Showing posts with label Trade Rumors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trade Rumors. Show all posts

Friday, January 19, 2018

Dreger: Evander Kane trade talks are 'heating up'

The Buffalo Sabres are expected to move Evander Kane before the Feb. 26 NHL trade deadline.

The 26-year-old left wing is due to become an unrestricted free agent in July and could seek a significant raise over his current $5.25 million annual average salary.

Last week, TSN's Pierre LeBrun reported Sabres general manager Jason Botterill was seeking a first-round draft pick, a prospect and a conditional pick. On Tuesday, TSN's Darren Dreger said there are teams claiming Botterill also wants an NHL roster player included. Then, on Friday, Dreger reported the trade talks over Kane were "heating up."

In 45 appearances in 2017-18, the Vancouver, BC native has recorded 16 goals and 20 assists (36 points) with a plus-minus of minus-10 and 34 penalty minutes.

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Analyzing five potential trade destinations for Matt Duchene

Rory Boylen / Sportsnet

What are you expecting to get from Matt Duchene if you trade for him?

A Calder Trophy finalist in his rookie season, Duchene’s production has been all over the map in his
eight-season career. Peaking as nearly a point-per-game player in 2012-13 and 2013-14 (43 points in 47 games and 70 in 71 respectively), his totals have tumbled since. For two years Duchene dipped into the 55-point range, totals that equate to his rookie production — notably he reached 30 goals in one of those seasons. This past season’s 41 points was the worst mark of his career over a full schedule. So although the Avalanche probably should be looking to move him for some young assets or at least help on defence while Duchene is still two years away from unrestricted free agency, his value may be at the lowest point of his career.

The Avalanche had the worst season of any NHL team since the 2004-05 lockout, so the pressure is on to win any Duchene trade. The reported asking price is high, which hasn’t squared with how interested teams view Duchene fitting into their lineup.

“People look at him as a complementary No. 2 as opposed to a No. 1 cornerstone,” Elliotte Friedman said on Prime Time Sports Thursday evening.

Although Duchene hasn’t been traded yet, it’s still possible a contender will come knocking and meet Colorado’s asking price to add that secondary piece. And in a better situation, who says Duchene can’t approach his career-high totals once more?

Throwing his trade value further into question is Duchene’s contract, which doesn’t come with an unreasonable cap hit at $6 million, but the issue is term. The 26-year-old would head to any acquiring team just two years away from unrestricted free agency so he’s not a very controllable asset.

Who are the teams Duchene could still end up on? We take a crack and breaking down five of them:

New York Islanders

The Islanders may not exactly fall into the category of “contender” but they are a team that needs to have more of an interest in improving in the short-term. John Tavares is entering the final season of his contract before he’ll become UFA eligible, and he’ll want to see the team making strides towards becoming a legit contender before re-upping for the long haul. The Isles have made three playoff appearances and have won one series in his eight years with the team.

GM Garth Snow has already brought in Jordan Eberle, presumably to play on Tavares’ wing, and picking up first- and second-round picks in the Travis Hamonic trade gives him a few more futures to potentially improve the team now. In this sense, Duchene could be a nice fit as that complementary piece on the Islanders as the No. 2 centre behind Tavares.

“I can understand why the Islanders want to bring him behind Tavares,” Friedman said. “That to me is a perfect fit for Matt Duchene.”

What could the Islanders offer: Remember, they already offered Hamonic and a first-rounder and were turned down.

Mathew Barzal is the easiest name to connect in a potential trade since he’s the Islanders’ best prospect. That, however, could be too rich for Snow’s blood considering the prolific junior scorer could crack the NHL roster this season. A more palatable trade option from Snow’s side might be Brock Nelson, who filled the No. 2 centre role this past season, scoring 20 goals and 45 points. Neither of these players fills Colorado’s biggest need for a defenceman, though.

The last time the Islanders drafted a blueliner in the first round was Ryan Pulock 15th overall in 2013. Pulock will be 23 when next season starts and although he hasn’t stuck in the NHL yet, he was eighth in AHL scoring at his position with 46 points in just 55 games. Still, Pulock isn’t a home run pick up, so the first-rounders or more may have to come into play.

Los Angeles Kings

With a new GM in Rob Blake and a new coach (promoted from an assistant) in John Stevens, the Kings are trying to figure why their dominant possession team has been in the bottom half of the league in goals two of the past three seasons.

