Ducks goaltender Frederik Andersen couldn’t say Saturday what happens next. He’s eligible to become an unrestricted free agent July 1, which means the Ducks have the right to re-sign him or match any offer to him from one of the NHL’s other 29 teams.

Will the Ducks give him the raise he believes he’s earned after proving his value to them the past three seasons? Can they afford to keep him and John Gibson, the goalie they signed to a three-season, $6.9-million contract extension that begins next season?

Will the Ducks trade Gibson and keep Andersen?

Or trade Andersen and keep Gibson?

“Tough to say right now,” Andersen said during his season-ending interview with reporters Saturday at Honda Center. “I think when the time comes some decisions will be made. I like playing here and all the guys love having me in the net. I like it here, so obviously, I would love to play here.”

General manager Bob Murray said Friday, “It won’t be the same team, that’s for sure.” Roster changes won’t be limited to the Ducks’ goalies, in other words. There are a number of pending free agents, both restricted and unrestricted, and Murray isn’t likely to retain all of them.

Andersen, forwards Rickard Rakell and Brandon Pirri and defensemen Hampus Lindholm and Sami Vatanen are restricted free agents. Forwards Shawn Horcoff, Jamie McGinn, David Perron, Mike Santorelli, Chris Stewart and defenseman Korbinian Holzer are unrestricted free agents.

Goaltender Anton Khudobin, who is playing with the San Diego Gulls of the American Hockey League in the Calder Cup playoffs, also is unrestricted July 1. Khudobin was the highest-paid of the Ducks’ goalies in 2015-15 at $2.25 million. Andersen made $1.15 million and Gibson made $721,666.

The Ducks’ youthful but strong defense corps also could undergo a big offseason makeover. The Ducks were the NHL’s top defensive team and had its best penalty-killing unit during the regular season, but financial constraints might force Murray’s hand.

“I like our ‘D’ a lot,” defenseman Kevin Bieksa said. “I think we did a great job this year.”

Breaking up the defense corps would wreck a good thing, as far as he’s concerned.

“This day and age, as much as you want to think that there’s one guy who can carry that load, you only have a couple of Duncan Keiths, Drew Doughtys in the league,” Bieksa said, referring to the standout defensemen for the Chicago Blackhawks and Kings, respectively.

“If you look at L.A., they have Drew Doughty and there’s a huge falloff after that,” Bieksa added. “I think with our team, we have seven guys who really contributed. I think that’s why we were the No. 1 defensive team in the league and the No. 1 penalty kill.

“I love our group. I love that we have a little bit of everything.”

Ducks captain Ryan Getzlaf declined to address the Ducks’ goalie free-agent situation.

“You can ask Bob that,” he said. “Both goalies were professional this year and played great. We can’t fault our goalies for anything this season. Even the start of the year, they both played really well. Khudobin, too, when he was here. They gave us a chance to win at the start of the year.

“We didn’t perform for them. You can’t win in this league scoring under one goal a night.”