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Jordan Binnington, the St. Louis Blues goalie, is keeping an open mind about his future as he has one year left on his contract. His performance this season was below expectations, prompting reflections on his next steps with the team's management.
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ST. LOUIS -- When it comes to his immediate future, St. Louis Blues Stanley Cup-winning goalie Jordan Binnington is keeping an open mind.
The 32-year-old, who has one year remaining on a six-year contract that paid him $6 million annually, is keeping his options open and a lot will hinge on his discussions of the vision of the team moving forward with the management team, led by current GM Doug Armstrong and incoming GM Alexander Steen, who takes the role when Armstrong solely moves into his primary role as president of hockey operations.
"I think 'Steener' and I are going to have some conversations," Binnington said at exit interviews on Saturday at Enterprise Center. "I think for me, Iām a competitive goaltender, right? I love St. Louis. I think for me, itās just taking care of whatās in my control. Itās the same old story I give every time. I think if I can take care of whatās in my control, then the rest will unfold. I believe in myself and in my process. Iām excited to get to work."
It's no secret that the numbers just didn't add up for Binnington this season, now seven years removed from a rookie season after helping guide the Blues to their first and only Stanley Cup over the Boston Bruins. He finished the season 13-20-7 with a 3.33 goals-against average and .873 save percentage, his worst statistical categories for wins, GAA and and save percentage.
"I wouldnāt say it went as planned," Binnington said. "There were some highlights throughout the year of some good games. Obviously the Olympics was a great experience and a setting I felt comfortable in. There was frustration at times. I would say itās a year of lessons, like any other year and this year more so. Just learning more about myself and different situations Iām in and how I respond. Not playing these last couple of months or so allowed me time to reflect and think about just what my next 3-5 year vision is. Itās exciting and life just keeps moving. Itās just one day at a time, and I will say about the group, we showed a great amount of commitment towards that second half of the year, similar to last year, but I think weāre trending in the right direction and I think the personnel involved, we understand that itās not good enough and I can feel the commitment from the group to want to be better and want to be in the playoffs and want to be tough to play against. A year of lessons, a year of optimism for the future of this group."
Coupled with the emergence of Joel Hofer, the 41 games played (39 starts) were the fewest in a season for Binnington since 2021-22, but the Blues, at least at the outset, are not so quick to make a rash decision whether to trade their career wins leader among goalies so fast.
Jordan Binnington has one year remaining on a six-year contract that pays him $6 million annually.
Binnington finished the season with a record of 13-20-7, a 3.33 goals-against average, and a .873 save percentage, marking his worst statistical performance.
Binnington is keeping an open mind and plans to discuss the team's vision with management, expressing optimism for the future.
Alexander Steen will take over as the general manager when Doug Armstrong transitions to president of hockey operations.

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"As you said, his resume is deep and he got us all a Stanley Cup," Armstrong said. "Iām not going to say anything bad about Jordan Binnington, but this wasnāt the year he wanted to have either. Heāll be the first to say that if you talk to him or if youāve already talked to him. But heās an ultimate competitor, and I expect that he is going to re-assess his training, heās going to re-assess things that put him in this spot, put our team in this spot and heās going to adjust to that.
"I think the NHL is a long season and you need two good goaltenders. I think that tandem can lead a team through dark times. Not every gameās going to be great, but if we have two goalies that can be great any given night, that gives us great opportunity."
Binnington finished the season strong, going 5-3-1 with a 2.25 GAA and .907 save percentage. He was solid for Canada, which claimed silver at this year's Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy.
"I think you ask those questions of the guys that are going to follow me," Blues coach Jim Montgomery on the management team. "Thatās not my department, and I trust those guys to do the right things for the Blues. I think that as long as players are on the roster, theyāre my players and thatās the way I treat everything.
"Just a high-character individual that you donāt often see goalies be a part of your leadership core but he is someone that is part of our leadership core because of his unselfishness and his willingness to help the Blues in any capacity."
Hofer, who went 12-2-2 (tied for the most wins after the Olympic break) with a 2.04 GAA and .933 save percentage since Feb. 26, loves the 1-2 punch the Blues currently have.
"Heās great," Hofer said of Binnington. "Our relationshipās great. Coming to the rink, he always has a smile on his face. Iād say the biggest thing is we push each other on and off the ice. In practices and stuff, weāre always talking about little things or talking about the games prior, our views on the games are different obviously, so itās nice to have his opinion. Heās been great for me."
But at this stage of his career, does Binnington want to be in a split role, or even one where Hofer grabs more of the No. 1 job title and he's a backup? Time will tell. But in regards to what he sees as the vision moving forward, Binnington, who is 186-136-43 with a 2.83 GAA and .903 save percentage in 377 games (366 started) in his Blues career, feels good about what his Cup-teammate Steen has lined up.
"I will say I believe in what 'Steener' has in mind for this group," Binnington said. "Iām excited about that and being a part of a good, winning, successful hockey team is where I want to be. Thatās something you just handle as it comes.
"I thought of this, thereās not a lot to be said really. Itās about action for me and thatās kind of how Iām going to go about it. Not that I donāt want to give you an answer, but thereās nothing to be really said. Iāll have to see."
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