Lineup production? Pitching? Just … more? Biggest needs for 10 MLB contenders
More Videos
Published
1 hour agoon
By
admin
-

Buster OlneyDec 3, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Senior writer ESPN Magazine/ESPN.com
- Analyst/reporter ESPN television
- Author of “The Last Night of the Yankee Dynasty”
Major League Baseball’s winter meetings begin next week, and, although we have seen some action already, relatively little has been resolved so far this offseason.
More than 100 relievers are unsigned, major stars from Japan remain up for grabs and many of the best free agent hitters — Kyle Schwarber, Kyle Tucker, Bo Bichette — are still available. Some executives also expect a flurry of trades to be made, as potential dealers account for the possibility of labor strife in 2027 and make moves sooner rather than later, perhaps with the likes of MacKenzie Gore, Joe Ryan and Sandy Alcantara.
“What I’m hearing when I talk to teams is pitching, pitching, pitching,” one agent said. “Everybody is looking for pitching.”
With all that in mind, here are the most glaring needs for some of baseball’s contending teams.
![]()
Philly’s everyday lineup has winter potholes.
There has been a broad assumption around the industry that Schwarber will return to the Phillies because, well, they can’t afford to let him go. To not sign him would be unthinkable, given what he provided in stability (he played in 162 games), power (56 homers and 264 times on base via hit, walk or HBP) and clubhouse presence.
But he’s not under contract yet, and neither is catcher J.T. Realmuto, the leader of the pitching staff. The Phillies also need outfield upgrades and to find a taker for Nick Castellanos.
Their pitching is actually in decent shape, thanks to Cristopher Sanchez & Co., in a winter in which everybody is talking about pitching. But for a team that’s theoretically in its window to win, the Phillies have a lot of work to do within their position player group — and it’s going to cost them.
![]()
New York’s signing of closer Devin Williams and trade for Marcus Semien are just the first two of what rival execs and agents expect to be many major moves devoted to run prevention. But all eyes in Mets nation — most notably, those of the owner who has now spent billions trying to win the franchise’s first championship since 1986 — will be on the search for someone to front the rotation.
On one hand, the Mets’ decision to triage their late-season collapse with the rookie pitching trio of Nolan McLean, Jonah Tong and Brandon Sproat was understandable — in that moment, they were the best available options. On the other hand, that one of the highest-spending teams tried this underscored just how thin the Mets were — and still are — in the front of their rotation. This cannot happen again.
It’s very possible that McLean will build on his remarkable late-season performance, and it would be reasonable for the Mets to anticipate a bounce-back year from Sean Manaea. Maybe Tong and/or Sproat will also emerge. And maybe David Peterson will pitch well all the way through the 2026 season, avoiding another late-season slide.
But the Mets need The Guy, and there are candidates in both the trade and free agent markets. Tarik Skubal could be a possibility, although officials with other teams seriously doubt that Mets head of baseball operations David Stearns would give up the vault of prospects needed to acquire Skubal for 2026 and then pay the $400 million-ish cost of his free agency next fall. The Mets could angle for a Joe Ryan trade, although some execs report that Minnesota hasn’t signaled a willingness to deal him. They could target Framber Valdez, maybe the best of the free agent starters.
Whoever it is, they need an ace — badly.
![]()
This has been their need for, well, the better part of a decade. Here is how Royals outfielders have ranked in fWAR in the majors over the past five seasons:
2021: 1.6 fWAR, 29th
2022: 4.4, 19th
2023: 3.3, 23rd
2024: 1.2, 27th
2025: -1.1, 30th
The Royals have 9.4 fWAR from all of their outfielders over the past five seasons combined. Aaron Judge had 10.1 fWAR in 2025 alone.
Jac Caglianone could help to improve these numbers in 2026, but the Royals are likely to also look elsewhere, as they did last winter, when they swapped starting pitching (Brady Singer) for a hitter (Jonathan India). Once again, they can work from their rotation depth to acquire an outfielder at a time when contenders are talking about … pitching, pitching, pitching.
