Yesterday morning, an hour before their scheduled arbitration hearing, Blue Jackets general
manager Scott Howson told defenseman Anton Stralman that the ugliness about to play out was not to
be taken personally.
About 55 minutes later, a deal was struck.
Stralman, the Blue Jackets' most offensively gifted defenseman and their top power-play point
man, signed a one-year, $1.95million contract that prevented the Jackets' first arbitration
hearing.
"Talking to Anton this morning, we both agreed that if we have to go through the process, we
have to go through it," Howson said. "I made sure he knew this was part of the business and that
whatever was going to be said in that room, we still like him as a player. But the danger of going
through it is, it gets very personal.
"It helped to have (Stralman) there this morning, to look him in the eye."
Stralman appeared to carry the biggest hammer as the arbitration date loomed. He is not a
polished defensive player, but he possesses what most other Blue Jackets defensemen do not:
skill.
But the Blue Jackets held a hammer, too.
By requesting a one-year contract from arbitrator Margaret Brogran in their brief submitted
Monday, the Blue Jackets gave themselves the right to cut ties with Stralman if they deemed
Brogran's ruling to be too expensive. That would have made Stralman an unrestricted free agent.
Late July and early August - especially this year, when so few clubs have salary-cap room for
free agents - is not an ideal time to hit the market.
"You have to look at the options (coming out of an arbitration) hearing, the different
scenarios," said Stralman's agent, Marc Levine. "Ultimately, we didn't have to go down that
road."
Stralman, who turns 24 on Sunday, made $731,666 last season. He'll be a restricted free agent
next summer, again with arbitration rights, if a contract extension isn't worked out first.
Last season, Stralman had six goals and 28 assists, leading Blue Jackets defensemen with 34
points. His 18 power-play assists were tops on the club.
"Anton is a very important part of our defensive corps, and he's very good on the power play,"
Howson said. "He has to keep working now to become a complete player, but we think he can get
there. He can be a very good player."
The Blue Jackets have seven defensemen signed to one-way NHL contracts: Mike Commodore, Jan
Hejda, Rostislav Klesla, Marc Methot, Kris Russell, Fedor Tyutin and Stralman. John Moore
(entry-level contract) and Grant Clitsome (two-way contract) will challenge for spots in training
camp.
But other names could join the mix, Howson said. The Blue Jackets have had trade talks with at
least two clubs known to be shopping defensemen, Vancouver (Kevin Bieksa) and Toronto (Tomas
Kaberle).
"We're still seeing what's out there on the (trade) market, if there's an opportunity that makes
sense for us," Howson said. "We're still exploring and talking with a few teams. But if it's not
there, we'll stay with this group. I like our (top) seven, I really do."
The Blue Jackets have two hurdles to clear in the coming weeks.
Restricted free agent right winger Mike Blunden, considered a candidate for the fourth line,
remains unsigned. And the Blue Jackets' top minor-league affiliate in Springfield is still without
a coaching staff.
But the signing of Stralman was eating up lots of man hours in Nationwide Arena the past few
weeks.
"There's always a sense of relief that you can come to an understanding (on a contract)," Levine
said. "I'm glad we were able to work things out with Columbus. It's a good situation for Anton and
his family."
aportzline@dispatch.com