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Canucks Notes: Miller, Trade Chatter, Hughes

February 3, 2025 at 9:48 am CDT | by Brennan McClain 1 Comment

In today’s episode of ’32 Thoughts’ with Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, the Vancouver Canucks and their recent trade activity were the center of attention. Friedman originally broke the news that the Canucks were trading forward J.T. Miller to the New York Rangers on Friday night, and Friedman provided even more context to the move.

Friedman reported that a players-only meeting happened during Vancouver’s early road trip to Florida in mid-October. This meeting addressed the rift between teammates Miller and Elias Pettersson. While the Sportsnet insider did not disclose which players led the discussion, the focus was on encouraging Miller and Pettersson to improve their relationship for the team’s betterment.

Ultimately, Miller’s relationship with Pettersson didn’t significantly improve, prompting him to take a month-long leave of absence. Friedman noted that when Miller returned in mid-November, the Vancouver organization had committed to trading him at some point this year.

The news from Friedman contradicts many of the reports surrounding Miller in December. In early December, Rick Dhaliwal of The Athletic reported the Canucks had publicly asserted they wouldn’t be trading Miller, and that he wouldn’t be requesting a trade from Vancouver.

As things turned out, Miller was indeed on the chopping block, being sent to the Rangers for Filip Chytil, Victor Mancini, and a protected 2025 first-round pick. Vancouver quickly moved the first-round pick to the Pittsburgh Penguins later that evening to acquire Marcus Pettersson and Drew O’Connor. Friedman believes that will be the only first-round pick the Canucks will trade this season.

After last night’s overtime loss to the Detroit Red Wings, Vancouver is 23-18-11 through 52 games and is two points back of the final wild-card spot in the Western Conference. Given their status as a bubble team at the moment, the Canucks’ first-round pick has a higher value than most prospective buyers as it could realistically become a lottery selection by the end of the year.

The Canucks are aware of this and have reportedly told interested teams they have no interest in moving their first-round pick unless they have a comfortable spot in the standings by the trade deadline. Vancouver traded their 2024 first-round pick to the Calgary Flames last season in the package for Elias Lindholm making it the first time since 2021 that they hadn’t made a first-round selection.

Vancouver’s position as a playoff contender may impact captain Quinn Hughes’ participation in the upcoming 4 Nations Face-Off starting next week. Hughes suffered a hand injury in the team’s recent game against the Dallas Stars, keeping him out of the lineup of last night’s contest. Friedman noted in his podcast that although no decision has been made, Vancouver could ask to withdraw from the tournament with Team USA to focus solely on getting healthy for their playoff run.

As arguably the team’s top defenseman, it would be a major blow to the American’s odds of winning the tournament. Still, Team USA has an easy choice for his replacement should he bow out in Washington Capitals’ blue liner, John Carlson.

4 Nations Face-Off| Injury| Team USA| Vancouver Canucks Elias Pettersson| J.T. Miller| Quinn Hughes

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Senators Reassign Leevi Merilainen, Activate Linus Ullmark

February 3, 2025 at 9:12 am CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

Feb. 3rd: According to a report from PuckPedia, the Senators have moved defenseman Jacob Bernard-Docker and forward Noah Gregor to LTIR. The move has allowed Ottawa the flexibility to activate Ullmark and have $105K in LTIR cap space.

Feb. 2nd: The Ottawa Senators have assigned goaltender Leevi Merilainen back to the minor leagues. This seems to be an indication that top goaltender Linus Ullmark is nearing a return from his long-term injury, as pointed out by TSN’s Bruce Garrioch. The NHL media site shows that Ullmark has been activated from long-term injured reserve. Ullmark has missed the team’s last 18 games with a back injury. Ottawa’s visit to Nashville on Monday could be his first game back.

Merilainen performed incredibly well in relief of Ullmark. He served as the team’s backup behind Anton Forsberg, but still appeared in 12 games and posted a dazzling 8-3-1 record and .925 save percentage. Should he not play in any more NHL games this season, Merilainen’s .925 would tie for the sixth-highest a Senators goaltender has ever recorded in a minimum of 10 games. Above him are three Craig Anderson seasons, and flash-in-the-pan years from Andrew Hammond and Robin Lehner. Ron Tugnutt (1998-99) and Dominik Hasek (2005-06) each posted .925 save percentages in 43 games of their own.