![]()
Maybe the Braves already acquired the player who will take the bulk of the playing time at shortstop with the trade for Mauricio Dubon. Maybe they will try to cover the position with a combination of players, rather than chase a star shortstop. But Atlanta needs significantly more from the position than it got in 2025 — 0.5 WAR, which was tied for 28th in MLB. The bar for potential improvement is low, but if the Braves are going to bounce back from the frustrating 76-win season of 2025, they need better — much better — production in this spot.
Bichette might be the best available free agent who has played shortstop, but given the regression in his defensive performance at the position, it’s hard to find evaluators who believe he has a future at shortstop. And history has shown that Braves head of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos does not pay sticker price when signing free agents. He didn’t for his own shortstop, Dansby Swanson, or for other former Braves Max Fried and Freddie Freeman. An Atlanta match with Bichette, whose market value stems from his offensive abilities, seems highly unlikely.
![]()
Since the Red Sox allowed Schwarber to walk as a free agent following the 2021 season, there has been major regret within the organization over that decision — not only because of the production that Schwarber provided, but also because of his leadership. Boston faces a similar quandary now with Alex Bregman: After an excellent experience with him in their clubhouse in 2025, the Red Sox know firsthand how he helps other players, especially younger ones.
But retaining Bregman will be expensive, and it’s not clear how much the Red Sox will spend coming off what was a year of progress. If they pay to retain Bregman, they will still need a thumper. At the end of a year in which the division rival Toronto Blue Jays have officially emerged as one of baseball’s money monsters — joining the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, Mets and Phillies — will the Red Sox continue to ante up for the rising cost of talent? It’s unclear.
![]()
The most notable missed opportunity for any team in the past 15 months was Baltimore squandering its chance to land Garrett Crochet — the Orioles matched up better with the Chicago White Sox than any other team, given their group of position prospects, and the $170 million deal that Crochet signed with Boston wouldn’t have been prohibitive for Baltimore. Crochet went on to lead the Red Sox into the playoffs, and the Orioles finished last in the American League East. Oh, what could have been.
Baltimore is trying to regain its footing now. The Orioles finally invested a multiyear deal in an arm by signing closer Ryan Helsley to a two-year contract over the weekend. But more is required if they’re going to take advantage of this window when Gunnar Henderson is wearing an O’s uniform.
The Orioles have Trevor Rogers, Kyle Bradish, Dean Kremer, Tyler Wells and Cade Povich among their starting pitchers for next season, but they know firsthand how pitching injuries can derail a season, and they need more rotation options. Nobody expects them to spend like the Yankees, Blue Jays or Red Sox, but Helsley is the only pitcher under contract for 2027. There has to be a greater devotion of resources this winter to this need.
![]()
New York Yankees: A veteran outfielder
One rival evaluator said it’s possible that the Yankees could go with what they currently have, now that they’ve retained Trent Grisham to play center alongside Judge in right field. That would mean a full commitment to 22-year-old Jasson Dominguez, who has yet to declare himself an everyday big league player; he had a 101 OPS+ last season and accumulated 0.5 WAR in 381 at-bats. The Yankees could bank on prospect Spencer Jones ascending into their outfield mix in 2026, after he hit 35 homers in Double-A and Triple-A this year (with 179 strikeouts in 506 plate appearances).
But moving in the direction of very young players will be hard to do, given how important veteran Cody Bellinger was to the team in 2025. He was a perfect fit in so many ways — the defense, the positional pliability, the speed, the comfort in the New York market. But some agents and rival evaluators aren’t sure if the Yankees will be willing to pay the price to either retain Bellinger or pursue fellow free agent outfielder Kyle Tucker. If not, they’ll still need to add someone with major league experience — ideally a right-handed hitter who can play center field.
![]()
Gleyber Torres was on base a lot for Detroit this past season, accumulating a .358 on-base percentage, and he’ll be back for 2026 after accepting the qualifying offer. The Tigers also have some high-end prospects who will soon manifest in the big leagues, such as shortstop Kevin McGonigle and outfielder Max Clark.
But if they keep Skubal for 2026 — which most rival evaluators believe they will do — in an effort to contend next season before he walks away as a free agent the following winter, they desperately need another masher, somebody who can produce in the No. 3, 4 or 5 spot in Detroit’s lineup and complement Riley Greene and Kerry Carpenter.
