DERICK BRASSARD
TRADE WORKS OUT FOR BOTH PENGUINS AND PANTHERS
The Pittsburgh Penguins and Florida Panthers made some major shakeups
to their rosters Monday, but how did each team do in the deal?
Let the month of the trade deadline officially begin. It’s
February 1st, and the trades are starting to roll in already, and they’re just
going to keep getting juicier as we get closer to the deadline. This time, it’s
the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Florida Panthers doing business, exchanging
struggling forwards for an entirely different purpose.
Friday afternoon, it was announced that the Pittsburgh
Penguins had sent Derick Brassard, Riley Sheahan, a second round pick, and two
fourth round picks to the Florida Panthers in exchange for Nick Bjugstad and
Jared McCann.
PITTSBURGH
PENGUINS GETS
Jared McCann, Nick Bjugstad
FLORIDA PANTHERS
GETS
Derick Brassard, Riley Sheahan, 2019 2nd Round Pick, 2019
4th Round Pick, 2019 4th Round Pick (Min)
On the surface, the Penguins get rid of two struggling forwards
and receive an upgrade to their bottom, and the Panthers got rid of some salary
commitments in order to make moves in the future and picked up three mid-round
draft picks in this years draft.
There’s a lot to break down about this trade on both sides,
so before we get to a winner of the trade, lets look at what each team is
getting and getting rid of from their perspective.
PITTSBURGH
PENGUINS GET WHAT THEY NEEDED, AND GOT RID OF WHAT THEY DIDN’T
Derick Brassard was never going to be a Penguin past the
trade deadline, it was simply not working out in Pittsburgh. The Penguins had
acquired him at the last trade deadline at an attempt to go all in for the
Stanley Cup, paying the Senators a sizable haul to get him, but it was never a
fit from the start. Combining all of his regular season and playoff games as a
Penguin, Brassard scored 27 points in 66 games.
Riley Sheahan was also acquired last season by the Penguins
from the Detroit Red Wings as a way to strengthen their center depth. It
actually worked out alright for most of last season, but this season he’s been
a ghost on the ice at times. With nine points in 49 games for the $2.1M he was
making, the Penguins needed an improvement.
In acquiring Jared McCann and Nick Bjugstad, the Penguins
get the upgrade to their bottom six forwards that they desperately coveted. The
26 year old Bjugstad has five goals and seven assists in 32 games and is signed
through 2021, carrying a contract with an average cap hit of $4.1M. Though
Bjugstad is in the midst of a down season after scoring 49 points the year
before, the Penguins are hoping for a rebound season along with the physicality
he’ll bring to the lineup at 6’6. If this doesn’t work out either, that cap hit
is going to hurt badly. Having Florida retain a bit of his salary for the next
two seasons would’ve worked in Pittsburgh’s favor, especially considering the
other assets Pittsburgh added onto the deal.
The real gem of this deal for Pittsburgh however is 22 year
old Jared McCann. McCann has eight goals and 10 assists in 46 contests with
Florida, but still has plenty of potential as a former late first round pick
and will benefit from a change of scenery to a Cup contending team. McCann’s
current contract is through 2020 and pays him an average of $1.25 million per
season. With the Penguins prospect cupboard almost completely bare and the core
getting older, getting youth with some more upside on the roster is crucial to
the competitive future of the team beyond this season as well.
The Penguins currently hold a tiebreaker over the Washington
Capitals for second place in the Metropolitan division with 60 points, and
trail the New York Islanders by three for the division lead. Playoffs have been
all but certainty all season, but the struggle for positioning within the
division is getting closer and closer.
With their cap space all but gone and not much more dead
money to move around without affecting the roster, the Penguins could be about
done aside from some tinkering around the edges before the trade deadline. They’re
a deep team all around, and they’re ready for another run at the Stanley Cup.
PENGUINS TRADE GRADE: B+
FLORIDA PANTHERS
STILL HAVE A LOT OF WORK TO DO
This trade is much fascinating to look at from the Florida
Panthers perspective. Along with acquiring three draft picks, the Panthers
picked up two trade deadline rentals despite being 11 points out of a playoff
spot at the moment. It’s highly doubtful that they’re loading up to make a push
at the playoffs, but they’re not giving up on this season yet either.
Florida’s trade grade for this move entirely depends on what
they do with both Brassard and Sheahan. The most obvious thing they can do is
flip both of them at the trade deadline, but that probably will take some time
to work out a deal. In the meantime, they will presumably see what they have in
Brassard and see if he fits into the lineup. But what’s the scenario that they
do end up keeping him? Even if he does fit the team and plays well, that should
be incentive to move him at his highest value.
In moving Jared McCann and Nick Bjugstad, the Panthers free
up long term salary commitments in order to make more moves at the trade
deadline but more importantly in the coming offseason. The Panthers are now
projected to have around $21M in cap space going into the offseason, which
would leave plenty of room to land some of the big fish that are going to be
available on July 1st.
A rumor that has floated around recently is that the Florida
Panthers are going to be big players for Artemi Panarin AND Sergei Bobrovsky in
free agency this summer, and if that’s the case, they just cleared off over $5M
to work with in the next offseason to get those deals done. General manager
Dale Tallon said as much in his conference addressing the move.
This trade for Florida is the first step taken before
several other crucial moves. The purpose of the move is to get more flexibility
in the next offseason, and likely to flip Brassard and Sheahan into some draft
assets to really load up the team for a few years down the road. There’s still
plenty that can go wrong here, the most obvious being that Panarin and
Bobrovsky just don’t sign there. Even still, there are plenty of other free
agents for them to go after, but this was quite a strange way to go about their
business. How they use the cap space from this deal will determine how it helps
the team.
PANTHERS TRADE GRADE: C+
TRADE WINNER:
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS
In terms of accomplishing a goal, the Penguins win this
trade. They get the bottom six upgrade that they needed for the home stretch
and playoff run, along with acquiring some youth in McCann for the future. The
Panthers have plenty of other moves to make before the full vision of this deal
is realized and maybe they turn this into something beneficial, but if they
don’t then this trade is just a complete mess.
The Panthers have plenty of other moves to make before the
full vision of this deal is realized and maybe they turn this into something
beneficial, but if they don’t then this trade is just a complete mess. A lot
can go right, but a lot can also go wrong. It can still work out, but there
were likely more efficient ways that they could’ve gotten what they wanted.
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