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Swayman Contract Dispute Looming Over Current RFAs

Published: Aug 16, 2025, 11:00 AM
6 min read
Updated: Aug 16, 2025, 11:00 AM
Fact checked by:
Quinn Allen

Key Takeaways

  • An NHL executive told RG that the Jeremy Swayman contract dispute last year is affecting current RFAs as the market remains quiet.
  • Swayman didn't sign a new deal until early October and then proceeded to struggle in 2024-25.
  • “I think it’s something the teams, players, and agents are all considering right now, but it will be unique to each situation,” the source said. 
Bruins goaltender Jeremy Swayman

Bruins goaltender Jeremy Swayman (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Will last year’s contract standoff between goalie Jeremy Swayman and the Boston Bruins serve as a cautionary tale or motivation for this year’s remaining NHL restricted free agents?

“I think it’s something the teams, players, and agents are all considering right now, but it will be unique to each situation,” one NHL executive told RG recently. “I mean, obviously, I’m coming from the team side here, so if I were in that situation, I’d want what’s best for my team, and I’d just be like ‘Fine, you don’t want to show up for camp, let’s see how that goes for you!’ 

He got paid, yeah, but how’d that go for Swayman? And I’d hope the player is willing to compromise and think of his teammates, too. I get you gotta get paid what you deserve, but sometimes agents really inflate a player’s worth in the player’s mind, and it can really backfire. It can also divide a dressing room. Given the season Swayman and the Bruins had, and the fact they traded their captain and blew that room up, I’d say that was the case there.”

With NHL training camps set to begin in a month, there are still some intriguing restricted free agents unsigned. Anaheim Ducks forward Mason McTavish, Minnesota Wild forward Marco Rossi, New Jersey Devils defenseman Luke Hughes, Calgary Flames forward Connor Zary, and Nashville Predators forward Luke Evangelista all entered the weekend unsigned. 

The majority of attention and NHL trade rumors continued to be focused on McTavish and Rossi, with Elite Prospects NHL insider Cam Robinson recently suggesting that Rossi could follow the path Swayman took last September and sit out of training camp until the Wild either meets his contract demands or compromises more. 

As the source above referenced,  Swayman sat out the entirety of the Bruins’ training camp and did not play in one preseason game leading into the 2024-25 regular season. Swayman and the Bruins traded barbs through the media, and NHL trade rumors swarmed around Swayman until the two sides finally agreed on an eight-year, $66 million ($8.25M AAV) contract two days before the Bruins lost their season opener to the Panthers in Florida. 

Both the Bruins and Swayman admitted that the experience left a bad taste in their mouths. It showed on the ice as Swayman went 22-29-7 with a 3.11 GAA and .892 save percentage, and the Bruins missed the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time since the 2015-16 season. 

“I think getting off to a really good start is important. With camp being kind of short, every day matters,” another NHL executive told RG. “I would wonder if the difference between what the player wanted and what the team was offering was worth sitting out.”

Of course, only Swayman and the Bruins know the truth when it came to how far apart they were when Swayman decided not to report to training camp, but even an NHL agent admitted to RG recently that he cautions his clients when it comes to that as well. 

“I’m always going to do what my client wants because I work for them, but I’m also going to try and provide the best advice I can,” the agent told RG. “If you’re not too far apart, then don’t let pride get in the way. Meet the team halfway, kick ass on the ice, and make them really pay the next time around. I think that’s why Swayman held out to be honest. He was still hurting from the arbitration case the year before, and I get that, but still, he hadn’t been a full-time No.1 in this league, and the Bruins used that against him.”

The Bruins and Swayman went before an arbitrator in the 2023 offseason, and Swayman was awarded a one-year, $3.4 million contract, but he never forgot what was said by the Bruins when they made their case.

“When you go into that room, you don’t say a word,” Swayman said in an Amazon Prime docuseries last summer. 

“My arbitrator started first, he said all of these great things. The arbitrator on their side, their job is to help the management side and to rip players, and hearing that you’re not worthy of what you think you’re worthy of, that was hard to hear. You don’t forget what was said. I wrote ’em down, and I looked at ’em the other day, and I had a couple of checkmarks. My biggest knock was how I wasn’t trustworthy in the playoffs. Check.”

Another NHL agent completely disagreed with what the two sourced executives and the agent above said.

“Bleep that!” the agent exclaimed. “Sitting out of camp is the best leverage the player has, and if the GM is so worried about how it may affect his team, then bend for the team and get the player signed and there for camp.”

<p>James Murphy is a veteran sports journalist covering the NHL, NCAA and CHL hockey for RG.</p><p>With 25 years of experience covering the Bruins, the NHL, NCAA, CHL and more, Murphy has seen it all when it comes to hockey. His hockey black book is filled with Hall of Famers, current players, coaches, management, scouts and a diverse array of hockey media personalities who have lived and worked in and around the game. Murphy also currently co-hosts The Eye Test podcast with Pierre McGuire and, along with McGuire, interviews NHL owners and executives, as well as NHL and NCAA head coaches and players daily.</p><p>The Arlington, Massachusetts, native began his writing career in hockey in 2001, when the Boston Bruins raised one of his childhood idols, Ray Bourque’s No. 77, to the rafters before their 2001–02 season opener. For 22 of his 25 years as a hockey reporter, Murphy covered the Bruins daily, including their victorious 2011 Stanley Cup run and their runs to the 2013 and 2019 Finals, multiple NHL drafts and countless Stanley Cup playoffs. He did all that for the Boston Metro, NHL.com, NESN.com and ESPN Boston.</p><p>In addition to his print work covering the Bruins, Murphy also made regular TV appearances on NESN, Fox 25 Boston, ESPN and NHL Network. From 2008 to 2012, Murphy hosted The Hockey Primetime Show on SiriusXM NHL Network Radio and made numerous appearances on national and international radio shows.</p><p>Ironically, his three years not covering the Bruins were spent covering their archrivals, the Montreal Canadiens. From 2012 to 2015, Murphy was based in Montreal and covered the Canadiens for NHL.com and TSN.ca. He also appeared regularly on TSN 690 radio and CTV.</p><p>Murphy returned to Boston in 2015 and left the media business to work in sales and marketing for LiveBarn, a Montreal-based sports streaming company, for four years. In 2019, Murphy once again became a Bruins beat reporter, this time writing for Boston Hockey Now. He spent four seasons working for BHN before arriving at RG in 2024 and also dedicated more time to The Eye Test podcast.</p>
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