While Duchene only had 18 goals this past season, his 11.3 shooting percentage would have been behind only Jeff Carter and Tanner Pearson, the Kings’ two highest goal scorers. On a team that has the puck more often than the Avs, Duchene could theoretically shoot the puck more and in turn, put more goals on the stat sheet.

The Kings would also do well to add more speed to the lineup and at least turn a little away from their heavy hockey style. Put Duchene with Tyler Toffoli, another player coming off a down season, and both players could work off each other to raise their totals.

And of course, Los Angeles is another destination where Duchene slides in as a No. 2.

“I don’t know if they’re interested, but for example a team like L.A. that already has a Kopitar, that to me is a fit,” Friedman said.

What could the Kings offer: As far as defencemen go, Los Angeles doesn’t have a home run pickup for the Avs either. Derek Forbort was the last defenceman they took in Round 1 and that was all the way back in 2010. Forbort, 25, is just now coming off his first full season.

As far as ‘D’ prospects go, Kale Clague, a 2016 second-rounder, may be the best and certainly the most long-term play. Paul LaDue, 24, also got 22 games of NHL action in his first year out of NCAA hockey, but that’s a low-end return for Duchene and would require some other significant parts.

The 11th overall pick from this year’s draft, Gabe Vilardi, might have to be on the table for the Avs, and considering skating is the biggest knock on him and the Kings need to focus a bit more on speed right now, it’s not inconceivable. The biggest issue in any Kings deal is who the defenceman (men?) going to Colorado is.

Columbus Blue Jackets

The Blue Jackets surprised everyone with their 108-point season and they are now in a frame of mind where adding to win now is a priority. Soon enough, Cam Atkinson and Zack Werenski will be looking for big raises.

They were in the Ilya Kovalchuk sweepstakes before he decided to stay in Russia, and swapped 200-foot player Brandon Saad for the offensive upside of Artemi Panarin, so Duchene is a reasonable target to expect them to want to chase as well.

The difference here is Duchene wouldn’t be such a clear No. 2 in Columbus, where he’d be a more key player.

“That kid (Alexander) Wennberg, I think at least you have a chance for both of them to be No. 1 guys,” Friedman noted.

Between Atkinson, Panarin, Josh Anderson, Nick Foligno, Boone Jenner and a fast-charging 22-year-old Oliver Bjorkstrand, there is a good amount of scoring punch on Columbus’ wings — if they can add another top-six centre it would lock in a pretty quick lineup with lots of potential to keep the flow from 2016-17.

What could the Blue Jackets offer: Here’s a case of a team that could give the Avalanche back an NHL defenceman in Ryan Murray. Remember, as poor as Colorado was last season, the roster isn’t a wasteland with talents like Nathan MacKinnon, Gabriel Landeskog and Tyson Barrie. They probably have at least some motivation to try and and get better now.

Murray, 23, was the second overall pick from 2012 and might be a nice complement to the smaller, more offensively inclined Barrie on the back end. Murray is on the last year of his contract, but is a controllable asset for a while yet with four NHL seasons under his belt.

Based on the asking price buzz, the Avs wouldn’t likely do a one-for-one here, so Columbus would have to be open for more. Maybe Colorado would be after one of those aforementioned wingers, with Bjorkstrand the youngest of them all and someone who could be a top-six winger as soon as next season.

Carolina Hurricanes

With a fully-stocked cupboard of defencemen, the most-connected team to Duchene is probably the Carolina Hurricanes, who themselves have a need for scoring up front they’ve tried to address with depth pickups Marcus Kruger and Justin Williams this summer. They still don’t have that game-breaker though.

While the Canes figure to have the defencemen to offer up to the Avs, he would be a No. 1 pivot in Carolina, which may not be the ideal place for him right now. Victor Rask had another pretty good 45-point season, but is not a lead guy — if the Hurricanes pick up Duchene, they’d be hoping for him to get up to at least 60 again. Acquiring Duchene would either move Jordan Staal to the third line, Rask to the wing, or perhaps Rask is involved the other way.

So on the one hand, the Canes could use Duchene to be their No. 1, but on the other, if there’s any chance he won’t produce as one, what should they give up for him? Duchene may not be as natural a fit for Carolina as their potential return is for the Avalanche, but he’s still a talent worth exploring for Carolina.