Bregman would be a nice fit — just as he would have been last winter, when the Tigers came close to signing him. A hitter like Bichette would also be ideal, but signing him would be expensive — more than the Tigers might be willing to pay to bring in someone who would project as a second baseman or third baseman in the future — and Detroit would have to use some of its payroll flexibility. The only players the Tigers have under contract for 2027 and beyond are Colt Keith and Javier Baez (whose deal expires after the 2027 season).
![]()
The Kyle Tucker of April, May and early June transformed this lineup, with his ability to get on base, hit for power and create opportunity. But it’s unclear where the bidding for Tucker‘s services will go this winter and whether it’s certain that the Cubs will consider keeping him if he’s out of their price range.
If the Cubs continue to be conservative with their budgets — and, to date, there’s no reason to think they’ll be big spenders — they’re going to have to offset the loss of Tucker in whatever ways they can. Maybe that’s by loading up on pitching by pursuing the likes of Ryan and trying to make do with an offense that ranked 20th in runs scored in the second half of 2025. Or maybe they pursue a thumper. But they need something.
As he was last winter, Bregman would be a perfect fit in how he plays both defensively and offensively. But signing him was too expensive for the Cubs last winter.
![]()
Los Angeles Dodgers: Bullpen help
Let’s be clear: This is hardly a panic situation that requires overpaying. The late-inning hole in the relief corps existed throughout October, and the Dodgers still won their second consecutive World Series title. They also have internal candidates for the closer role — including Tanner Scott, who was signed to a four-year, $72 million deal last winter — and a possible fallback option for 2026 in Roki Sasaki, who demonstrated in the playoffs that he has the ability to be a lockdown force in the late innings.
But the Dodgers still view Sasaki as a future starter — to go with their other cast of rotation stars — and given their desire for a three-peat, it would behoove them to add a reliever who could reliably take the eighth or ninth innings of big games.
Here’s one more great thing about the heights the Dodgers now occupy in the MLB universe: Veteran free agents want to play for them for a chance at a ring, to the point that they might even pass up better offers from other teams. Great players want to play for the Dodgers. At some point, they will bolster their bullpen.
You may like
Sports
Hamlin: Team couldn’t survive under charter deal
Published
17 mins agoon
December 3, 2025By
admin
-
Associated Press
Dec 2, 2025, 02:46 PM ET
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin outlined the precarious situation facing NASCAR teams, testifying Tuesday in the federal antitrust trial against the stock car series that the race team he co-owns spent more than $700,000 to the series in 2022 alone and how agreeing to its charter proposal last fall would have been like signing his own “death certificate.”
Hamlin was the first witness called when testimony began Monday in the antitrust case brought by 23XI Racing, which is owned by Hamlin and Basketball Hall of Famer Michael Jordan, and Front Row Motorsports, owned by fast-food franchiser Bob Jenkins. The two teams contend that NASCAR is a monopoly that has handcuffed teams with a no-win revenue model.
Hamlin returned to the stand for more than three hours and was asked about line items in 23XI Racing’s budget. He noted how more than $703,000 three years ago was spent on costs to NASCAR ranging from entry fees, credentials for team members to enter the track and even access to Internet signals. He also said he and Jordan spent $100 million to build 23XI and “all it takes is one sponsor to go away and all our profit is gone.”
All 15 of NASCAR’s teams had been vocal for over two years that the last charter agreement made it impossible for them to turn a profit and they demanded four changes in prolonged negotiations. When the final offer came from NASCAR and lacked most of what the teams asked for, 23XI and Front Row refused to sign and instead sued.
23XI has turned a profit in all but one of its five seasons, but its financial success is largely a product of Jordan’s star power drawing top-dollar sponsors. Plaintiffs’ attorney Jeffery Kessler told the jury Monday that a NASCAR-commissioned study found that 75% of teams lost money in 2024.
Hamlin testified that the TV deal NASCAR signed ahead of the 2025 season has not been a boon to race teams because of a shift toward streaming services and big-ticket sponsors want to be on television. He also referred to a meeting with NASCAR chairman Jim France, who indicated teams are spending too much and it should only cost $10 million per car. Hamlin testified it costs $20 million.
