In a lot of ways the 2019 NHL trade deadline was a
predictable one.
The Ottawa Senators sold off their few remaining good
players. The Nashville Predators were heavy buyers. Teams like the Calgary
Flames and New York Islanders that appear to be ahead of schedule did not mess
with what has worked for them so far and decided to stay the course and see
where their current rosters can take them. There also were not really any major
shockers, outside of maybe Mikael Granlund being traded by Minnesota, in terms
of the players who did get moved.
But there were still a few surprises thrown in.
The Columbus Blue Jackets went wild and mortgaged their
short-term future for the hope of even shorter-term success, the San Jose Sharks
doubled down on their confidence in Martin Jones, the Vegas Golden Knights went
after the big fish again and the Boston Bruins and Washington Capitals made
some minor tweaks to their rosters.
We examine all of that and more with 10 thoughts and observations
after the NHL trade deadline.
1. COLUMBUS
HAS EVERYTHING RIDING ON THIS SEASON
Keeping Artemi Panarin and Sergei Bobrovsky was a pretty
good indication that the Columbus Blue Jackets were willing to see what they
could do this season instead of being resigned to the fact they will lose both
over the summer, and thus trading them before the deadline. But then they
doubled down on that by being the biggest buyers at the deadline by giving up
draft picks and prospects for rentals Matt Duchene, Ryan Dzingel, Adam McQuaid
and Keith Kinkaid. That leaves the Blue Jackets with six unrestricted free
agents after this season (including Panarin, Bobrovsky, Duchene and Dzingel)
and only two draft picks in the 2019 class: a third-rounder and a
seventh-rounder. That is the definition of "all-in." The wild thing
about this is that they are not even a lock to make the playoffs. This could
all go south very quickly if they do not secure one of the top eight seeds in
the Eastern Conference.
2. THE SHARKS HAVE
EVERYTHING RIDING ON MARTIN JONES
The San Jose Sharks made themselves better at the trade
deadline by getting Gustav Nyquist from the Detroit Red Wings, making an
already deep team that much stronger. They did not, however, address the
biggest question mark facing them: goaltending. The tag-team duo of Martin
Jones and Aaron Dell has not played up to a championship level this season and
that could prove to be the team's ultimate undoing in the playoffs. Jones has
never been one to steal games for the Sharks, but he has always been, at worst,
a league-average to slightly above-league-average starter. If he can return to
that form and play at that level, the Sharks will be a formidable team in the
playoffs. If he does not, it could derail a potential championship season.
3. THE FLAMES HAVE
A LOT OF FAITH IN THEIR TEAM
The San Jose Sharks added Nyquist. The Vegas Golden Knights
added Mark Stone. The Nashville Predators added Mikael Granlund and Wayne
Simmonds. The Winnipeg Jets added Kevin Hayes. All of the top contenders in the
Western Conference added a significant player. The Calgary Flames? Added Oscar
Fantenberg. A depth defender. No insurance in goal. No additional depth up
front. They are riding into the playoffs with the team that has gotten them to
this point in the season. Sometimes that is a good thing.
4. THE DETROIT RED
WINGS PROBABLY SHOULD HAVE DONE MORE
It is a few years overdue, but the Detroit Red Wings have
finally started to rebuild their aging, expensive, declining roster. They have
assembled a ton of draft picks and have at least set themselves up for a chance
to restock the cupboards. But why didn't they do more? Trading Nyquist was a
necessary move, given his pending status as a UFA, but was there really no
market for Jimmy Howard, Niklas Kronwall, Thomas Vanek or any other veteran on
the team? It just seems like there was a chance here to move more players and
get even more draft picks for the future.
5. THE NASHVILLE
PREDATORS LOVE BLOCKBUSTERS
David Poile has assembled a powerhouse team in Nashville and
somehow still kept his team well under the league's salary cap. He's also
scored some of the biggest trades in the NHL over the past few years acquiring
P.K. Subban, Filip Forsberg, Ryan Johansen, and Kyle Turris as part of
blockbuster deals. He added to that at the trade deadline by pulling a stunner
when he sent Kevin Fiala to the Minnesota Wild for Granlund and then acquiring
Simmonds from the Philadelphia Flyers. Oh, and don't forget about that
pre-deadline deal to get Brian Boyle from the New Jersey Devils. That is what
going all in looks like for a Stanley Cup contender, and, amazingly, his team
is still in a great position under the salary cap in future seasons. A lot of
times when GM's swing for the fences on big trades, they start to eventually
come up empty. That has yet to happen for Poile, who just keeps hitting home
runs.
