Tampa Bay Lightning Acquire Corey Perry

According to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, the Tampa Bay Lightning are acquiring veteran forward Corey Perry from the Los Angeles Kings. The trade comes a day after Frank Seravalli of Victory+ reported that Perry had made his intention known to Los Angeles that he would be interested in remaining with the organization. Both organizations have confirmed the deal.

Seravalli shared that the Kings would receive a second-round pick from the Bolts in exchange for Perry’s services. Later, TSN’s Pierre LeBrun confirmed it was Tampa Bay’s 2028 second-round pick headed back to Los Angeles.

Last offseason, Perry signed a one-year, $2MM contract with the Kings, with performance bonuses. According to ESPN’s Emily Kaplan, Los Angeles recently paid Perry $250K for reaching the 50-game mark. For the remainder of the year, the Bolts will be on the hook for a $125K payment for a Round One win, a $250K for a semi-finals win, and a $125K for a Conference Final win. David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period added an interesting twist to his bonus structure, sharing that the Kings are retaining 50% of his salary, which would apply to his bonuses.

It’s a return to Tampa Bay for the 21-year veteran. Perry enjoyed two years with the Lightning from 2021 to 2023, scoring 31 goals and 65 points in 163 games, averaging 12:33 of ice time in a bottom-six role. Since then, he has spent his time in the Western Conference with the Chicago Blackhawks, Edmonton Oilers, and Kings.

Although he’s far removed from being a constant threat for the Hart Trophy, Perry has remained a productive forward into his 40s. Since leaving the Lightning after the 2022-23 NHL season, Perry has registered 42 goals and 80 points in 185 games with a +5 rating.

Still, Perry’s recent runs in the Stanley Cup playoffs have become something of a running joke around the league. Since being bought out by the Anaheim Ducks after the 2018-19 campaign, Perry has reached five Stanley Cup Finals and lost each one of them.

Regardless, that doesn’t mean he hasn’t remained productive in the postseason. As he has done in the regular season, Perry has been a steady tertiary scorer in spring hockey. Since the 2019-20 postseason, Perry has scored 28 goals and 52 points in 119 playoff contests.

For Tampa Bay, the team didn’t need to add much on deadline day. The Lightning are already one of the best teams in the NHL, but it never hurts to insert additional goal-scoring, especially at the bottom of a lineup. To boot, Perry is a familiar face and will give the Bolts an extra veteran presence to lean on come playoff time.

From the Kings’ perspective, even if Perry had the desire to remain in Los Angeles for another season or two, it didn’t make much sense from an organizational perspective. Yes, Perry is productive, but he’s into his age-40 season, and the team has a decent crop of young talent that could theoretically fill the void on the bottom-six moving forward.

Still, the team is attempting to add significant draft capital. If the second-round selection is within the next two years, the Kings will have seven picks in the first two rounds of the next two drafts, exiting the Anze Kopitar era.

Photo courtesy of Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images. 

Wild Acquire Nick Foligno

In a tight battle in the Central Division, the Wild continue to add depth pieces.  Frank Seravalli of Victory+ reports (Twitter link) that Minnesota is close to acquiring winger Nick Foligno from the Blackhawks.  Pierre LeBrun of TSN and The Athletic adds (Twitter link) that Chicago is only receiving future considerations in return.  The teams have since confirmed the move.

The 38-year-old is in the final season of a two-year, $9MM contract.  Notably, Minnesota will be picking up the full cost of his $4.5MM cap charge as Chicago no longer has any remaining salary retention slots having used two earlier this week on Jason Dickinson and Connor Murphy and one last season on Seth Jones.  Meanwhile, Chicago will not replace Foligno as their captain for the rest of the season; NHL.com’s Tracey Myers relays (Twitter link) that winger Tyler Bertuzzi will become an alternate captain for the remainder of the season.

Foligno has had a quiet year offensively, notching just three goals and eight assists in 37 games while also missing 21 contests due to injury.  Meanwhile, his playing time has dropped sharply for the second straight year.  After logging nearly 18 minutes a night in 2023-24 in his first season with the team, Foligno is now down to just 12:28 per night despite seeing playing time on Chicago’s second power play unit and being part of their penalty killing rotation.  It stands to reason that his ice time will slide even more with this swap as he’s a strong candidate to be a fourth liner for Minnesota.

