Turris was in the final season of a five-year contract when the Predators acquired the center in a trade from the Ottawa Senators on Nov. 5, 2017, and signed him that day to a six-year, $36 million contract ($6 million average annual value) that began with the 2018-19 season.
"We've had conversations with Kyle and his agent," Predators general manager David Poile said. "I think there has been a change in terms of Kyle's play under [former Predators coach Peter Laviolette] and now our current coach, John Hynes. It's all a question mark of: Can he get his game back?"
Turris scored 42 points (13 goals, 29 assists) in 65 games in 2017-18 after the trade, but the 31-year-old has struggled the past two seasons, with 54 points (16 goals, 38 assists) in 117 games.
Turris, who scored 31 points (nine goals, 22 assists) in 62 games this season, did not have a point in Nashville's four-game loss to the Arizona Coyotes in the best-of-5 Stanley Cup Qualifiers.
"When we made the trade for Kyle ... [he] was a terrific player and he really gave our team a boost," Poile said. "But for whatever reason it hasn't gone well in the last couple years, and those are the things in these next couple weeks that we're going to weigh in terms of what we should do and what we're doing. I don't want to take anything off the table.
"My normal day is I probably talk to approximately 10 (general) managers a day, so there's a lot of conversations. This is not just a [Turris] conversation. I want to be open-minded. I want to see what the value of our players are, what changes we could make, if any, and then make a decision from that. So there's going to be a lot of things that are going to happen here in the next week or so."