Here's Jason Garrison speaking a few days after the Panthers ended their season with a Game 7 loss to the Devils.
Sorry, phone ran out of memory at the end of that interview.
Here's Jason Garrison speaking a few days after the Panthers ended their season with a Game 7 loss to the Devils.
Sorry, phone ran out of memory at the end of that interview.
July 01, 2012 | Permalink | Comments (1)
BY GEORGE RICHARDS grichards@MiamiHerald.com
TWITTER: @GeorgeRichards
Jason Garrison left the Florida Panthers on Sunday, signing a six-year contract with the Vancouver Canucks.
The contract, which is worth an average of $4.6 million per season, is said to be lower than money he was offered from other teams.
TSN's Bob McKenzie tweeted that Garrison “left money on the table” and was offered similar money that Calgary signed former (short-lived) teammate Dennis Wideman to last week.
The Panthers will not disclose their negotiations with Garrison, but it's thought Florida offered $4 million at either three or four years. This may or not be true, just numbers I have heard.
Garrison, from White Rock, B.C., basically took comparable money (when taxes are taken into consideration) to go back home. With the additional years, however, Garrison has more security.
Don't forget that in 2010, Garrison took less money from Dale Tallon and the Panthers for a two-year deal that was a guaranteed one-way deal.
It worked out for the Panthers; Garrison played well for Florida in those two seasons – especially this year.
Garrison came into the season with a grand total of seven goals in his first two NHL seasons. This time around, he put 16 pucks into the net and became a fan favorite.
Some fans have taken to social media to blast Garrison for leaving, many comparing him to Jay Bouwmeester.
Two very different situations.
Bouwmeester was never coming back to the Panthers regardless of the payday (one he got in Calgary – also close to his hometown of Edmonton yet not as close as Garrison).
Bouwmeester told the Panthers 18 months before he was due to become a free agent that he probably wasn't coming back – and gave the team a list of teams they should trade him to.
It was the Panthers who decided they were better off with Bouwmeester for that time and didn't trade him.
Florida knew he was going to leave and didn't trade him when he had his highest value.
Making the playoffs at the time, the Panthers reasoned, was more important. That's on the Panthers, not Bouwmeester. He just didn't dig South Florida and wasn't real keen on seeing if the franchise could turn itself around.
By all indications, it has. Bouwmeester couldn't be sure.
Garrison, as far as I know, never told the Panthers he wouldn't be coming back and, as far as I can tell, negotiated in good faith.
The Panthers thought they had a chance at signing Garrison but were going to stick to their guns and not let the market dictate what they thought Garrison was worth.
Basically, the Panthers decided not to go crazy in order to keep him. And he eventually took less money that he could have recieved elsewhere – I know it's relative – to go back to his hometown.
Garrison was a good player for the Panthers during his time here and was a good teammate. Never heard a bad word said about him – from anyone. He played well during his contract, and when it was up, made a life-altering decision and moved on.
The Panthers got everything they could have asked for out of Jason Garrison in his time here.
"We wanted size, we wanted another guy who can shoot the puck on the power play and we wanted character and he fit all of those criteria," general manager Mike Gillis told the Vancouver Sun.
"He is from Vancouver so he had a real desire to play here, which he articulated to us. . .we also wanted to get a little younger and keep within our salary parameters and we're fortunate to have young man who wanted to come back to Vancouver, wanted to play for us and was prepared to work with us on salary structure to get it done."
And so the Vancouver Panthers pick up another member as Garrison joins the likes of Roberto Luongo (for now), David Booth and Keith Ballard with the Canucks.
That number could rise in the coming weeks if Florida swings a deal for Luongo and sends a few more Panthers west.
The two teams meet up Nov. 13 in Vancouver. Good tickets still available. OK, that last part wasn't true.
July 01, 2012 | Permalink | Comments (6)
BY GEORGE RICHARDS grichards@MiamiHerald.com
TWITTER: @GeorgeRichards
The Panthers weren't as busy at the onset of the free agency market opening on Sunday afternoon as they were last season – although no one expected them to be.
Things were slow for much of the day as the biggest free agents on the market, not including Florida's Jason Garrison, remain out there going into Day 2 on Monday.
The Panthers did make some moves. Florida signed goalie Scott Clemmensen to a two-year contract before he could become an unrestricted free agent at noon. The Panthers also added veteran defenseman Filip Kuba and bottom six forward George Parros.