This move, assuming it gets finalized, would reunite Foligno with his younger brother, Marcus Foligno, giving them a chance to play together for the first time.  Marcus has spent a good chunk of the season on the Wild’s fourth line as well, so on top of getting a chance to play on the same team, they might even wind up on the same line once he returns from his lower-body injury.

Armed with ample cap space at the trade deadline for the first time in a long time, GM Bill Guerin is putting it to use.  This will be his fourth forward addition of the week having swung previous trades for Michael McCarron and Bobby Brink, while he also grabbed Robby Fabbri off waivers.  With the roster limit no longer being in effect as of today, Minnesota now has considerable forward depth to mix and match with for specific matchups or when injuries arise.  Even with those moves, they can still add more than $5MM in full-season salary, per PuckPedia, meaning that they might not be done just yet.

Wild Acquire Bobby Brink

The Wild are addressing their need for additional scoring depth by acquiring winger Bobby Brink from the Flyers, according to Michael Russo of The Athletic and Frank Seravalli of Victory+. Defenseman David Jiříček is the return headed to Philly, both add. There is no extension in place between the Wild and Brink, who’s a pending restricted free agent, Anthony Di Marco of Daily Faceoff reports. The trade has since been confirmed.

Brink is in the back half of a two-year, $3MM bridge deal he signed with Philly in 2024. He’ll be looking for a notable raise this summer. The 2019 second-rounder has grown into a stable top-nine piece during that time, and while he’s not the top-six center that Minnesota has been aiming for, it was clear the Wild were at least looking for a middle-six winger to augment their depth. They reportedly explored acquiring Nick Foligno from the Blackhawks, and while this doesn’t take them out of that race, it is a notable move to replenish some of the scoring upside they lost earlier this season by trading Liam Ohgren and Marco Rossi to the Canucks in the Quinn Hughes deal.

Since emerging as a full-time piece in the Flyers’ lineup back in 2023, Brink has averaged around a half a point per game. That hasn’t changed much this season with 26 in 55 games, but his finishing has taken a step forward, notching a career-high 13 tallies while shooting at 14.4% clip. He was averaging north of 15 minutes per game for Philly, playing mostly on their second line with Noah Cates and Matvei Michkov.

The inclusion of Brink, who’s still only 24, gives the Wild nine double-digit goal scorers on their roster up to this point in the season. They may still be looking for muscle near the bottom of the lineup. Brink certainly doesn’t provide that at just 5’8″ and 169 lbs, but he plays much larger than he is and is on pace for 100 hits.

For the Flyers, it’s a simple swap of young players from a position of excess to a position of need. The right-shot Jiříček now finds himself on his third team in four years since being drafted sixth overall by the Blue Jackets in 2022, but he’ll never have a clearer path to NHL minutes than he has now. The 22-year-old was on an assignment to AHL Iowa at the time of the trade, but with Rasmus Ristolainen likely on his way out of Philly today amid a rush of offers, the Flyers had a pressing organizational need for a righty who can challenge for top-four minutes.

That gives Jiříček a prime opportunity down the stretch to showcase himself in the extended ice time he’s so desperately desired to be effective. In 84 career NHL appearances over the last four years, he has a 2-11–13 scoring line and a -8 rating while averaging just 13:33 of ice time per game. Assuming Philly recalls him in short order, that number should jump closer to 20 with the potential for power-play opportunity, something Charlie O’Connor of PHLY Sports reports played a role in the move.

Ducks Acquire John Carlson

A midnight blockbuster kicks off deadline day. The Ducks announced they’ve acquired two-time All-Star defenseman John Carlson from the Capitals. Washington lands a conditional first-round pick in return, plus Anaheim’s third-round pick in 2027. Anaheim will send its 2026 first-rounder if they make the playoffs this year; if not, then they have the option to send their 2027 pick instead.

Last night, it looked like adding a winger was the Ducks’ deadline priority. That may still be in play heading into sunrise on Friday, but for now, they’ve made a major splash on their blue line to load up on a veteran-heavy right side that already includes imposing shutdown pieces Radko Gudas and Jacob Trouba.

They do so by acquiring a name that few believed would ever be on the move. While a pending unrestricted free agent, Carlson has been the face of Washington’s defense group for well over a decade, taking over #1 honors from the high-octane Mike Green around the time of the 2012 lockout. The 6’3″ righty may have lost a bit of a step from his days as a consensus top-10 defender in the league throughout the late 2010s, but he still finished 16th in Norris Trophy voting just last season and has put up even better boxcar stats here in 2025-26.

