A little over a year ago, the Anaheim Ducks acquired defenseman Jacob Trouba from the New York Rangers in what appeared at the time as a salary dump for the latter. He was embroiled in the worst season of his NHL career, and looked more like a placeholder for the Ducks as their prospects made their way to the NHL ranks.
However, a year later, Trouba has become a fixture on Anaheim’s blue line, helping the Ducks to their first postseason appearance since the 2018 Stanley Cup playoffs. Unfortunately, as much as they would like to keep Trouba, the two sides haven’t gotten close to finalizing a contract extension.
Speaking on The Fan Hockey Show, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman said, “They’ve been negotiating with [Jacob] Trouba on and off, and to this point they haven’t been able to close it.” The 13-year veteran will see his seven-year, $56MM contract expire on July 1st in a few weeks.
Much of that likely has to do with the price point. Trouba and his camp are likely trying to capitalize on a resurgent 2025-26 campaign, and the Ducks may view it as a flash in the pan, though they would still like to retain him at a digestible rate. Essentially, since the 2021-22 campaign, Trouba’s performance had been declining across the board.
This season, however, he made a big comeback. Throughout the 2025-26 season, Trouba scored 10 goals and 35 points in 81 games with a -1 rating, averaging nearly 23 minutes of ice time per game. Additionally, he led the team in blocked shots, finished third in hits, and had the sixth-most takeaways on the team.
Diving deeper, his 51.8% CorsiFor at even strength is the second-highest mark of his career, and better than any season he had with the Rangers. Still, heading into his age-32 season, especially with how he plays the game, it’s a fair question from the Ducks if he can keep this up for several more years.
In all seriousness, Anaheim is likely in the driver’s seat in the negotiations, despite Trouba’s impressive season. The team has a solid opportunity this summer to re-work its defensive core for the future, without having a stark drop-off in talent. Trouba is joined by captain Radko Gudas and trade deadline acquisition John Carlson as projected unrestricted free agents this summer. If the Ducks keep only one of the trio, they’ll have a balanced right side of the blue line with Drew Helleson and Tristan Luneau in tow.
According to AFP Analytics, Trouba is projected to land a three-year, $9.25MM contract should he hit the open market this summer. Although he will assuredly earn less than his current $8MM salary, an approximately $3.1MM salary feels remarkably low for the season he just had. If Trouba does make it to the open market, he’ll likely land a deal similar to the extension Adam Larsson signed with the Seattle Kraken last year, a four-year, $21MM ($5.25MM AAV) pact, if not a little bit more.

The Ducks don’t need Trouba, Carlson, Or, Gudas, Hinds could be a full timer next season along with Tristan Luneau, And possibly Stian Solberg.
Problem is, 2 of the the three you just listed are left shot guys. They need some sort of veteran presence on the right side. Trouba was probably the best of the 5 right shot guys they used this year. Moore was used more as a forward and Carlson was a small sample size, considering he was a deadline add…
I would keep one of those three in case one of those kids shows they’re not quite ready for the big time
@soccer_ref. I like trouba out of the other two. Moore gets a spot. Helleson/Luneau/Warren fight for the last one.
Coach28. Moore will be playing defense next year. It was weird with injuries, but they didn’t send him down.
Trouba is probably the best RHD besides Andersson in FA.
Always be aware of contract years, especially when they have a resurgence in that said year.
Stevie Y is on the case
This is a hard one. Steady player. Showed decline while in NY (and may have single handedly lose the Cup run for the Rangers a few years back), but rebounds in a contract year. Good locker room captain and stands up for his teammates, which could help the kids.
If he’s willing to take a hit on the salary (50%) he’s worth the contract, otherwise he’s just a second or third pair filler. If there’s one thing the Rangers missed about him, especially Igor, is that he cleared the front office the net. Today that’s not the case in NY.