Defenceman Josh Morrissey signs eight-year extension with Winnipeg Jets
Josh Morrissey is exactly where he wants to be.
WINNIPEG — Josh Morrissey is exactly where he wants to be.
The Winnipeg Jets announced Thursday the defenceman has signed an eight-year, US$50-million contract extension, one day before the start of training camp.
The deal, which begins in 2020-21 and carries Morrissey through the 2027-28 season, has an average annual value of $6.25 million.
The Calgary-born Morrissey, 24, had one year left on a two-year contract with a cap hit of $3.15 million.
Morrissey is the club's only current player to have a contract run that far into the future.
"The term excited me," said Morrissey, who's starting his fourth full season in the NHL. "The fact that I get to have that stability, but to be here and playing in Winnipeg, from Day 1, it's what I've always said that I wanted to do."
Morrissey will get paid $8 million in the first two years and fourth year of the deal. He receives $5.2 million in the third year, $6.4 million in the fifth year and $4.8 million in each of the last three seasons.
Jets general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff said Morrissey reflects the type of player and person the franchise wants.
"He's done a lot of things both on and off the ice to help our team grow," he said. "He's mature beyond his years with respect to him as a person.
"Just the way he has progressed and how he earned everything he's gotten on the ice — the coaches' trust, the coaches' praise, teammates' trust, teammates' praise. Those are things that you earn. In a very difficult sport like this and a very competitive sport, to earn all those people's trust and praise is a big thing."
The six-foot, 195-pound Morrissey had a career-high 31 points (six goals, 25 assists) in 59 games with the Jets last season.
A first-round pick (13th overall) by Winnipeg in 2013, Morrissey was third on the team in average ice time last season at 22 minutes 24 seconds.
He returns to a Jets blueline that lost his top-pairing partner Jacob Trouba, Tyler Myers and Ben Chiarot during the off-season.
Last year, Morrissey missed the first three days of training camp before signing a two-year bridge deal.
On the eve of this year's camp, the team doesn't have contracts with restricted free-agent forwards Patrik Laine and Kyle Connor.
"We're at a stage here where there's still work to be done and we'll continue to work at that," Cheveldayoff said. "That's pretty much the basis of the most comments I'll give on negotiations, other than we'll continue to work at them and hopefully everything works out sooner rather than later."
Morrissey's deal doesn't relate to those negotiations, he said.
"We wouldn't have made it if we didn't feel comfortable," Cheveldayoff said. "And as far as impacting anything else, this deal was done with the cap in mind and I talked about the uncertainties about the future cap and at some point in time you have to make some decisions and go with it."
Morrissey said he wanted to try to ink a deal before training camp or the start of the season.
"We've got it figured out and now I can focus on my game individually and trying to win," he said.
"From talking to the guys in the room, I think everyone's kind of coming from that mindset where we're excited about this year and we're excited to show what we can do as a team and try to build with our young group that's still one of the youngest in the league."
With a total of nine seasons ahead of him with the team, Morrissey can envision himself taking on more of a leadership role.
"That's something I think happens naturally," he said. "At least it has to happen naturally. If it's forced or anything like that, then it just doesn't work as well.
"It's definitely something I would welcome. It's something you grow with over time, get better at over time. You learn and with experience you get better at it.
"We're fortunate here to have great leaders, great older guys who are leaders and I feel like I've learned a lot from them over the years and want to continue to be part of that group of guys that is leading on and off the ice and pushing to win."
Judy Owen, The Canadian Press