At age 36, Carlson hasn’t shown many signs of slowing down. He’s put up 10 goals, 36 assists and 46 points in 55 outings this year to rank 13th in the league among defenders at 0.84 points per game. It’s his best offensive showing since finishing 10th in Norris voting in 2021-22 and the fifth-best season of his 17-year career on a per-game basis. He immediately becomes Anaheim’s fourth-leading scorer this season behind their young forward triumvirate of Cutter GauthierLeo Carlsson, and Beckett Sennecke, and that’s despite having his minutes in Washington drop to #2 deployment behind dominant lefty Jakob Chychrun. The minute-muncher’s 22:52 average time on ice is his lowest figure since the 2016-17 campaign.

The Caps had hinted at a sell-off yesterday morning by sending Nic Dowd to the Golden Knights. This is a move of an entirely different caliber, essentially closing the book on a disappointing follow-up to last year’s Eastern Conference regular-season championship.

A 3-2 loss to the Mammoth on Tuesday dropped their record to 31-25-7, and after the conclusion of Thursday’s games, they’re only four points back of the Bruins for the playoff cutoff. The Blue Jackets and Senators stand between them, though, and all three clubs have two games in hand on the Caps. With their playoff chances down under 25% as a result, the Caps will continue the on-the-fly retooling mindset that’s kept them competitive following their 2018 Stanley Cup championship by selling off their older assets – as hard as it may be – to continue stocking their cupboards with futures.

Of note, there is no extension in place between Carlson and the Ducks at the time of the deal, and those talks aren’t yet scheduled to take place, per Frank Seravalli of Victory+. There’s a real chance the Ducks, looking to wrestle the Pacific Division title away from the Golden Knights for their first postseason berth since 2018, are taking on the potential Hall-of-Fame defender as a rental.

While Carlson’s reputation is that of a more one-dimensional puck-mover, his two-way game has improved drastically in the later stages of his career. He’s continued to log major shorthanded minutes in D.C. and has had spectacular possession metrics for several seasons now, including a 53.2% Corsi For share at 5-on-5 this season. That’ll fit in well with an Anaheim group that’s completely turned around its two-way play, albeit in a high-event manner, under head coach Joel Quenneville. It also means there’s a natural fit for him to slide in alongside Jackson LaCombe on the Ducks’ top unit to let Trouba and Gudas patrol the ice against lesser competition, ideally boosting the Ducks’ puck possession when LaCombe isn’t on the ice.

The Ducks, with five of their top seven scorers this season aged 25 or younger, won’t miss a first-round choice in the next two years too much. They’re still armed with an above-average prospect pool and still have a decent stable of relatively high picks, including three second-round selections in 2027 that can be packaged to move up. The Caps, who were short on depth picks this year after trading away their second and third-rounders, will now likely end up with a pair of first-round selections that they can either use or flip for NHL-ready talent today or at the draft.

It will still be incredibly jarring to see the Caps’ roster without Carlson for the first time since 2009. A first-round pick the year prior, Carlson ends his time in Washington with 166 goals, 605 assists, and 771 points in 1,143 games. All of those are franchise records for defenders – by relatively wide margins – and he ranks fifth among all skaters in franchise history in points behind Alex OvechkinNicklas Bäckström, Peter Bondra, and Mike Gartner.

Image courtesy of Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images.

Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman was first to report the trade.

Blue Jackets Acquire Conor Garland

The Blue Jackets are in agreement to acquire winger Conor Garland from the Canucks, per Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet. Vancouver gets a second and third-round pick in return, Frank Seravalli of Victory+ reports. The second-round pick involved is the Blue Jackets’ 2028 selection, according to Thomas Drance of The Athletic. Reports of Columbus and Vancouver discussing a Garland trade were first reported by Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic. Both teams have since made the deal official.

Columbus traded Egor Chinakhov to the Penguins for the same price in December. There has been a hole in the depth chart ever since, forcing Miles Wood onto his off-side right-wing. The Blue Jackets solve that problem with the addition of Garland, who should beat out Kent Johnson for second on the depth chart to Kirill Marchenko.