“We cannot cut more. Tell me how to get my investment back? He had no answer,” Hamlin said.
As for refusing to sign the charter agreements last fall, Hamlin said the last-ditch proposal from NASCAR “had eight points minimum that needed to be changed. When we pointed that out we were told ‘Negotiations are closed.'”
“I didn’t sign because I knew this was my death certificate for the future,” he said, later adding: “I have spent 20 years trying to make this sport grow as a driver and for the last five years as a team owner. 23XI is doing our part. You can’t have someone treat you this unfairly and I knew It wasn’t right. They were wrong and someone needed to be held accountable.”
Under cross-examination, Hamlin was asked why he paints a rosier picture of NASCAR on podcast appearances. He replied that he is regurgitating NASCAR talking points because any negative comments can lead to retribution.
“You can take all my things out of context and paint a picture that everything is fine,” he said. “The reality is, (being) negative affects me in (technical inspection), getting called to the hauler, NASCAR not liking what I said.”
The trial is expected to last two weeks.
NASCAR is owned and operated by the Florida-based France family, which founded the series in 1948. Kessler said over a three-year period almost $400 million was paid to the France Family Trust and a 2023 evaluation by Goldman Sachs found NASCAR to be worth $5 billion. The pretrial discovery process revealed NASCAR made more than $100 million in 2024, while Jenkins testified in a deposition he has lost $60 million over the last decade and $100 million since starting his team in 2004.
NASCAR contends it is doing nothing wrong and has not restrained trade or commerce by its teams. The series says the original charters were given for free to teams when the system was created in 2016 and the demand for them created a market of $1.5 billion in equity for chartered organizations.
Hamlin countered that 11 of the original 19 chartered organizations are out of business; all three of 23XI’s charters came from teams that ceased operations. NASCAR also said each chartered car now receives a guaranteed $12.5 million in annual revenue, up from $9 million. Hamlin testified it costs $20 million to bring a single car to the track for all 38 races and that figure does not include any overhead, operating costs or a driver’s salary.
Sports
Hamlin emotional, MJ present at antitrust trial
Published
17 mins agoon
December 3, 2025By
admin

-
Associated Press
Dec 1, 2025, 06:15 PM ET
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The landmark federal antitrust trial against NASCAR opened Monday with three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin breaking down in tears minutes into his testimony as the first witness in a case that could upend the venerable stock car series.
Hamlin’s 23XI Racing, which he co-owns with Michael Jordan, and Front Row Motorsports claim the series is a monopolistic bully that leaves its teams no option but to comply with rules and financing they don’t agree with.
As Jordan watched from the gallery, Hamlin began to cry and had to stop and compose himself when asked how he got into racing. He disclosed to The Associated Press last month that his father is dying, and he said on the stand he was emotional because his dad “is not in great health.”
“We got to when I was about 20 and a decision had to be made, I could keep racing or go out and work for my dad’s trailer business,” Hamlin testified, adding that he later was thinking about what retirement looked like and found a team going out of business. He needed a partner and turned to Jordan, who he had developed a friendship with when the Basketball Hall of Famer owned the Charlotte Hornets and Hamlin was a season-ticket holder.
“If I can’t be successful with Michael as a partner, I knew this was never going to work,” he said.
The references to his early days in auto racing and the sacrifices his family made were intended to show how difficult it is for both team owners and drivers to make it at the top level of the sport. He said he never would have been able to start 23XI in 2021 had he not partnered with Jordan.
Because of Jordan’s presence with the team, Hamlin testified, 23XI has turned a profit in all but one of its five seasons of operation. His attorney, Jeffrey Kessler, said in his opening statement that fast-food restaurant entrepreneur Bob Jenkins has never turned a profit since starting his Front Row team in 2004, a team that won the Daytona 500 in 2021.
Kessler said a NASCAR-commissioned study found that 75% of teams lost money in 2024 and added that over a three-year period almost $400 million was paid to the France Family Trust. He said a 2023 evaluation by Goldman Sachs found NASCAR to be worth $5 billion. NASCAR is currently run by Jim France, son of founder Bill France Sr.
“What the evidence is going to show is Mr. France ran this for the benefit of his family at the expense of the teams and sport,” Kessler said.