That’s certainly welcome company for Merilainen, who will now take his red hot play back to the minor leagues. He served as the Belleville Senators’ clear starter to begin the year, posting a 7-2-4 record and .901 save percentage through 13 games before his call-up. That still stands as the winningest record and highest save percentage on the AHL Senators, who have turned towards a rotation of goaltenders to fill Merilainen’s role. Malcolm Subban has been their more prominent fixture – playing in 11 games – though Michael Simpson, Mads Sogaard, and Mark Sinclair have each received their own shots at the AHL crease. All four fill-ins have posted save percentages below .890 – or in Sogaard’s case, below .860. Those numbers set Merilainen up for clear control of the Belleville crease upon his return – and continued strong play could force the NHL Senators to soon reconsider their choice of backup.

Ullmark will be rushed back to the NHL starting role in much the same way. The Senators have struggled immensely to find a consistent goaltender, and made a brazen move to acquire the former Vezina Trophy this summer. Aside from the long-term injury, the move has paid dividends extremely quickly. Ullmark recorded a 12-7-2 record and .915 save percentages in 23 games before getting hurt. After plenty of speculation around how he’d translate to a tougher environment, Ullmark has looked every ounce of cool, calm, and collected for the duration of his Senators tenure. This return from injury will give him a chance to continue that streak, and ramp up the Senators’ 7-2-1 hot streak over their last 10 games.

AHL| Injury| NHL| Newsstand| Ottawa Senators| Transactions Jacob Bernard-Docker| Leevi Merilainen| Linus Ullmark| Noah Gregor

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Five Key Stories: 1/27/25 – 2/2/25

February 2, 2025 at 9:01 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 1 Comment

While the trade deadline is still more than a month away, there was still a flurry of activity around the NHL including Brandon Saad walking away from more than $5MM from St. Louis to sign for much less with Vegas.  While that move was newsworthy in itself, it wasn’t enough to land a spot in this week’s key stories.

Flyers/Flames Swap: The first notable trade of the week came from the Flyers and Flames.  Center Morgan Frost and winger Joel Farabee had been in trade speculation for quite a while and the two were dealt together to Calgary for wingers Andrei Kuzmenko and Jakob Pelletier, Calgary’s 2025 second-round pick, and the Flames’ 2028 seventh-rounder.  The Flames had long been seeking a longer-term piece down the middle and get that in Frost who has two years of team control remaining.  Farabee, meanwhile, has struggled this year and has a $5MM cap charge through 2027-28 and Calgary is picking up the full freight of the contract while hoping they can get him going again.  Clearing that contract appears to be the impetus for the move as Kuzmenko is on an expiring contract and is struggling mightily while Pelletier cleared waivers earlier in the season but was playing well before the swap.  The move gives them much more flexibility on the salary cap that they’ll look to put to use this summer.

Salary Cap News: For the past few weeks, there was plenty of speculation that the NHL and NHLPA would like to release salary cap projections for a year or two ahead of schedule.  They wound up doing one better, announcing that the 2025-26 cap will be $95.5MM while projecting that the Upper Limits for 2026-27 and 2027-28 will be approximately $104MM and $113.5MM, respectively, subject to minor revisions.  That results in roughly a 9% increase per season to the cap.  Meanwhile, the spending minimums will also go up, moving to $70.6MM in 2025-26, $76.9MM in 2026-27, and $83.9MM in 2027-28 (again, subject to any minor revisions).  The CBA is set to expire after the 2025-26 campaign so the fact these numbers are coming out early could be construed as a positive sign while teams will now be able to better project their spending flexibility for the next three years.

Canucks Make Moves: With the rift between Elias Pettersson and J.T. Miller being too much to overcome, Vancouver finally found a suitable trade, sending Miller along with defensemen Erik Brannstrom and Jackson Dorrington to the Rangers for center Filip Chytil, blueliner Victor Mancini, and a protected 2025 first-round pick.  Miller returns to the team that he started his career with and gives New York three veteran centers signed through at least the 2028-29 campaign, joining Mika Zibanejad and Vincent Trocheck.  For Vancouver, they get some long-term cap flexibility with Chytil only being signed through 2026-27 while also opening up some extra spending room for this year.  That, coupled with the draft pick, played a role in deal number two.