Garland has scored seven goals and 26 points in 50 games this season. That’s just under the scoring pace that led him to the second 50-point season of his career last year. He has made up for that dip by recording the second-most blocks (28) on the Canucks offense, behind Elias Pettersson. Garland has also averaged a career-high 18:57 in ice time, narrowly beating out his previous high of 18:39 set last season.

Now in his age-30 season, Garland has finally seemed to find his rut as a hard-working, second-line winger. He averaged 19 goals and 49 points per 82 games played in five seasons with the Canucks – while only missing 18 games. The bulk of those absences – 11 – came this season, sprinkled between two undisclosed, short-term injuries and a bout with illness.

The Blue Jackets will hope Garland can bring the top-six spark they need to pull ahead of the Eastern Conference Wild Card race. They sit one point behind the Boston Bruins for the second spot, with the Ottawa Senators and Washington Capitals both three points behind. The Blue Jackets sit in the middle of the pack, 17th in the league, in goals-scored this season.

Columbus’ 3.13 goals-per-game season average has risen to 3.75 goals in 16 games under new head coach Rick Bowness. The Blue Jackets have a 13-2-1 record in those games and now add another winger capable of reaching 20 goals this season.

Garland has achieved the feat twice before, in Vancouver’s 2023-24 season and with the Arizona Coyotes in the 2019-20 season. That performance stamped Garland’s spot in the league after he debuted with 13 goals in 47 games the year prior. The 5-foot-10 winger was a fifth-round draft pick from the QMJHL’s Moncton Wildcats in 2015.

Image courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.

Sabres Acquire Luke Schenn, Logan Stanley

The Sabres are working on a trade to acquire defensemen Luke Schenn and Logan Stanley from the Jets, sources tell David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. Chad DeDominicis of Expected Buffalo was first to report that the deal was in process. In return, Winnipeg will receive Buffalo’s 2027 second-round pick, forward prospect Isak Rosen, and left-defender Jacob Bryson per Frank Seravalli of Victory+.

Both the Sabres and Jets have confirmed the deal.

It appears Schenn, 36, will be heading to the 10th team of his 18-year career. It’ll also be his second straight year being moved at the deadline. He arrived in Winnipeg this time last season via the Penguins, who he never actually played for after being acquired from the Predators two days prior. He’s now in the final season of the three-year, $8.25MM pact he signed with Nashville as a free agent in 2023.

Few Jets skaters have lived up to expectations this season. Schenn is no exception. Even in a bottom-pairing role, he’s looked overmatched, posting seven points and a -11 rating in 46 outings. He’s been in the press box for stretches, has only averaged 13:44 of ice time per game when dressed, and Winnipeg has been outscored 29-16 with him on the ice at 5-on-5 while controlling only 43.4% of shot attempts.

The 2008 fifth overall pick has been a third-pairing piece for most of his NHL career, but he’s now operating as more of a #7/#8 piece – even on a team outside of the playoff picture like Winnipeg. He does still provide physical value – he leads the Jets with 139 hits, a figure that now ranks third on Buffalo behind Beck Malenstyn and Peyton Krebs.

Outside of that, he’ll provide the Sabres with experienced and much-needed right-shot depth, but whether he factors into their lineup on a regular basis remains to be seen. While Michael Kesselring has been hampered by injuries and has only managed one assist and a -4 rating in 28 outings over his first year in Buffalo, his under-the-hood numbers still paint him as a preferable third-pairing option to Schenn on the right side. He’s averaging comparable ice time at 13:45 per game and has controlled 48.8% of shot attempts at even strength.

Stanley, though, should be a regular piece. Finding stability on the third pairing has been one of the few hiccups this season in Buffalo, whose top four of Rasmus Dahlin, Mattias SamuelssonOwen Power, and Bowen Byram is comprised entirely of lefties. They’ve been unsuccessful in their pursuit of an impact piece, nearly striking a deal for Blues star righty Colton Parayko, which fell apart when he invoked his no-trade clause.

Drafted 18th overall in 2016, the 27-year-old Stanley isn’t a right-shot option like they wanted, but should easily usurp Jacob Bryson as the de facto third-pairing lefty. His 6’7″, 231-lb frame has sometimes made him a frustrating defender to watch – with so much potential there, he’s only hit 100 hits once in his career, and has consistently been underwater on the possession front due to his subpar skating mechanics.

