Ehlers ends suspense, signs six-year deal with Carolina

A long — and sometimes complicated — relationship between the Winnipeg Jets and Nikolaj Ehlers has run its course. Naturally, plenty of people will be eager to play the blame game.

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A long — and sometimes complicated — relationship between the Winnipeg Jets and Nikolaj Ehlers has run its course. Naturally, plenty of people will be eager to play the blame game.

In the end, the split seemed to have little to do with pay — and everything to do with play. Specifically, how the speedy Danish winger was deployed over the years in Winnipeg, a subject of non-stop debate right to the end.

Now the guy nicknamed “Fly” is heading to Hurricane country, signing a six-year contract with Carolina that will pay him US$8.5 million per season. It’s a safe bet Winnipeg would have exceeded that US$51 million total, especially if they had re-signed the pending unrestricted free agent to an eight-year maximum prior to the July 1 deadline.

JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Nikolaj Ehlers signed with the Carolina Hurricanes and will be paid US$51 million over six years.

JOHN WOODS / FREE PRESS FILES

Nikolaj Ehlers signed with the Carolina Hurricanes and will be paid US$51 million over six years.

But it takes two to tango, and a player who can dance around the ice like few others clearly had his heart set on a change of scenery — one he’s banking on giving him the opportunities that didn’t always come his way in Winnipeg.

Ehlers — who just finished a seven-year deal with the Jets that had an annual cap hit of US$6 million — quickly became the biggest prize as NHL free agency opened on Tuesday and a handful of other high-profile wingers such as Mitch Marner and Brock Boeser never made it to market.

The 29-year-old took his time making up his mind with several clubs in pursuit, including the Washington Capitals, Tampa Bay Lightning and Utah Mammoth. Ultimately, he settled on an Eastern Conference team that has been a regular-season powerhouse but can’t get over the proverbial playoff hump.

Ehlers joins a talented core that includes Winnipegger Seth Jarvis, Finnish star Sebastian Aho, Russian sniper Andrei Svechnikov, and young talent such as Logan Stankoven and Jackson Blake. The Hurricanes have an elite back-end, which was just bolstered with the acquisition of K’Andre Miller from the New York Rangers via a sign-and-trade.

Ehlers, who spends his summers back home in Aalborg, is expected to speak on Friday along with Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky. He declined to discuss his contract situation all season, never really giving an indication whether a return to the Jets was on the table.

Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff said last week: “We’ll continue to have conversations until we can’t — until we’re saying ‘Congratulations’ or ‘Thank you.’”

“From first-round pick to the highest-scoring Danish player in NHL history, and all the countless memories in between. Thank you for everything, Fly. All the best in Carolina,” the Jets said in a social media post shortly after the signing was announced.

Winnipeg selected Ehlers ninth overall in the 2014 NHL draft. He jumped to the NHL in the fall of 2015 after two dominant seasons with the Halifax Mooseheads of the QMJHL and quickly became a fan favourite.

He skated in 674 regular-season games with the Jets, putting up 520 points (225G, 295A). Ehlers also had 21 points (9G, 12A) in 45 playoff games while also representing his native Denmark in several international events.

JEFF LE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                Winnipeg selected Ehlers in the first round, ninth overall, of the 2014 NHL draft.

JEFF LE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Winnipeg selected Ehlers in the first round, ninth overall, of the 2014 NHL draft.

Ehlers’ agent, Andre Rufener, told the Free Press that “Nik will be reaching out to the fans in Winnipeg in the next couple days” with a message.

Injuries have been an ongoing challenge, with Ehlers managing to play a full season only three times — and just once in the past seven years. His career high is 64 points, which he nearly eclipsed this past season before injuries struck again. He finished with 63 points (24 goals, 39 assists) in 69 games.

His usage has long been a flashpoint: limited minutes, stretches away from the top line, and relegation to the second power-play unit. Whether it was his health, his risk-reward style, or a lack of full trust from coaches — Paul Maurice, Dave Lowry, Rick Bowness, and Scott Arniel — Ehlers and the Jets weren’t always on the same page.

He seldom got to play at five-on-five with top centre Mark Scheifele, with wingers like Kyle Connor and Gabe Vilardi taking up those winger spots most recently. Before that, Blake Wheeler was a fixture. More often, Ehlers found himself alongside the likes of Vlad Namestnikov and Cole Perfetti.

He was also stuck on the second power-play unit that rarely saw the ice — at least until this past season, when Arniel finally elevated him. The result? Winnipeg led the NHL in power-play efficiency, with Ehlers producing a career-best 22 points (6 goals, 16 assists) with the man advantage.

Consider this: over the past three years, Ehlers ranks 16th among all NHL players in points per 60 minutes at five-on-five — yet just 199th in average even-strength ice time per game. Across all situations, he sits 26th in points per game but 194th in ice time.

Yet multiple coaches over multiple seasons felt some restraint was necessary — that less was essentially more. That likely weighed heavily as Ehlers planned his future.

He missed the start of the playoffs this year after re-injuring his ankle following a bizarre collision with a lineman during a regular-season game in early April against Chicago. But he returned to lead the Jets in post-season scoring in their second-round series against Dallas, with five goals and an assist in six games.

Fittingly, he was ninth on the team in average even-strength ice time. Arniel leaned heavily on his top trio of Scheifele, Vilardi and Connor while also deploying his third line of Adam Lowry, Nino Niederreiter and Mason Appleton in a shutdown role.

MATT SLOCUM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
                                Ehlers skated in 674 regular-season games with the Jets, putting up 520 points (225G, 295A). Ehlers also had 21 points (9G, 12A) in 45 playoff games.

MATT SLOCUM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

Ehlers skated in 674 regular-season games with the Jets, putting up 520 points (225G, 295A). Ehlers also had 21 points (9G, 12A) in 45 playoff games.

Now the Jets face life without Ehlers and a huge hole in their top six. They’ve made four NHL signings so far in free agency, bringing in forwards Jonathan Toews, Tanner Pearson, Gustav Nyquist, and Cole Koepke on one-year deals.

Is the plan to replace Ehlers’ offence by committee? There’s no one quite like him on the roster or in the system, though the Jets are hoping young first-round picks Brad Lambert and Brayden Yager might grow into that kind of role.

Winnipeg still has nearly $20 million in cap space, but a large chunk will go toward restricted free agents Dylan Samberg, Gabe Vilardi, and Morgan Barron.

Whether Cheveldayoff pursues more help via signings or trades remains to be seen. The Jets are still in “win-now” mode after a season that saw them capture the Presidents’ Trophy as the NHL’s top regular-season club, with goaltender Connor Hellebuyck taking home both the Hart and Vezina trophies.

mike.mcintyre@freepress.mb.ca

X and Bluesky: @mikemcintyrewpg

Mike McIntyre

Mike McIntyre
Reporter

Mike McIntyre is a sports reporter whose primary role is covering the Winnipeg Jets. After graduating from the Creative Communications program at Red River College in 1995, he spent two years gaining experience at the Winnipeg Sun before joining the Free Press in 1997, where he served on the crime and justice beat until 2016. Read more about Mike.

Every piece of reporting Mike produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

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History

Updated on Thursday, July 3, 2025 3:18 PM CDT: Adds quotes from team, agent.

Updated on Thursday, July 3, 2025 4:21 PM CDT: Final update, adds photo

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