What could the Hurricanes offer: Jaccob Slavin is certainly out of the question and you would suspect Noah Hanifin, the fifth overall pick from 2015, and Justin Faulk, a huge and exciting part of the blue line, are as well.

That leaves someone like 22-year-old Brett Pesce, coming off his sophomore season averaging 21:12 of ice time a game and scoring 20 points. Other than that, 19-year-old Jake Bean, who Carolina drafted 13th overall in 2016, would be of interest to the Avalanche. Bean posted more than a point-per-game in the WHL this past season in 43 games. The Canes also have 2014 seventh overall pick Haydn Fleury coming off his first pro season in the AHL.

There’s a lot to choose from here for the Avs, but the bigger question is how Duchene fits into Carolina’s roster and what he’ll bing for the price being asked. The fact he’s two years away from being a UFA could also freak out a team that’s already paying Staal $6 million per for the long term, has a number of notable RFAs coming up after next season, and also has Jeff Skinner hitting UFA status after 2018-19.

Pittsburgh Penguins

Never count out the champs.

“I think Pittsburgh is on the fringe of this and I think the Penguins have to do some other things in order to even have a chance and I’m not really sure if they can get there,” Friedman said. “But I think that Pittsburgh would be the kind of team, just like Kessel thrived there, I think a guy like Duchene would, too.”

Acquiring Duchene would give the Penguins plenty of options to either roll with him in a No. 3 spot and give a surge of speed and offensive upside to that line, or move him to the wing. There is little doubt that if you put him with Sidney Crosby or Evgeni Malkin, an uptick in production is all but certain.

The question here is cap space (the Penguins still have to re-sign Conor Sheary and Brian Dumoulin) and just who the Penguins could give back Colorado on defence, an area of need for the Penguins, too.

What could the Penguins offer: The sticking point is on the blue line so we’ll start there. Olli Maatta has been fairly inconsistent in his career and has struggled with injuries, but at 22 years old, he may be a piece Colorado is interested in. As well, 23-year-old Derrick Pouliot, the eighth overall pick in 2012 may be of interest, but the fact he hasn’t yet stuck on a roster or earned any post-season playing time on a team that was desperate to fill blue line spots is troubling.

Up front, the likes of Jake Guentzel and Sheary may be desired by Colorado, but they’re still relatively cheap, controllable assets for a Penguins team that will constantly need to watch the cap. The Penguins have no obvious talents in the pipeline to give the Avs in a home run return, so as Friedman noted, they may have to do something else before they have what it takes to pry Duchene from Colorado.

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

NHL Trade Rumors: Penguins want Flames' first-round pick

"The Neutral Zone" Staff Report
Do the Flames want Marc-Andre Fleury, and do the
Penguins want the Flames 2016 first-rounder in
return?
Eric Francis of The Calgary Sun says that the news source has learned that Pittsburgh Penguins GM Jim Rutherford is asking for the Calgary Flames’ first round draft pick for Penguins goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury.

That first-round pick the Penguins reportedly want is the sixth pick overall at Friday’s NHL Entry Draft in Buffalo.

"It’s not going to happen, nor should it," says Francis.

Francis believes that Fleury’s value started declining heavily the minute the Andersen trade was made and will continue to drop as the Flames explore several other options such as Blues goalie Brian Elliott or unrestricted free agent James Reimer.


Francis believes that the Flames are still interested in acquiring Fleury.

Monday, February 29, 2016

Report: Coyotes getting asked about Hanzal

"The Neutral Zone" Staff Report

The Arizona Coyotes are reportedly getting asked about forward Martin Hanzal, according to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.

Hanzal has one year remaining on his contract after this season that will pay him $3.1 million. The 29-year-old is currently on pace to eclipse his previous career high of 40 points this season.

The Coyotes have also been linked to possibly trading forward Mikkel Boedker. His name has been linked to the New York Islanders.

RUMORS: Ducks and Wild involved with Jonathan Drouin discussion; Boedker being linked to Islanders

"The Neutral Zone" Staff Report

Jonathan Drouin has been involved in many NHL trade rumors recently. But since today is trade deadline day for 2016, it shouldn't be a surprise that there are two teams are reportedly involved in discussion with the Tampa Bay Lightning about Drouin.

Those two teams are the Anaheim Ducks and the Minnesota Wild.