This season, though, the pending UFA has found a new gear. His nine goals in 59 games are nearly twice what he had in five previous NHL seasons to date, and he’s added 12 assists for 21 points. That’s a career high by a wide margin and has him seventh on the Jets in scoring, only trailing Josh Morrissey among defenders. An unsustainable 12.2% shooting rate is fueling it, but it’s worth noting that only one of those points, an assist, has come on the power play. All of that production is coming at even strength, where he’s seen his minutes boosted and is now averaging a career-high 17:12 per game.

Assuming a regular group of Dahlin, Byram, Samuelsson, Power, Stanley, and Kesselring, Buffalo will enter its first postseason appearance in 15 years with a ridiculously imposing defense core averaging 6’4″ and 218 lbs.

Image courtesy of Terrence Lee-Imagn Images.

More to come…

Red Wings Acquire David Perron

The Red Wings and Senators announced a rare deal between teams in the same playoff race. Winger David Perron is headed back to Detroit, with the Wings sending a conditional 2026 fourth-round pick to Ottawa to complete the deal. Ottawa will receive the pick, the Blue Jackets’ 2026 fourth, if Perron plays in at least one game. It will upgrade to Detroit’s third-round selection this year if the Wings advance to at least the second round of the playoffs and Perron plays in at least half of the first-round games.

Detroit has been tied to forward targets of a much higher prestige and acquisition cost, and Perron wasn’t an obvious trade candidate with Ottawa still pushing to get back into the wild-card race. He hasn’t played since January after undergoing sports hernia surgery, and it’s fair to wonder if the 37-year-old requested a move back to a familiar environment with a higher likelihood of making the postseason in what could be his final NHL season. He’s nearing the end of his projected return timeline anyway, and if healthy, he legitimately provides a third-line scoring presence the Wings desperately needed to add this week.

In his last two trips through free agency, Perron has signed two-year deals – first with Detroit in 2022 and then Ottawa in 2024. Now a pending UFA, he took a marginal pay cut from his $4.75MM cap hit with Detroit to the $4MM price tag he carries now. He was a legitimately impactful top-nine presence during his pair of seasons in Hockeytown, averaging 21 goals and 54 points with 113 hits per 82 games while staying healthy the vast majority of the time.

Due to age-related decline and a pair of injury-plagued seasons in Canada’s capital, he’s not that player anymore. A back injury held him out of nearly half the 2024-25 campaign, and his ice time and production dipped. He did manage to get his scoring back on track before his surgery this year, though, notching 10 goals and 25 points through 49 games. That’s still not the rate he was producing in Detroit, but it is still a half a point per game. That’s a significant offensive upgrade over names like Michael Rasmussen and Elmer Söderblom, who have spent time on the wings in Detroit’s top nine.

A Stanley Cup winner with the Blues in 2019, Perron also brings a wealth of experience – 1,223 regular-season games and 110 playoff games – to a club primed for its first postseason appearance in 10 years. His time in Ottawa aside, he’s been one of the league’s more consistent producers in the 50-point range since debuting for the Blues way back in 2007. Assuming he can return to play from his surgery and suit up for the Wings in the playoffs, it’ll be his 12th time in 19 NHL seasons making it to the dance.

The move offers a clear reason why the Sens opted to leverage a second-round pick to land winger Warren Foegele from the Kings earlier today. Entering play tonight six points back of a playoff spot, they weren’t comfortable sending Perron away without ensuring they could bring someone in to replace him in a separate move. The Sens do clear $500K in current cap space with the pair of transactions, but are still on the hook for Foegele’s $3.5MM cap hit through next season, while Perron is long for the open market.

Ducks Sign Ryan Poehling To Four-Year Extension

The Ducks announced they’ve signed center Ryan Poehling to a four-year extension. It carries an average annual value of $3.75MM for a total value of $15MM, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. He’s now under contract through the 2029-30 season.

Poehling, 27, would have been an unrestricted free agent this summer. He’s in the back half of a two-year, $3.8MM deal he signed with the Flyers in 2024. Anaheim was likely never keen on letting him hit the open market after making him the key piece of the return they received from Philadelphia for Trevor Zegras last summer.

A first-round pick by the Canadiens back in 2017, Poehling has taken the long road toward being a stable top-nine contributor, but it’s looking like he’s finally arrived. He played mostly fourth-line minutes for the first several years of his career, but he first got an extended look on Philly’s third line last season. A defensively responsible pivot who’s featured heavily on the Penguins’, Flyers’, and Ducks’ penalty kills since the 2022-23 campaign, the offense arrived in earnest with a 12-19–31 scoring line in 68 games for Philly.