6. THE VEGAS
GOLDEN KNIGHTS GO BIG
Even though they were in the Stanley Cup Final a year ago,
it is still remarkable to see the Vegas Golden Knights, in Year 2 of their existence,
going after the big-ticket players. They went all in trying to get Erik
Karlsson. When that failed they traded for Max Pacioretty and signed Paul
Stastny. Now they pulled off one of the biggest scores of the deadline in
getting Stone from the Ottawa Senators, and then agreed to a new contract.
Stone is a star, a true top-line winger, and a player who can make a difference
for an already strong team that is a contender. He is still in the prime of his
career, making this a huge score for both the short term and long term.
7. DID BOSTON DO
ENOUGH?
The Boston Bruins are an outstanding team and a sneaky
contender in the Eastern Conference, getting lost in the shadow of Tampa Bay
and Toronto. But the top half of their lineup is as good as anybody's in the
league, and they have two goalies playing at an extremely high level in Tuukka
Rask and Jaroslav Halak. Their big question has been depth, as there has been
little offensive production after Patrice Bergeron, Brad Marchand, David
Pastrnak, David Krejci, Charlie McAvoy and Torey Krug (when they are healthy).
They attempted to address that by acquiring Charlie Coyle and Marcus Johansson.
They are solid additions, and Johansson has been especially hot lately now that
he is healthy. But will they be enough to get the Bruins through what will
almost certainly be a daunting playoff run in the Atlantic Division that will
probably include both the Maple Leafs and Lightning?
8. CAPITALS' SMALL
MOVES COULD MAKE BIG IMPACT
The defending Stanley Cup champions didn't make the biggest
splash, but they may have made the smartest. This isn't a team that needs a
blockbuster. It isn't a team that needs a major shakeup. It is a team that
needs its goalie to play like the top-tier netminder he is and just needed a
minor tweak or two to shore up some defensive shortcomings. That is exactly
what the Caps did in acquiring Nick Jensen and Carl Hagelin. Jensen should be a
rock-solid addition to a blue line that needs a more steady defensive hand,
while Hagelin is still one of the league's best defensive forwards and penalty
killers. They did not pay a huge price, they did not steal the deadline, but
they may have given themselves a better chance to make a run at a repeat title.
9. THE DALLAS STARS' LUCK IS UNBELIEVABLE
There has never been a big trade that Dallas Stars general
manager Jim Nill didn't want to go after. It is his calling card. It is what he
does. It does not always result in a better team on the ice, but he goes for
it. He did it again at the trade deadline by acquiring Mats Zuccarello from the
New York Rangers, and for one day it was awesome, as Zuccarello scored a goal,
added an assist and looked like someone who could be a difference-maker for a
bubble playoff team in the Western Conference. Then he suffered an arm injury
and got himself sidelined for the next four weeks, or almost the entirety of
the remaining schedule. If the Stars do not make the playoffs, that could be
one of the toughest pieces of trade deadline luck in recent memory. There is
not anything you can do about that; it is just dumb luck for a team that needed
something to go its way this season.
10. MINNESOTA
REMAINED A CURIOUS SELLER
On one hand, I cannot blame the Minnesota Wild for trying to
shake things up within their core. For years this has been a team that has been
good enough to make the playoffs but not quite good enough to do anything once
it got there, The Wild would inevitably run into a better team in the first or
second round. It was hard to see that team, as constructed, ever really breaking
through the glass ceiling that was always holding it down. But general manager
Paul Fenton sure picked an odd time, the middle of the season, when his team is
still in a playoff position, to start selling off some of his better players in
an effort to get younger. This is especially curious given how so many of the
trades (Nino Niederreiter for Victor Rask; Granlund for Fiala) were one-for-one
deals. Even the Charlie Coyle trade netted only Ryan Donato and one late-round
draft pick. Are they better after that? They are certainly younger and cheaper,
but it remains to be seen if this helps the Wild get over the hump in future
seasons. It was also curious because even with the significant injuries to
Mikko Koivu and Matthew Dumba this season, the Wild are still in the playoff
race and entered the week of the deadline in a playoff position. So maybe
Fenton recognized his team was not good enough as is and was still really in
the playoff race only because of the overall weakness of the Western Conference
and decided to shake things up. But that also could have waited until the
offseason after you gave yourself a better chance to sneak in the playoffs.
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