Florida didn't improve its offense on Sunday, something general manager Dale Tallon said he hopes to address as the summer rolls on – and perhaps as early as Monday.
Once top free agents Ryan Suter and Zach Parise sign, the market should open up.
“We made solid hockey moves with guys who want to come here,'' said Tallon, who signed an unprecedented eight players on the first day of free agency last summer.
“We're still not done, have a few things in the fryer right now and are waiting for some guys to get back to us. This is a work in progress. We're moving forward.''
Florida replaced Garrison by signing Kuba to a two-year deal worth $8 million. It's believed the Panthers were offering Garrison – a free agent who scored a career-high 16 goals last season – around $4 million per season.
Garrison, from British Columbia, signed a six-year deal with Vancouver worth an average of $4.6 million per season.
“Based on the numbers they are at and the numbers we are at, we are happy with Filip,'' Tallon said of Garrison. “We kept our solid defense in place with his acquisition.''
Kuba, 35, was drafted by the Panthers in 1995 and played in 18 games for Florida from 1998-99. He's played in 776 since for Minnesota, Tampa Bay and Ottawa. Last year, paired with Norris Trophy winner Erik Karlsson, Kuba had 32 points off six goals and was a team-best plus-26 in 73 games.
Clemmensen, who turns 35 this month, just completed a three-year deal with the Panthers. Financial terms were not available; Clemmensen made $1.5 million last season on a contract that averaged $1.2 million.
Florida has both of last year's goalies under contract as Jose Theodore is signed for one more season. The Panthers are said to still be in the running for Vancouver's Roberto Luongo – Florida's goalie from 2000-06 who still lives in Parkland – and reportedly inquired about New Jersey's Martin Brodeur.
“It's been fun, I've really enjoyed my time in South Florida,'' said Clemmensen, who has made 70 of his 124 career starts with the Panthers. “I want to be a Panther. I'm very excited about it. Florida was on the top of my destination list. Talks were always positive. It's just nice to get it done.''
The Panthers' final big move of Sunday was signing Parros away from Anaheim to replace Matt Bradley. Florida officially bought out Bradley's final year on Saturday.
Bradley suffered a season-ending concussion in February, coincidentally, after missing on a full-speed check of Parros and going head-first into the stanchion by the Panthers bench.
Parros is known for his thick mustache (which has its own Facebook page) and tough play. He said he saw how Florida coach Kevin Dineen used players such as Krys Barch and Bradley last season and figured he will get more playing time with the Panthers.
“They had a great season last year and have great management. I'm excited to be a part of it,'' said Parros, who played in just 46 games last year because of various injuries and being scratched for 11 of Anaheim's final 16 games.
“Being out west for so long, you don't see that division a whole lot. But this past year, Florida impressed a lot of people. They were on everyone's radar. We all saw that. The guys out west took notice.''
Although Florida kept Clemmensen around, it lost out on Mikael Samuelsson.
The Panthers acquired Samuelsson in the David Booth deal with Vancouver last October; Samuelsson missed a big chunk of the season with various injuries (sports hernia, concussion) but played strong down the stretch and was a key veteran leader during the postseason.
The Panthers made an offer to Samuelsson to stay, yet Sunday afternoon, he returned to Detroit – where he won the Cup in 2008 – and signed a two-year deal worth $6 million. “We tried and were in the mix,'' Tallon said.
() Florida will open its week-long developmental camp Monday afternoon at the Coral Springs Iceplex. The first group will hit the ice at 1:30 p.m. with the second going on at 2:30. Admission is free.
() The Panthers also announced the signing of Greg Rallo and Dov Grumet-Morris to two-way deals. They'll be in San Antonio.
MEET THE PANTHERS
Who: Filip Kuba, defenseman
Age, hometown: 35; Ostrava, Czech Republic
Experience (past teams): 13 seasons (Florida, Minnesota, Tampa Bay, Ottawa)
Scouting report: Kuba is a smooth skating defenseman who had a strong offensive season last year. Kuba is consistent and should be a top-four guy in Florida.
Who: George Parros, left wing
Age, hometown: 32; Washington, Pa.
Experience (past teams): 7 seasons (Los Angeles, Anaheim)
Scouting report: At 6-5 and 230 pounds, Parros is big, strong and intimidating. Parros isn't much of an offensive threat, but he's not a liability either.
July 01, 2012 | Permalink | Comments (8)
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ||||||
| 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
| 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |
| 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 |
| 30 |