Anaheim was banking on him keeping that production up while continuing to feature as a #3/#4 center. So far, that’s been the case. Despite a five-point regression in shooting percentage from last season, his 7-17–24 scoring line through 54 contests as a Duck is roughly in line with his points per game output in 2024-25. He’s done that with what seems like a never-ending rotating cast of linemates while also leading Anaheim forwards in shorthanded ice time.

Poehling’s 46.3% faceoff win rate isn’t anything to write home about, but his +7 rating is tied with Troy Terry for the team lead, and his 62 blocked shots are the most among Ducks forwards. That kind of skillset, plus what seems like a consistent ability to score in the 30-to-40-point range, is valuable considering how low he generally plays in the lineup, and he’ll now be filling that role behind core centers Leo Carlsson and Mason McTavish through the end of the decade.

Image courtesy of Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.

Red Wings Pursuing Robert Thomas, Vincent Trocheck

Insider Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet published this evening’s Trade Deadline Thoughts, where he noted that the Detroit Red Wings are in the mix on the market’s top two centers: Robert Thomas of St. Louis and the Rangers’ Vincent Trocheck.

Thomas, 26, is the bigger fish and likely the #1 overall player available before tomorrow’s 3 p.m. ET deadline. If GM Steve Yzerman would be able to pull it off, the 26-year-old could be the final piece to the puzzle up front after years of building. The center, an 80+ point getter over the last two seasons, is locked up through 2030-31 at a $8.125MM cap hit, reasonable considering that it will take him through the prime of his career.

Detroit has missed the playoffs for nine straight years, and patience was wearing thin. Making it 10 was simply not an option, and sure enough, the team is well on their way to end the drought. Even just making it is half the battle, but if the Wings could win more than one round, it would be the first time since 2009, when they came just short of back-to-back Stanley Cups.

A center such as Thomas or Trocheck could make Detroit a real dark horse contender. Current 2C Andrew Copp has played well this season, already reaching his second best point total as a Red Wing in 62 games, but he’d be better off as a third line middleman. Cheaper options exist, such as Nashville’s Erik Haula, but looking at their lineup it’s really all or nothing in terms of what could actually push the Wings over the top.

Suffice to say, there’s a reason for Yzerman to be aggressive. Years of patience have assembled a nucleus of young talent which few teams can rival in trade offers. For Thomas, it has been reported that the Blues are seeking multiple first-round picks or equivalent pieces, as Buffalo and Utah have made a push. As for Detroit, it’s not clear who may be in discussion, but St. Louis would have a variety of assets to choose from.

Standout NCAA goaltending prospect Trey Augustine could especially appeal to the Blues as they could move on from Jordan Binnington. Also, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard and Carter Bear are both wingers selected in the first round over the last two years. They’d allow Yzerman to march on without touching his current group.

On the other hand, Nate Danielson and Marco Kasper would be assets appealing to St. Louis, or maybe even New York as they could jump right into the lineup. Both top 10 selections, their NHL production has hit a bit of a snag, possibly enough that Yzerman could move on.

If St. Louis was to add defense to their Thomas trade wish list, youngsters Axel Sandin-Pellikka and Albert Johansson emerge, although both are current contributors to the Wings lineup, which is already thin in depth. Especially if Yzerman were to part with the uber-talented Sandin-Pellikka, it may require a bigger deal where someone like Justin Faulk also came along.

Detroit stands out as a suitor as even after all seven of those players listed, there are still several other noteworthy candidates, not to mention their draft capital. Yzerman holds all of the team’s selections besides one second rounder in 2027.

The Red Wings have all the pieces to put together a blockbuster, and it may simply come down to the Aurora, Ontario native’s preferences, as he holds a no trade clause.

Even if Thomas is not meant to be, Trocheck would still be a tremendous fit in Detroit. The 32-year-old already had ties to the area, playing in the Little Caesars program as a youth, and his OHL Hockey in Saginaw. He has already been linked to Detroit for such reasons. Older, and signed through 2028-29 at a reasonable $5.625MM, he would naturally bring less in return than Thomas. However, there’s still plenty to offer that would have the Rangers salivating as they move forward on their youth movement.