That move came only a few hours after the Miller one as Vancouver flipped the draft pick along with defenseman Vincent Desharnais and wingers Danton Heinen and Melvin Fernstrom to Pittsburgh for blueliner Marcus Pettersson and winger Drew O’Connor.  Pettersson is a strong upgrade on Vancouver’s back end while O’Connor is an improvement in their bottom six up front.  However, both players are pending unrestricted free agents although it wouldn’t be surprising to see the Canucks take a run at extending them according to Thomas Drance of The Athletic (subscription link).  Pittsburgh does well to pick up a first-round pick for two expiring contracts though it involves taking on $4.25MM in contracts for next season with Desharnais and Heinen both having an extra year on their deals.  Meanwhile, for the time being at least, the Canucks have even more long-term cap flexibility at their disposal.

One Signed, One To Go? The Capitals entered the week with their bargain goalie tandem heading for unrestricted free agency in July.  They ended it with Logan Thompson signed for the long haul as the team signed him to a six-year, $35.1MM extension that will carry a $5.85MM cap charge and a partial no-trade clause.  The 27-year-old has been stellar this season with a 2.15 GAA and a .924 SV% in 29 games so far and is on quite a bargain deal at the moment as his cap charge is the lowest in the entire league, below the minimum salary.  Meanwhile, Charlie Lindgren remains unsigned but that might not be the case for long following a report that the two sides are working on an extension that would drive his price up to between $3.5MM and $4MM.  Washington’s goalie tandem costs less than $2MM this season but that will be changing soon enough.

Stars Add Two Veterans: Following a long-term injury to defenseman Miro Heiskanen and season-ending surgery for blueliner Nils Lundkvist, the Stars decided to make a splash of their own on the trade market.  Following a series of transactions that locked them into using LTIR, they acquired center Mikael Granlund and rearguard Cody Ceci from San Jose for their 2025 first-round pick and Winnipeg’s 2025 fourth-round selection (which would elevate to Dallas’ third-rounder if they make the Stanley Cup Final.  Granlund was San Jose’s top point-getter this season and while he won’t be a top-liner with the Stars, he’ll deepen their center group with Tyler Seguin (hip) expected to be out until the playoffs.  Meanwhile, Ceci is a minute-eating second-pairing player who should help take off some pressure until Heiskanen returns.  San Jose takes arguably its most prominent rentals and packages them together but in doing so, they land another first-round pick as their extended rebuild continues.  Considering they signed Granlund as a short-term reclamation project in 2023 and took on Ceci as a cap dump from Edmonton, getting a first-rounder is a solid piece of business for the Sharks.

Photo courtesy of Imagn Images.

NHL Week In Review

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West Notes: Flames, Wedgewood, Emberson, Guenther

February 2, 2025 at 7:59 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose 3 Comments

Heading into the season, many expected the Flames to be selling before the trade deadline.  Instead, they made a move to add, picking up Joel Farabee and Morgan Frost from Philadelphia.  But that hasn’t stopped teams from calling Calgary GM Craig Conroy about his top veterans, center Nazem Kadri and blueliners Rasmus Andersson and MacKenzie Weegar.  However, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported on Saturday that Conroy is telling inquiring teams that he doesn’t plan to move those players.  Kadri and Weegar are signed to long-term contracts but Andersson’s expires in 2026, making him extension-eligible as of July 1st.  Friedman adds that Calgary is getting more confident that they can get a new contract in place with the 28-year-old who will be eyeing a sizable raise from his current $4.55MM AAV.

