With the Olympics only a few weeks away, an extra trade deadline of sorts will be coming into play. Accordingly, teams are starting to pick up the pace on the transactions front with a big trade and an extension among the key stories from the past seven days.
The Letter, Part Two: Nearly seven years ago, then-Ranger GM Jeff Gorton released a letter to the fans about the rebuild that was coming. This week, GM Chris Drury took a similar approach, writing that the team will begin a retooling process around its core players. However, it also means saying goodbye to some long-standing veterans. It appears one of those will be winger Artemi Panarin as the pending UFA has been informed that he won’t be offered a contract for next season and that the team will work with him to try to find a suitable trade. New York is at the bottom of the Eastern Conference, underwhelming for the second straight season. How far this retooling goes remains to be seen but the Rangers could be a team to keep an eye on leading into the March 6th trade deadline.
Two For Texier: It wasn’t even two months ago that Alexandre Texier found himself an in-season free agent after walking away from the rest of his contract with St. Louis to get a fresh start elsewhere. That brought him to Montreal on a one-year, $1MM prorated deal, where he has been productive with 16 points in 27 games, a total aided by a pair of back-to-back three-point games. Still, it was enough for the Canadiens to sign the 26-year-old to a two-year, $5MM extension. The deal checks in $400K above what his qualifying offer would have been had he remained with the Blues. As the Canadiens get healthier up front, it’s unlikely that Texier will stay on their top line but this extension shows that management believes he’ll be part of their plans moving forward.
Coaching Change: It’s rare to get this deep into the season without a coaching change but that was the case until Columbus decided to make a move. The Blue Jackets fired head coach Dean Evason along with assistant Steve McCarthy while hiring veteran Rick Bowness. Evason was in his second season with the team and they just missed the playoffs last season but they have been near or in the basement for a big chunk of this season, warranting a change in GM Don Waddell’s eyes. Bowness was a particularly interesting hire after he stepped away from Winnipeg in 2024 for health reasons so it wasn’t clear that he’d consider going back behind a bench. The 70-year-old has only signed for the rest of the season, however, with both sides to reassess things from there.
Olympic-Related Injuries: A pair of teams find themselves without key players that also puts their Olympic participation in jeopardy. Lightning center Brayden Point is listed as week-to-week with a lower-body injury that appeared to be a knee issue. It’s the second absence of the season for the veteran who has managed 30 points in 37 games when he’s in the lineup. His availability to suit up for Canada is now in question. The same can be said for Ducks middleman Leo Carlsson. He’s set to miss three to five weeks after undergoing a procedure to treat a Morel-Lavallée lesion in his left thigh. Carlsson is a point-per-game player for Anaheim this season, making him their leading scorer through the first half of the campaign. If his recovery is on the shorter end of the timeline, he should be fine to play at the Olympics but if it’s going to be closer to five weeks, Sweden will have a decision to make in terms of keeping or replacing him.
Off To Vegas: Going back to the offseason, the Golden Knights had interest in Flames defenseman Rasmus Andersson but a trade never came to fruition. Now, it has. Vegas acquired the blueliner (with Calgary retaining half of his $4.55MM cap charge) in exchange for defenseman Zach Whitecloud, Vegas’ 2027 first-round pick, a conditional 2027 second-round pick (that becomes a 2028 first rounder if Vegas wins the Stanley Cup this season), and the signing rights to University of North Dakota defender Abram Wiebe. Andersson, a pending unrestricted free agent, has not agreed to an extension as part of the swap. He’ll help fill the role vacated by the injured Alex Pietrangelo while adding some firepower from the back end as he already has 10 goals and 30 points this season. Calgary’s return, as expected, is largely futures-based although they do add a capable third-pairing piece in Whitecloud, who, in theory, could potentially be flipped closer to the deadline to team looking for defensive depth.
Photo courtesy of James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images.