Another rumor circulating (we should say that it is a small one) is that Arizona Coyotes forward Mikkel Boedeker has had his anme linked to the New York Islanders. Also, the Coyotes are rumored for wanting to trade forward Martin Hanzal. Could we see a trade between the Coyotes and the Islanders?

Please note that these are just rumors, and that the likely hood of Drouin ding traded on Monday is extremely likely.

Friday, February 26, 2016

McKenzie: Blackhawks and Kings may trade late Friday

"The Neutral Zone" Staff Report
Rob Scuderi
According to TSN's Bob McKenzieThe Chicago Blackhawks are close to a deal that will send defenseman Rob Scuderi to the Los Angeles Kings for defenseman Christian Ehrhoff. 

McKenzie reports the trade may not be completed until late Friday.

McKenzie on the trade: "It should get done."

Both players recently cleared waivers. McKenzie says salary retention could be involved.

Either way, it sounds like Chicago gets the benefit here.

Monday, February 15, 2016

Stamkos won't be traded, Lightning GM says

On Monday, Tampa Bay Lightning general manager Steve Yzerman announced Tha despite many rumors, the team will not be trading forward Steven Stamkos.

Many rumors have circulated that Stamkos may have been traded due to the fact that he is a free agent at the end of this season.

For now, Stamkos is staying in Tampa Bay.

Saturday, February 6, 2016

NHL TRADE TALK: McIlrath in a Jets uniform? Larry Brooks thinks it may happen

Special report by @GucciardoJoey
Dylan McIlrath (Getty Images)
The NHL trade deadline on February 29 is nearing, and the New York Rangers are causing rumor activity among trades.

At least Larry Brooks of the New York Post makes it seem that way.

Brooks thinks that the Jets would be willing to take some combination of J.T. Miller, Pavel Buchnevich (who currently plays in the KHL in Russia), a first-round pick and Dylan McIlrath off of the the Rangers hands in return for "high-end rental property". 

Brooks thinks that Rangers GM Jeff Gorton has no choice but to recover some assets and trade pending UFA defenseman Keith Yandle. He also thinks that the Rangers can’t afford to lose Yandle for nothing, who in case you haven't noticed has been the topic of many trade rumors and talks since it was noticed that he would be a free agent when this season ends.

This trade would seem possible, but after the recent injury to Rangers defenseman Ryan McDonagh on Sunday, and with no timetable on his return, the Rangers should not even think about trading McIlrath, who has been playing fairly well this season.

Not only should the Rangers not trade McIlrath due to the fact that the Rangers need all of the defensive power they can get at this point in the season, but they should not trade Miller because he is playing very well and is progressing at an amazing rate, nor should they trade Pavel Buchnevich because he may turn into a great future prospect when he is ready to play in the NHL.

Friday, February 5, 2016

NHL TRADE TALK: Could Byfuglien be on the move (to the Kings)?

"The Neutral Zone" Trade Rumor Report
Dustin Byfuglien
In recent weeks, contract negotiations between the Winnipeg Jets and Dustin Byfuglien have really picked up, says Ed Tait of the Winnipeg Free Press 

Byfuglien recently said that he would love to stay in Winnipeg. 

"Yeah. I'd love to. I've met a lot of good people and now some really good friends," the Jets defenseman said. "I've been here for a long time. You never want to leave home. I've been here long enough; my family has been here and I've had two kids here. 

"It's somewhere you don't want to leave."

However, according to TSN's Pierre LeBrun, the Los Angeles Kings are interested in Byfuglien.

But LeBrun says that the Kings' cap issues may gt in the way of them acquiring Byfuglien.

"First of all, Kings are right at the cap," LeBrun said Tuesday on TSN 1260. "So for them to absorb Byfuglien's cap number, even this late in the year, there would have to be guys going back. And how do the Jets feel about that. The Kings don't have a first round pick. And maybe that's the death knell for them."

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Canucks looking to trade Higgins

Here is a release from the Vancouver Canucks on Chris Higgins, who they have announced are exploring trade options involving him.
VANCOUVER, B.C. - Vancouver Canucks General Manager Jim Benning confirmed today that the club is exploring trade options for forward Chris Higgins.
“As part of our transition to a younger team, I can confirm we’re exploring trade options for Chris Higgins so we can create more roster space for our younger players to develop. Chris is a quality person who has been an important member of our team for nearly five seasons. Our focus has been on finding a positive new situation for him and we will continue to do so."
via the Canucks website.