New York fans can likely forget about the Wings’ absolute top assets, but a first rounder in either of the next two seasons along with some serious second tier options would be adequate. Rangers GM Chris Drury is not forced to move Trocheck now, as he could hold off until the summer, but the Blueshirts completing their lost season with all three 32-year-old centers still in the fold doesn’t seem favorable.

Whether it could be Thomas in a blockbuster, or Trocheck in what would still be one of the bigger deals of the deadline, time will tell. Yzerman will remain disciplined against high demands. Yet there’s enough reason from Detroit to swing a trade for Thomas or Trocheck, and pushing for more than simply returning to the playoffs this spring.

Image Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images (Thomas)

Image Credit: Danny Wild-Imagn Images (Trocheck)

Kings Trade Warren Foegele To Senators

5:30 p.m.: The deal is now official, per both clubs. The details of the pick swap are as follows:

Ottawa will get the worse of the Kings’ own third round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft or Dallas’ third round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft (acquired in a previous trade). Los Angeles will get the better of Ottawa’s own third round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft or Washington’s third round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft (acquired in a previous trade). However, if both Ottawa and Washington do not qualify for the 2026 NHL playoffs, then Ottawa will instead transfer to Los Angeles the worse of Ottawa’s own third round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft or Washington’s third round draft pick in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft (acquired in a previous trade).

The Kings also recalled forward Jared Wright from AHL Ontario in a corresponding move, per John Hoven of Mayor’s Manor. He was sent down just yesterday after making his NHL debut against the Avalanche earlier this week, but will be back in the lineup tonight.


4:13 p.m.: The Senators are adding some depth on the wings, with Darren Dreger of TSN reporting they’re acquiring forward Warren Foegele from the Kings. Ottawa is sending the Sabres’ 2026 second-round pick (acquired in last year’s Dylan Cozens/Joshua Norris deal) to Los Angeles in return, while the clubs are also swapping conditional third-round picks, per David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period.

Foegele, 30 next month, is a big left winger with some legitimate scoring upside, although he hasn’t shown much of it this season. He’s scored just seven goals and nine points in 47 games this year, and he was moved to the press box for five of the Kings’ last 10 games after being a lineup staple for L.A. and Edmonton for the last several seasons. Even still, he’s averaged 16 goals and 32 points per 82 games over his nine-year career.

Foegele is playing the season in year two of a three-year, $10.5MM deal and has a five-team no-trade list, which presumably didn’t include his home country’s capital. He still has another year left on that contract at a $3.5MM cap hit – a steep commitment if he can’t rebound to his career-average form, let alone the back-to-back 20-goal seasons he’d put up leading into this year. He’s making only $3MM in actual salary next season, though, so that’ll be financially attractive for the Sens’ books.

While he’d recently squeezed back into the Kings’ lineup thanks to their rash of injuries at forward, he’ll likely get a longer leash in Ottawa’s top-nine, at least to start. David Perron is close to a return from his sports hernia surgery, but his absence has stretched their depth scoring thin with Nick Cousins needing to step up into a third-line role (although even he’s produced at a better rate than Foegele has this year).

That makes a second-round pick a steep price to pay for a player on an undesirable contract who may not be in Ottawa’s regular lineup when Perron returns to health, but it’s only further evidence of the seller’s market this deadline is quickly turning out to be. Comparable fourth-line pieces like Michael McCarron and Nic Dowd have fetched similar returns in the past few days, but those names carry added value as centers (where Foegele has zero utility), and the Sens likely valued his controllability for another year while hoping a change of scenery could make his production more efficient.

Selling off a forward is at first glance counterintuitive for a Kings club that’s had nightmarish scoring troubles this season and is currently down a pair of top-nine wingers for the rest of the season in Kevin Fiala and Andrei Kuzmenko. After swinging a deal for Artemi Panarin last month, they were clearly trying to get themselves back into the playoff picture after a rough start, but their recent rash of injuries – plus the fact they managed to get Panarin extended for two more seasons – has seemingly pushed them the other way, with ESPN’s Emily Kaplan calling them a “wild card team in terms of direction.” Nonetheless, it’s tidy work in a vacuum to land a top-64 pick for a name they haven’t been using while opening up cap space to retool for next season.

Image courtesy of Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images.

Bruce Garrioch of Postmedia was first to report a second-round pick was headed the Kings’ way, while Frank Seravalli of Victory+ was first to report a pick swap was included.

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