Defenseman Torey Krug, one of the top prizes in this year's NHL free-agent class, has agreed to a seven-year contract worth $45.5 million with the St. Louis Blues, the team announced Friday night.
A blue-line staple for the Bruins, the 5-foot-9 Krug, 29, has spent his entire NHL career with Boston, playing in 523 games. A quarterback of the power play, he has 67 career goals and 337 points.
The Blues struggled at times defensively last season as they defended the Stanley Cup. They bypassed the qualifying round in the Western Conference but lost in the first playoff round to the Vancouver Canucks.
Blues general manager Doug Armstrong, in a Friday night media availability, said the organization made only three calls to potential players, Krug included. The process then continued with Krug having a conversation with coach Craig Berube.
"We know the player; we know what he can do on the power play," Armstrong said. "He's going to fit in very well."
Krug and the Bruins lost to the Blues in the 2019 Stanley Cup Final, a seven-game thriller of a series that ended with St. Louis' first title.
"He's not tall, obviously, but he is thick," Armstrong said. "And he plays above his size. But his quickness is very important for us. He gets back and retrieves pucks. He makes an excellent first pass out of the zone."
Krug's deal could well end the tenure of Blues captain and top defenseman Alex Pietrangelo. Also a free agent, Pietrangelo has had on-again, off-again discussions with St. Louis but could be ultimately headed to another destination. Armstrong reiterated that the Blues haven't closed the door on a potential new deal, but it does appear to be a long shot.
"You never know what happens in the future. We'd have to get very creative," he said. "But Alex has been a great part of this franchise.
"What we were trying to do, is knock things off as they came. And this came first."
Krug, who played collegiately at Michigan State, was a member of the NHL All-Rookie team in 2013-14. He is coming off a four-year, $21 million contract, and said -- before free agency began -- that he was not interested in a short-term deal.
Thank you, @ToreyKrug. pic.twitter.com/SakD6mZxOc
— Boston Bruins (@NHLBruins) October 10, 2020
He wasn't even planning on St. Louis, for that matter. In an interview posted on the team's website Friday night, in fact, Krug admitted that interest from the Blues was unexpected.
"To be honest, I didn't see it coming," he said. "I knew -- before this whole process began -- that there'd be a team that would come out of left field and come in and surprise us, and sure enough, when I got the call, it seemed like a match made in heaven."
The Blues, traditionally one of the top teams in the Western Conference, have qualified for the postseason eight of the past nine years, and have topped 90 regular-season points seven consecutive years.
"I couldn't pass up an opportunity to win year after year," Krug said, "with that locker room, [and with] a core that is similar in age as I am today."
The Bruins, quiet for most of the day, signed defenseman Kevan Miller to a one-year contract with a salary-cap hit of $1.25 million. Boston general manager Don Sweeney's media availability was canceled Friday afternoon, but he is scheduled to speak on Saturday afternoon.