At the heart of the lawsuit is NASCAR’s revenue sharing model, which 23XI and Front Row argue is unfair to race teams that often operate at a loss. Hamlin testified it cost $20 million to simply bring a single car to the track over a 38-race season, not including overhead expenses such as driver salary and business operations.
“So, why would these people do this if you are just going to lose money because NASCAR isn’t giving you a fair deal?” asked Kessler, “Because you love stock car racing, and there’s nowhere else to do it.”
The charter agreements signed for this year that triggered the lawsuit guarantee the teams $12.5 million in annual revenue per chartered car. NASCAR argues the guaranteed payouts are an increase from $9 million from the previous agreement, but Hamlin noted that 11 of the first 19 chartered teams are no longer in business.
All three charters 23XI purchased came from teams that ceased operations, and Hamlin said 23XI paid $4.7 million for its first charter, $13.5 million for its second and $28 million for its third, acquired late last year. He acknowledged purchasing the third charter was a risk because of the pending litigation – and the price concerned him – but it was required if 23XI intends to build itself into a top team.
The charter system guarantees a car a spot in the field each race week as well as a percentage of the purse and gives team owners an asset to sell should they want to get out of the business.
NASCAR attorneys argued that the charter system has created $1.5 billion in equity for the 36 chartered teams. Prior to the charter system, teams raced “open,” with no guarantee they’d make the field or earn a payout.
“The France family built NASCAR from nothing. They are an American success story,” Johnny Stephenson said in the opening statement for NASCAR. Stephenson is a colleague of Christopher Yates, who had previously handled most of the courtroom arguments for the defendants.
“They’ve done it through hard work over 75 years. That’s the kind of effort that doesn’t deserve a lawsuit. That’s the kind of effort that deserves admiration.”
The case has churned through hearings and arguments for more than a year despite calls from other NASCAR teams to settle. U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell even helped mediate a failed two-day summit in October.
A NASCAR victory could put 23XI, Front Row and their six combined cars out of business. Their charters – now being held by NASCAR – would likely be sold. The last charter went for $45 million, and NASCAR has indicated there is interest from potential buyers including private equity firms.
A win for the teams could lead to monetary damages and the potential demolition of NASCAR as it is run today. The judge has the power to unravel a monopoly, and nothing is off the table, from ordering a sale of NASCAR to the dismantling of the charter system.
Jordan’s presence factors into the trial
Jordan’s presence in the courtroom gallery near Hamlin was a factor: Among those dismissed from serving on the jury was a man who said he can’t be impartial because “I like Mike” and another who said he had Michael Jordan posters on his walls growing up. A juror said they were a North Carolina fan but noted the football team at Jordan’s alma mater is not “doing too well right now” to which the star shook his head and laughed.
NASCAR executives in the courtroom included chairman Jim France and vice chair Lesa France Kennedy, two scions of the family that founded NASCAR in 1948 and still owns it.
Hamlin will resume testimony Tuesday morning. NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps, 23XI minority owner Curtis Polk, France Kennedy and other top executives had to leave the courtroom after opening arguments because they are all potential witnesses.
Sports
What Mikko Rantanen learned from last season’s double-trade campaign
Published
40 mins agoon
December 3, 2025By
admin

-

Greg WyshynskiDec 3, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Greg Wyshynski is ESPN’s senior NHL writer.
NEW YORK — After 11 seasons as one of the NHL’s leading scorers, Mikko Rantanen has become accustomed to fame.
But infamy? Not so much, although he has experienced plenty of that this season.
Rantanen recently served the first suspension of his NHL career, having earned an automatic one-game ban for two game misconducts for physical infractions.
NHL rules state that players must go 41 games between ejections to avoid suspension. Rantanen’s second ejection, for boarding Calgary Flames forward Matt Coronato, came four days after his first ejection on a play that earned Rantanen widespread derision from fans — and one very angry coach.
On Nov. 18, Rantanen skated through a check by New York Islanders defenseman Scott Mayfield and shoved defenseman Alexander Romanov in the back, sending him violently into the end boards. As a result of that play, Romanov had shoulder surgery that will put him on the shelf for five months at a minimum.
