THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
MONTREAL -- With two days to go before NHL free agency opens, it's almost certain that Blue
Jackets center Manny Malhotra will test the market.
General manager Scott Howson and Malhotra's agent have not spoken in more than a week since
negotiations stalled.
Howson would say only that "We have significant ground to cover" if a deal is to get done.
The two sides are apart on both dollars and the length of the contract, Howson said. Malhotra
made $1.5 million last season, the final year of a three-year contract.
Malhotra has not returned several calls from
The Dispatch this offseason.
If Malhotra leaves, the Blue Jackets will need to add two centers, either through trade or in
free agency, which begins at noon Wednesday. They plan on Derick Brassard and Antoine Vermette
anchoring the top two lines next season, so they would be looking for checking-line centers who are
adept at penalty-killing.
Some free-agents who might fill that bill: John Madden, Todd Marchant, Sami Pahlsson, Chad
LaRose, Vernon Fiddler and Radek Bonk.
The Blue Jackets have told two of their own pending free-agent centers, Michael Peca and Jason
Williams, to test the market, but that a return to Columbus is not out of the question.
Malhotra is one of the longest-tenured Blue Jackets players, having joined the club off waivers
from Dallas early in the 2003-04 season. Last season, he had 11 goals and 24 assists in 77
games.
His negotiations had all the earmarks of a difficult deal right from the start.
Malhotra spent most of the season playing on the No. 1 line between Rick Nash and Kristian
Huselius. But he's regarded by the club -- and throughout the NHL -- as a third-line center, at
best.
Those two ends of the spectrum might have made it difficult for the Blue Jackets and Malhotra's
agent to find a comparable player to serve as a model for a contract.
aportzline@dispatch.com