Derick Brassard will be traded. That’s the news coming
out of nearly every outlet in Pittsburgh as the Penguins prepare to shake up
their roster for another Stanley Cup run. The latest to report on the Penguins
is Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman in his latest "31 Thoughts" column,
which includes a note saying that GM Jim Rutherford is “ready to start dealing.”
That notion comes just a day after the Penguins lost badly
at the hands of the San Jose Sharks, their second consecutive defeat and one
that has dropped them to fourth place in the Metropolitan Division. That’s a
dangerous place to be in at the moment every team out of the playoff picture is
gunning for the Penguins’ spot, including the Buffalo Sabres who are just four
points back. Rutherford is never one to just wait around and hope things get
better, and with the imperfect fit that is Brassard there’s work to be done.
Friedman notes that the Penguins have expressed interest in
Carolina Hurricanes forward Micheal Ferland, but also writes that the list of teams after
the pending free agents is long and also includes the Boston Bruins, Edmonton
Oilers and Vancouver Canucks. Ferland would be a nice fit to provide some
physicality and secondary scoring for the Penguins, but he doesn’t fill that
third-line center role that Brassard has failed to run with.
If that’s the position most sought after, there are
certainly several avenues to go down. Matt Duchene’s representation is meeting with Ottawa Senators
GM Pierre Dorion today in California according to Darren Dreger of TSN, meaning
there should be at least some feeling of where his contract negotiations are
headed. If the Senators can’t get Duchene under an extension in the next few
weeks, you have to expect them to see what they could get for him on the trade
market. Kevin Hayes stands out as another center that could fit
in behind Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, though there will be plenty of competition for
his services too.
Like other teams that are squarely in their competitive
window, the Penguins aren’t worried about building for the future and will try
to give themselves the best shot at a Stanley Cup this season. Brassard was
that move a year ago as the team had to part with multiple pieces to multiple
teams in order to get a cheaper version of the veteran center onto their team.
That leaves Brassard as a fairly appetizing trade chip this time around, given
that he carries just a $3M cap hit this season. Moving that cap hit will be
important to any moves that the Penguins do make, given their relative
proximity to the salary cap ceiling.
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