Rantanen didn’t have a hearing with the NHL Department of Player Safety for either of these misconducts, but he heard plenty from Islanders coach Patrick Roy after the Romanov hit. It was a scene that instantly went viral: Rantanen leaving the ice after his major penalty and a red-faced Roy screaming at him from the New York bench.
0:38
Mikko Rantanen ejected for nasty hit on Alex Romanov
Alex Romanov is left flat out on the ice after this shove in the back from Mikko Rantanen with under a minute left in regulation.
“Usually if something happens, if somebody gets pissed off, the media picks it up,” Rantanen told ESPN on Tuesday. “So I’m not really surprised it got so big.”
Roy, who called the hit “disrespectful,” yelled at Rantanen, appearing to say, “You’re not going to f—ing finish that game” in reference to the teams’ rematch scheduled for March 26 on Long Island.
Is Rantanen worried about what might happen in that game?
“No, no, no,” he said. “I’m just going to play there, play hard, play hockey and see what comes at me. But I’m a grown man. So I can stand up for myself.”
But the notoriety wasn’t only on the ice for Rantanen in 2025. Earlier this year, thanks to two blockbuster trades, he became one of the NHL’s most debated players.
RANTANEN WAS PLAYING for the Colorado Avalanche in a contract year. His salary demands remained high — rumored at the time to be around $14 million annually for one of the league’s most dominant scoring wingers and a player who helped Colorado win the Stanley Cup in 2022.
Avalanche GM Chris MacFarland shocked the hockey world by trading him to the Carolina Hurricanes in a blockbuster deal on Jan. 24 that saw Canes leading scorer Martin Necas sent back to the Avalanche. MacFarland called it a “business decision” involving a player who “had the unrestricted free agent card” but lamented losing “a superstar human being.”
However, Rantanen’s time with the Hurricanes was incredibly short. Carolina hoped to convince him to sign an extension — meeting his salary demands — and to put roots down in Raleigh. But after 13 games, the player the Hurricanes hoped could lead them to the Stanley Cup was traded again, this time to Dallas, in a deal involving young forward Logan Stankoven.
“My sense of it was that this just didn’t feel like home for him, as far as I can tell. And that’s OK. He’s making an eight-year commitment,” Carolina GM Eric Tulsky said at the time.
It was a dizzying, at times humbling, experience for Rantanen. He wanted to remain in Colorado. He learned quickly how much was out of his control. It was no surprise that Rantanen’s contract with Dallas spanned eight seasons (for $96 million total) and carried a full no-movement clause.
“You learn always from those tough moments, whether it’s on the ice or wherever in life,” he said. “You always learn from those moments when you’re going through tough times.”
The double-trade season and the new monster contract sparked questions around the NHL about whether Rantanen was in fact worth coveting. Was he a superstar away from the Avalanche? Was he a franchise-level player?
“There’s been a lot written about him. There’s been a lot said about him,” then-Stars coach Peter DeBoer said last postseason. “There’s been a lot of doubters out there, based on the situations he’s been in and how it’s looked at different points.”
Rantanen began answering those questions in the Stanley Cup playoffs, leading the Stars back to the conference finals for the third straight season — including a seven-game, first-round elimination of his friends from Colorado. Rantanen had 22 points in 18 playoff games, including one torrid stretch in which he had nine goals and eight assists in the span of six games.
DALLAS IS HOME NOW. Rantanen and his girlfriend, Susanna Ranta, got engaged in the offseason. No contract talk leaks. No trade chaos. To his relief, just playing the game.
“We’re settled and know where we’re going to be,” he said. “You don’t have to think about off-ice stuff as much. You can just focus on hockey. It’s been more comfortable.”
Rantanen’s comfort has been to Dallas’ benefit. Through 25 games, he has 33 points, including 10 goals. That includes 18 points on the Stars’ torrid power play, which ranked second to Pittsburgh heading into Tuesday’s game against the New York Rangers.
Winger Jason Robertson said having Rantanen for a full training camp was a key to that unit’s success. “You really didn’t have time to develop that look, that chemistry after the trade deadline last year,” he said.