More from the Western Conference:

  • Avalanche goaltender Scott Wedgewood is listed as day-to-day with an upper-body injury, mentions Evan Rawal of The Denver Gazette (Twitter link). He will, however, accompany the team on the road so he shouldn’t be out for too long.  The 32-year-old has a 2.40 GAA and a .910 SV% in his first nine games with Colorado after being acquired from Nashville at the end of November.  Trent Miner is already up on recall so the Avs won’t need to bring anyone else up.
  • Oilers defenseman Ty Emberson played in his 80th career NHL game last night, meaning he will become a restricted free agent this summer, notes Kurt Leavins of the Edmonton Journal. Had he not reached that mark, he would have been a Group Six unrestricted free agent.  Emberson has nine assists, 70 blocks, and 78 hits in just under 15 minutes a night through 50 games with Edmonton this season.  Leavins suggests a three-year deal worth $1.5MM per season might be a reasonable contract for the sides to come to although some of the recent comparables have come in a little below that.
  • Utah winger Dylan Guenther has been upgraded as out day-to-day, relays Belle Fraser of the Salt Lake Tribune (Twitter link). The 21-year-old has missed a little more than three weeks with a lower-body injury.  Before getting hurt, Guenther was scoring at pretty much the same rate as last season, tallying 16 goals and 18 assists in his first 40 games after putting up 18 tallies and 17 helpers in 45 outings in 2023-24.

Calgary Flames| Colorado Avalanche| Edmonton Oilers| Utah Mammoth Dylan Guenther| MacKenzie Weegar| Nazem Kadri| Rasmus Andersson| Scott Wedgewood| Ty Emberson

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Minor Transactions: 2/2/25

February 2, 2025 at 6:57 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

With the AHL All-Star break now in effect, we could see an influx of paper transactions as teams look to bank an extra little bit of cap space.  We’ll keep track of today’s minor moves here.

  • The Hurricanes continue their daily roster movement. They announced that they’ve assigned forward Ryan Suzuki to AHL Chicago while recalling blueliner Riley Stillman; the two have been trading places in recent days.  Despite the numerous recalls, Stillman has only suited up once this season with Carolina.  Suzuki, meanwhile, played his first two NHL games earlier this week.  It wouldn’t be surprising to see one or both of these players in another transaction in the near future.
  • The Lightning have returned goaltender Matt Tomkins to AHL Syracuse, per a team release. He has been recalled recently with Jonas Johansson banged up and could be back up if Johansson can’t return on Tuesday versus Ottawa.  The 30-year-old has a 2.87 GAA with a .900 SV% in 17 games with the Crunch this season.
  • The Bruins have assigned center Matthew Poitras and winger Vinni Lettieri to AHL Providence, per the AHL’s transactions log. This move is likely just a paper one to bank a bit of cap space with the two likely to be recalled for Tuesday’s game against Minnesota.  Poitras has a goal and eight assists in 23 games with Boston this season while Lettieri has two goals in eight outings at the NHL level.
  • The Jets announced (Twitter link) that they have assigned wingers Brad Lambert and Parker Ford to AHL Manitoba. Lambert has been up and down a fair bit lately but is still looking for his first NHL point after being held off the scoresheet in his four games with Winnipeg this season.  As for Ford, he scored in his NHL debut on Thursday so it won’t be surprising if he’s recalled before Tuesday’s contest against Carolina.

AHL| Boston Bruins| Carolina Hurricanes| Tampa Bay Lightning| Transactions| Winnipeg Jets Brad Lambert| Matt Tomkins| Matthew Poitras| Parker Ford| Riley Stillman| Ryan Suzuki| Vinni Lettieri

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Canadiens Assign Owen Beck And Logan Mailloux To AHL

February 2, 2025 at 6:18 pm CDT | by Brian La Rose Leave a Comment

Sunday: The team announced (Twitter link) that both Beck and Mailloux have been sent back to the AHL to allow them to play in the All-Star Game; neither played today against Anaheim.

Saturday: The Canadiens have added a bit of extra roster depth as they get set to start a three-game California road trip.  The team announced that they have recalled center Owen Beck and Logan Mailloux from AHL Laval.  It’s the second recall of the season for both players.

Beck is in his first professional season and has spent the bulk of it with the Rocket.  The 20-year-old played in two games with Montreal late last month and was held off the scoresheet.  Beck has had a productive rookie campaign in the minors, however, tallying 11 goals and 16 assists in 41 games, good for a tie for tenth in scoring among all AHL freshmen.

