Cape Breton Post

How expansion is throwing wrench into the NHL trade deadline

- BY JONAS SIEGEL THE CANADIAN PRESS

Members of the Calgary Flames’ front office have all been asking general manager Brad Treliving how expansion will affect the NHL trade deadline.

His answer: “It adds another layer” to an already complicate­d process.

The Las Vegas Golden Knights won’t play their first game for another seven months, but their presence is already causing disruption to today’s trade deadline. Clubs across the league have to consider the June 20 expansion draft when it comes to adding or subtractin­g players before today’s 3 p.m. ET deadline.

Vegas choose 30 players, including at least 14 forwards, nine defencemen and three goaltender­s at the draft.

“I don’t think it’s going to necessaril­y stop moves, but I think it has an impact and I think it’s going to make it a little bit stickier,” Treliving said in an interview with the Canadian Press. “I think there’s going to be deals that potentiall­y could’ve gotten done or may have gotten done in another situation that may not get done because of the expansion implicatio­n.”

It’s the protection list for the expansion draft that really throws a wrench into the process. Teams can either protect seven forwards, three defencemen and one goaltender on June 17 or eight skaters and one goaltender.

That makes trading for a player with term on his contract more complex, as teams need to consider loss of assets — draft picks, prospects etc. — but also the possibilit­y of losing an unprotecte­d player in the expansion draft as a result of the trade.

Said Treliving: “It’s going to impact what you do in your protection list one way or another because either you’re just bringing this guy and you’re going to expose him — so now the assets you gave up are gone (and) the player could be gone — or is he an upgrade on somebody you would’ve protected otherwise and that person’s out?”

Treliving’s prediction of a largely rental-driven market has borne fruit with expiring contracts — highlighte­d by Ben Bishop and Kevin Shattenkir­k — dominating the early shuffling.

Blockbuste­r trades might have to wait until the summer.

Take Matt Duchene for instance, the speedy Colorado Avalanche forward with two years left on his contract (US$6 million cap hit) who’s reportedly available.

Any team that trades for the 26-year-old would have to pay a hefty price in assets and potentiall­y a player to expansion whom they might have kept otherwise.

“We’re all dealing with this,” Blue Jackets president John Davidson told the Columbus Post-Dispatch. “So when you make deals, you have to look at who now is going to be exposed, who’s not, and are we going to pick a different format for protection.

“We’d like to do things, for sure,” he added. “But not at the expense for two months as a rental. Not at the expense of pushing one more guy out there, exposed, this summer. With the prices being asked, it doesn’t make sense.”

Unlike the last expansion draft, which happened in 2000 with the Blue Jackets and Minnesota Wild joining the league, there’s a salary cap to consider this time around.

The crunch of the cap already complicate­s movement at the deadline as do the standings with only a handful of clubs (and thus trading partners) truly out of the playoff mix. That leads to what Treliving calls a “deadline deadline,” where teams on the playoff bubble wait as long as possible to decide if they’re in or out, complicati­ng the market for buyers.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this November 2016 file photo, the Golden Knights’ team name is displayed on a screen during an event to unveil the name of Las Vegas’ National Hockey League franchise in Las Vegas.
AP PHOTO In this November 2016 file photo, the Golden Knights’ team name is displayed on a screen during an event to unveil the name of Las Vegas’ National Hockey League franchise in Las Vegas.

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