At 5-on-5, Rantanen has found a fit with center Wyatt Johnston, who was tied with Robertson at 16 goals to lead the Stars. Like Nathan MacKinnon, the Avalanche star with whom Rantanen had explosive chemistry, Johnston is a right-shot center.
“Obviously last year I had a lot of success with playing with [Roope] Hintz and [Mikael] Granlund. Those are two lefties, so it’s not end of the world,” Rantanen said. “But playing a lot with Nate in the past as a righty, it’s more common for me to make plays and stuff. [Johnston] is a really good player. He can score goals. We find each other pretty well. Obviously, it takes some time. We haven’t played that long together, so we can still get better, but it’s going in a good direction.”
0:45
Mikko Rantanen capitalizes on the power play
Mikko Rantanen scores on the power play for Dallas Stars
Rantanen has played with Johnston and Dallas captain Jamie Benn recently, which is to say the Finland native is not playing with his countryman Hintz. When he was traded to the Stars last season, Rantanen joined what was colloquially known as Dallas’ “Finnish Mafia,” along with Hintz, defensemen Miro Heiskanen and Esa Lindell, and Granlund, who left for Anaheim as a free agent last summer. He played on a line with Hintz and Granlund for much of the playoffs.
There are moments when the Finns flock together. Such as at the end of a recent morning skate, when they were speaking their native tongue during a Suomi-only shooting drill. But Dallas players say Rantanen also has subverted some expectations.
“Normally, most of our Finnish guys are relatively quiet and whatever. Mikko comes in here and he’s this big, loud and happy guy. Just a different dynamic,” Robertson said. “He fit in obviously very well, and everyone welcomed him in.”
Forward Tyler Seguin knew Rantanen only as an opponent before the trade. A rather large opponent, at 6-foot-4 and around 230 pounds. Seguin said having Rantanen as a teammate offered an up-close glimpse at “how thick he is and why his nickname is what it is” referring to “Moose,” Rantanen’s moniker in Colorado.
“He’s a big boy,” Seguin said.
But Seguin also appreciates what a charismatic teammate he is, too.
“I used to know him as a skilled big forward that put up a lot of offense and points with Colorado. Getting him here as a teammate, I’ve learned what a good person he is. How much he can affect our locker room with his leadership,” Seguin explained. “Sometimes, guys come in and won’t feel comfortable talking. He does. So it’s nice.”
RANTANEN BRINGS SIZE, skill and personality to Dallas. He also brings a superstar quality to the franchise as “one of the elite power forwards in the game,” as GM Jim Nill described him last March.
Dallas coach Glen Gulutzan, hired to replace DeBoer in the offseason, coached two other elite forwards on the Edmonton Oilers‘ bench as an assistant coach: Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl. Gulutzan said that Rantanen is “certainly there” as far as comparable star quality.
“The most interesting thing that I’ve found coaching Mikko and then coaching Leon and Connor: The similarity is their fire. Their competitiveness. And that’s what you need, right?” Gulutzan said. “They’re very hard on themselves, just to be great every night. That’s what I really noticed. I didn’t know that as much with Mikko, but now that I’ve gotten to coach him, you just see that drive and that intensity.”
Rantanen is trying to drive the Stars into the Stanley Cup Final after three straight conference finals losses, and push Dallas to its first Cup win since 1999. He has found the right fit with a team committed to him for the long term. But he learned a lesson the hard way during last season’s chaos: Take nothing for granted.
“Last year was nothing like I’ve experienced before. Hopefully it never happens again,” he said. “But if it does, I’m ready.”
Trending
-
Sports2 years agoStory injured on diving stop, exits Red Sox game
-
Sports3 years ago‘Storybook stuff’: Inside the night Bryce Harper sent the Phillies to the World Series
-
Sports2 years agoGame 1 of WS least-watched in recorded history
-
Sports3 years agoButton battles heat exhaustion in NASCAR debut
-
Sports3 years agoMLB Rank 2023: Ranking baseball’s top 100 players
-
Sports4 years ago
Team Europe easily wins 4th straight Laver Cup
-
Environment3 years agoJapan and South Korea have a lot at stake in a free and open South China Sea
-
Environment1 year agoHere are the best electric bikes you can buy at every price level in October 2024