As for Mailloux, he got into five games with the Canadiens back in October.  He was productive in those outings, picking up a goal and two assists while logging 16:30 of ice time but struggled in the defensive zone.  He’s in his second pro campaign and has nine goals and 13 assists in 36 AHL appearances so far this season, putting him close to his offensive pace from his rookie year.

It wouldn’t be too surprising to see both players shuffled back and forth a bit over the coming days.  Beck and Mailloux are set to participate in the AHL All-Star Classic on Sunday and Monday with that event being held in California where Montreal will be for a few days.  Accordingly, they’ll likely be loaned back down following Sunday’s game and then recalled back to the big club on Tuesday when the Canadiens are in San Jose.

AHL| Montreal Canadiens| Transactions Logan Mailloux| Owen Beck

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Red Wings’ Jeff Petry Undergoes Surgery, Out 6-8 Weeks

February 2, 2025 at 5:57 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 5 Comments

Detroit Red Wings defenseman Jeff Petry has undergone surgery to address an undisclosed injury and will miss the next six-to-eight weeks, per Frank Seravalli of the Daily Faceoff. No specifics of the injury were provided.

Petry has been out of the lineup since suffering an injury in the team’s January 3rd game against the Columbus Blue Jackets. He left that game with roughly 10 minutes left in the third period after wrapping awkwardly around Columbus’ Kirill Marchenko while the latter took a shot. Petry went down immediately and took his time getting back up. It wasn’t clear what he hurt on the play. He was designated as day-to-day with injury immediately following the game, then landed on injured reserve three days later. Now, Petry will be a candidate for long-term injured reserve, as he pushes to return before Detroit’s season ends on April 17th.

Petry has dealt with numerous injuries this season. He missed time in early October with an upper-body injury, then sat out with a lower-body injury for parts of early December. In total, he’s only played in 34 of Detroit’s 52 games this season. The 37-year-old has just one goal and six points in the games he’s played in. He’s also recorded 12 penalty minutes, a -7, 56 blocked shots, and 39 hits. Petry was Detroit’s fourth-most utilized defender before falling to injury, averaging just over 19 minutes of ice time –  behind Moritz Seider, Ben Chiarot, and Simon Edvinsson.

Petry is just four seasons removed from recording 42 points in 55 games with the 2020-21 Montreal Canadiens. He’s seen a gradual decrease in scoring ever since, netting 27, 31, and 24 over the last three seasons respectively. Those numbers have fallen off a cliff this season. That decrease, during an injury-riddled season, could motivate Petry to retire when his contract ends this summer. That thought may be in the back of his head through the rest of the season, though he hasn’t been ruled out for the year yet.

Detroit Red Wings| Injury Jeff Petry

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Canucks Activate Kiefer Sherwood

February 2, 2025 at 5:31 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

The Vancouver Canucks have activated forward Kiefer Sherwood off of injured reserve. Sherwood has missed Vancouver’s last four games with an undisclosed injury. His return brings some sense to Vancouver assigning Aatu Raty and, after he cleared waivers, Phillip Di Giuseppe to the minor leagues.

Sherwood is expected to return to the lineup in Sunday’s game against the Detroit Red Wings. He’ll join a lineup full of new faces, including recent trade acquisitions Marcus Pettersson, Victor Mancini, and Filip Chytil. Sherwood should maintain his role on the team’s third line despite the lineup shuffle. He’s been one of the brightest performers in Vancouver’s bottom-six, boasting 13 goals and 21 points in 47 games this season. Sherwood has also recorded a staggering 273 hits – while no other Canuck has managed even 100 (Noah Juulsen has 99). In fact, Sherwood’s lofty hit totals lead the entire NHL by nearly 80 hits – with Philadelphia’s Garnet Hathaway ranked second with 197 hits. So long as he maintains his current hit pace, Sherwood is on track to finish the season with 453 hits – which would stand as an NHL record.

Sherwood has doubled down on the role of goal-scoring wrecking-ball after recording 10 goals, 27 points, and 234 hits in 68 games with the Nashville Predators last season. He seems to be finding plenty of comfort in his first year with the Canucks, sat just seven points shy of surpassing his career-high in scoring from last year. This news sets him up to continue pursuing new scoring heights, and the hit record, in a Canucks roster with plenty of minutes opened up by the trading of top forward scorer J.T. Miller.

