game to label him as a top-pair force who should be paid accordingly.

Will an honest and well-intentioned back-and-forth happen? Pulver and his team recognize there’s a danger in agreeing to, say, six years at $6.5 million per, given Miller’s package of obviously elite abilities. Should the defenseman actually fulfill his considerable potential, the agent knows he will have sold off a No. 1 or No. 2 D-man at a discount – especially with the confirmation that the salary cap will rise at a significant rate over the next three seasons, and likely into the future.

Pulver is also aware that asking for Victor Hedman or Quinn Hughes money – about $8 million per for both players – isn’t supported by his client’s body of work. And the Rangers will still hold leverage and control for two more seasons, given that Miller will be an RFA, albeit one with arbitration rights that neither side wants to exercise.

The Rangers need Miller, even if his occasional dips in performance prove to be a career-long characteristic and not something he’ll definitely outgrow. It’s also in Miller’s interest to work out a deal with the team that drafted him, given his comfort level with a defense partner that might be paving the way for him to reach another level. Then there’s the possibility that Miller is Adam Fox’s partner in waiting on the top pair.

Can the sides come to an agreement, either during the season or this summer? It might come down to whether team and player are able to partially accept each other’s viewpoint on who Miller is, and what he might become. The Rangers might not get him for purely second-pair cash, and Miller also won’t get paid as a top player at his position.

The Rangers’ remaining 27 regular-season games should go a long way toward determining which version of Miller the club will be dealing with as it looks for a long-term commitment to keep him on Broadway.

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Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/new-york-rangers-news/kandre-miller-contract-pending-rfa/
 
Rangers blown out by Sabres 8-2 in 1st game after 4 Nations Face-Off break

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn ImagesTimothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The New York Rangers returned from the two-week break for the 4 Nations Face-Off and were doomed by a litany of mistakes in a humiliating 8-2 loss to the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday at KeyBank Center.

The Rangers fell behind 1:46 into the contest and gave up four more goals in the final 8:02 of the opening period to fall behind the last-place Sabres 5-0.

“It wasn’t good,” coach Peter Laviolette said postgame. “There was nothing that was good about the game. Terrible start, terrible first period. It didn’t get much better from there. It was not the game we were looking for coming out of the break. That’s it in a nutshell.”

Jack Quinn scored the opening goal, Rasmus Dahlin scored twice and added an assist for the Sabres, who also rolled to a 6-1 rout against the Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 7. Dahlin had a three-point opening period and was unstoppable against the Rangers, who spent large stretches in their defensive zone and scrambling around.

“I don’t see it as a lack of urgency,” said Vincent Trocheck, one of six Rangers who appeared in the 4 Nations Face-Off. “I think we were not in the right spots.”

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

Tage Thompson scored Buffalo’s third goal and tallied again early in the third. Ryan McLeod scored less than two minutes after Thompson’s first goal to turn the game into a rout, added another goal in the third and Dahlin capped the five-goal barrage by scoring on a power play.

Henri Jokiharju scored in the final minute, and the Rangers allowed eight goals for the first time since a 9-3 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Nov. 14, 2019.

“I think the effort and execution needs to be a whole lot better,” center J.T. Miller said. “It’s tough seeing that many go up. We kind of left the goalies hanging out to dry tonight.”

SEVEN GOALS FOR YOUR BUFFALO SABRES

THIS IS MAYHEM

WHAT A MOVE FROM MCLEOD

HIS SECOND OF THE GAME

7-2 SABRES pic.twitter.com/NodXz6EGOg

— Crossing Swords ⚔️ (@CrossSwordsPod) February 23, 2025

Dahlin’s second goal at 18: 21 of the first period ended Igor Shesterkin’s night. Shesterkin returned from his second upper-body injury this season and allowed five goals on 16 shots.

It was the ninth time this season Shesterkin allowed at least five goals, his most in any season since making his NHL debut in January 2020. The 29-year-old is 1-5-0 in his past six games with an .817 save percentage. It was the fourth time this season Shesterkin was pulled. Jonathan Quick allowed the final three goals, all in the third period.

The Rangers (27-25-5, 58 points) fell to 3-5-0 in their past eight games since a 10-game point streak (7-0-3) moved them back into the Eastern Conference playoff race. The Rangers play six more games before the NHL Trade Deadline on March 7. New York is four points out of the second wild-card spot with 26 games remaining.

The Rangers were somewhat improved in the second period after allowing their first five-goal opening period since Dec. 26, 1991 in an 8-6 road win over the Washington Capitals. Chris Kreider scored a power-play goal and Mika Zibanejad also scored, but Buffalo finished it off in the opening 5:40 of the third.

Kreids deflects it in to tie the franchise record for power play goals. pic.twitter.com/0uJUoUJWic

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) February 22, 2025

Kreider’s goal was the 116th power-play goal of his career, tying Camille Henry for the most in Rangers history. But it was the only bright spot on a rough night for the Rangers, who face a quick turnaround with a visit to the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday afternoon.

“It has to be frustrating today,” Zibanejad said. “We move on and play a big one tomorrow.”

Related: Rangers must pay pending RFA K’Andre Miller based on track record, not potential

Sabres 8 – Rangers 2

NHL: New York Rangers at Buffalo Sabres

Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

The mistakes started early and persisted throughout a disastrous opening 20 minutes.

Buffalo went ahead after K’Andre Miller’s clearing pass banked off Zibanejad’s left skate. Quinn gained possession, easily moved through the slot and flipped a soft shot from the left circle past Shesterkin.

With 8:14 remaining, Shesterkin made a juggling save on Jordan Greenway but could not control the rebound and the puck went to the corner. Braden Schneider lost his stick in the corner and lost possession, allowing Greenway to move to the left point and take a shot that was tipped in by Dahlin, who easily breezed past Reilly Smith to the front of the net.

Dahlin was denied on a breakaway with 5:55 left but things got even worse for the Rangers when Thompson made a dominating play to put Buffalo up 3-0 with 4:28 left. Thompson pried the puck from Ryan Lindgren with an effective forecheck near the left corner, easily skated past Adam Fox and flipped a backhander past Shesterkin from in front of the net.

After McLeod won an offensive zone face-off from Trocheck, he went to the net as the Sabres moved the puck around without difficulty. Following five passes, McLeod jostled for position in front with Schneider and tipped in Dahlin’s blast from the point with 2:27 remaining.

Shesterkin’s night ended during a cross-checking penalty to Sam Carrick when Dahlin eased by Trocheck, got to the left circle and sent a wrist shot into the net.

After Kreider and Zibanejad scored to make it 5-2 after two periods, Thompson surprised Quick with a shot from the right circle at 3:47 of the third and McLeod finished off a breakaway less than two minutes later. Jokiharju completed the scoring with 36 seconds left.

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Source: https://www.foreverblueshirts.com/n...-8-2-1st-game-after-4-nations-face-off-break/
 
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