Anaheim Ducks Lock Up Mason McTavish With New 6 Year Extension
After what felt like watching paint dry in reverse, the Anaheim Ducks and Mason McTavish have finally figured out how to shake hands on a deal. The young center has inked a six-year extension worth $7 million annually, keeping him in Orange County through the 2030-31 season. Only took them long enough to get this done.
The Holdout Drama Finally Ends
Let’s be honest here – this whole saga was getting a bit ridiculous. McTavish had been holding out of training camp like he was some sort of established superstar demanding a max deal. Meanwhile, he was skating with the Ottawa 67s in junior hockey, which is about as awkward as showing up to your old high school after graduating college. The optics weren’t great, but hey, sometimes you’ve got to play hardball to get what you want.
The main sticking point? Term. McTavish reportedly wanted a bridge deal – you know, the “prove it” contract that lets a player hit free agency sooner. The Ducks wanted long-term security. Turns out when you’re paying someone $42 million, you’d prefer they stick around for a while.
What This Deal Means for Anaheim
This extension represents more than just throwing money at a promising young player. It’s the Ducks essentially planting their flag on McTavish as the centerpiece of their rebuild. With Trevor Zegras shipped off to Philadelphia this summer, Anaheim has made it crystal clear who they view as their future franchise player.
And honestly? It’s not a terrible bet. The Swiss-born center just wrapped up his best NHL season, posting career-highs across the board with 22 goals and 52 points in 76 games. For a team that’s been about as competitive as a participation trophy, having someone actually score goals is refreshing.
The Numbers Don’t Lie (But They Don’t Tell Everything)
At 22 years old, McTavish has already racked up 140 points in 229 NHL games. That’s solid production, especially considering he’s been playing for a Ducks team that’s made missing the playoffs an art form. Seven straight years out of postseason contention will do that to your individual stats.
The $7 million annual average value puts McTavish in interesting company. It’s not McDavid money, but it’s certainly “we believe you’re going to be really good” money. The Ducks are betting that his trajectory continues upward, which seems reasonable given his age and development curve.
Building Around Young Talent
Here’s where things get interesting for Anaheim’s future. The Ducks have assembled what looks like a promising young core with McTavish, Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, Jackson LaCombe, and Olen Zellweger. That’s a lot of potential wrapped up in players.
The question becomes whether this group can mature together and actually compete in a Western Conference that’s loaded with talent. It’s one thing to put up decent numbers on a rebuilding team; it’s another to carry that production when games actually matter. At least getting Chris Kreider via trade will help guide the players.
Its a shame that this franchise made the disgraceful move hiring Joel Quenneville to coach. You know the man that knew sexual assault was going on and chose to do nothing about it.
The Pressure is On
Ducks fans who’ve endured seven years of mediocrity aren’t going to be satisfied with moral victories and “good individual seasons” much longer. The timing couldn’t be more crucial either. Training camp is underway, and the regular season kicks off October 9th against Seattle. McTavish needed to be in the lineup, not skating with junior players and negotiating through the media. This deal gets him back where he belongs, but the real work starts now and time will tell if this gamble pays off.