Injury| NHL| Transactions| Vancouver Canucks Aatu Raty| Filip Chytil| Garnet Hathaway| J.T. Miller| Kiefer Sherwood| Marcus Pettersson| Noah Juulsen| Victor Mancini

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Blues’ Robert Thomas, Colton Parayko Expected To Play Despite Illness

February 2, 2025 at 4:54 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley Leave a Comment

5:00 PM: The Blues have announced that Thomas and Parayko are both expected to play through their illness on Sunday. Kessel and Walker will step out of the lineup in their place.

4:00 PM: The St. Louis Blues could be without two pillars of the lineup when they visit the Utah Hockey Club on Sunday. Top centerman Robert Thomas and top defenseman Colton Parayko are both questionable for the matchup due to illness NHL.com’s Lou Korac reports. Parayko also missed St. Louis’ Friday loss to the Colorado Avalanche, while Thomas left the team’s Sunday practice early.

St. Louis turned toward depth defenseman Matthew Kessel to fill in for Parayko on Friday. He was paired with Parayko’s typical partner, Cam Fowler, and recorded no scoring and a -2 in the outing. The Blues aren’t carrying any other extra defenders, meaning Kessel will step up once again should Parayko miss another matchup.

How to fill in for Thomas will be a much harder question. He has served as the team’s top-line center for the entirety of the season. The team struggled significantly when Thomas missed 12 games between October and November, posting a 4-7-1 record and getting outscored 3.75-to-2.33 on average. The Blues turned towards their litany of depth forwards to fill in for Thomas’ vacancy, with each of Alexandre Texier, Radek Faksa, and Nathan Walker earning routine ice time in his absence.

This time around, Oskar Sundqvist seems like the depth option that’d get the nod, with Faksa and Walker already playing routinely. Sundqvist has been a routine healthy scratch under Jim Montgomery’s reign, and has just three points in 10 games in January and nine points in 38 games this season. He’s fallen to the role of de facto extra forward for the Blues, but Thomas’ absence could force him back into the lineup. That circumstance would likely elevate Brayden Schenn to the Blues’ top line and slot Sundqvist in between Jake Neighbours and Zachary Bolduc on the third line.

Injury| NHL| St. Louis Blues Colton Parayko| Robert Thomas

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Trade Deadline Primer: Anaheim Ducks

February 2, 2025 at 3:21 pm CDT | by Gabriel Foley 13 Comments

With the 4 Nations Face-Off break approaching, the trade deadline looms large and is about a month away. Where does each team stand, and what moves should they be looking to make? We start our look around the league with the Anaheim Ducks.

The 2024-25 season has returned the Anaheim Ducks to a very familiar spot. They’re once again fending off last place in the Pacific Division and being propped up by a dismal San Jose Sharks lineup. Another middling year has meant another year of trying to rebuild the Ducks lineup into a team that’s both capable of making a late-season push and fits the vision of head coach Greg Cronin and general manager Pat Verbeek. They’ve already acquired rough-and-tumble veteran Jacob Trouba and burly depth forward Justin Bailey via trade – pushing a clear message of size and grit that’s sure to carry through their Trade Deadline.

Record

21-24-6, 7th in the Pacific

Deadline Status

Sellers

Deadline Cap Space

$78.49MM on deadline day, 1/3 retention slots used, 45/50 contracts used, per PuckPedia.

Upcoming Draft Picks

2025: ANA 1st, ANA 3rd, TOR 3rd, DET 4th, EDM 5th, ANA 5th, ANA 6th, ANA 7th
2026: ANA 1st, ANA 2nd, ANA 3rd, ANA 5th, ANA 6th, ANA 7th

Trade Chips

Another year of trade conversation inevitably leads to another year of conversation around now-backup goaltender John Gibson. The 31-year-old netminder has been the talk of trade discussions dating back to, at least, 2020 – but Anaheim hasn’t yet found a suitor. That’s in large part thanks to his daunting $6.4MM cap hit – making him the seventh-most expensive goaltender in the league. Gibson has struggled to vindicate the lofty cap hit since signing the deal in 2019. He’s set an 82-138-35 record and .901 save percentage over the course of the deal, which is set to expire after next season. Those are middling numbers but Gibson has finally found relief from them this season, largely thanks to emerging star Lukas Dostal shouldering the starting responsibilities.

Finally relieved from playing at a 50-game pace, Gibson has posted an admirable .913 Sv% through 22 games this season – actually leading the team in the stat, compared to Dostal’s .908 in 30 games. It has been a resurgence for the struggling veteran, but a move out of Anaheim still seems like his only option. Dostal has gained control of the starter’s crease at the young age of 24, and backed his rise with an impressive, Gold Medal performance at the 2024 World Championship. While two strong netminders are a great asset for a playoff team, Anaheim seems far removed from that acclaim – and stands to benefit most from giving Dostal a clear runway. That means Anaheim will continue on in the difficult spot of trying to move Gibson’s hefty deal. They’ll likely be forced to retain at least part of his salary, and may need to ask for a new backup in return – with Calle Clang and Oscar Dansk each posting save percentages below .900 in the minor leagues.

Top forward Trevor Zegras could stand as the more rationale trade chip. He has also been oft mentioned in trade rumors, backed by talks of a stylistic divide between the nimble and skilled Zegras and the hard-nosed coaching of Cronin. Zegras wasn’t helped along by persistent injuries last season. He missed more games than he played – appearing in just 31 of Anaheim’s 82 games. That made it incredibly difficult for the young forward to find a scoring groove. He ended the year with just six goals and 15 points – far below the 60-point pace he managed in his first two seasons. Zegras hasn’t been free from injuries this year – suffering a torn meniscus in December that limited him for five weeks. But he’s been healthier than last year, and mounted 13 points in 29 games as a result. That’s an 82-game pace of just 36 points – still far from his scoring ceiling – but the improved performance could be enough to market Zegras as a scorer with upside to teams in need of a boost to their top-end. The former top-10 draft pick will turn 24 two weeks after the Trade Deadline, and carries a cost-controlled $5.75MM cap hit through the end of next season. While certainly a riskier bet than some on the market, Zegras brings tantalizing goal-scoring upside and youth to a league-wide trade board lacking in both categories.

Other potential trade chips: F Isac Lundestrom, F Mason McTavish, D Tristan Luneau

Team Needs

Rough and Tumble Forwards: The Ducks are paving their path with recent trade buzz. Talks of Zegras’ departure, coupled with the arrival of multiple bruting skaters, points towards the team clearly wanting a roster capable of winning games by force. They’ll need more size and grit in the lineup if they want to pull that off, putting the Ducks firmly in the market for some of the market’s heaviest options. Boston Bruins forward Trent Frederic seems like the most compelling bet – offering the flexibility to play center or wing, and bringing plenty of grit to either role. Frederic has just seven goals and 14 points in 48 games this season, but his heft down the lineup has proved helpful for a Bruins team in need of a star-protector. Frederic has four fighting majors this season, and was voted as the clear winner in all of them by fans on HockeyFights.com. He could be a low-cost acquisition as the Ducks look for a physical spark in their bottom-six. Anaheim could also turn towards Montreal’s Jake Evans, or Seattle forwards Brandon Tanev or Yanni Gourde, for a physical presence with more scoring upside – but each of the three are likely older than the team would prefer.

Young Scoring Forwards: Anaheim will need to be careful to not fall too far down the well of bruising forwards as the Deadline approaches. Their bottom-six is averaging just 11.5 points, and that number is helped along quite significantly by rookie Cutter Gauthier’s 21 points. With this season already looking lost, the Ducks can afford to be patient with the impact of whoever they acquire. Main trade rumors haven’t revealed a lot of options for that role – though Buffalo’s Dylan Cozens could be a speedy, high-cost option with the heft to stick in Anaheim’s forward group. But more realistic options could be Toronto’s Nicholas Robertson, or Nashville’s Thomas Novak. Both players bring admirable physicality – particularly Novak – and likely wouldn’t cost Anaheim much to acquire mid-season.

Anaheim Ducks| Deadline Primer 2025| Pro Hockey Rumors Originals

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