Edmonton Journal

WHAT’S ON TRADE MENU FOR CANADIAN CLUBS?

Breaking down the best- and worst-case scenarios for all seven northern franchises

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/Michael_Traikos

Let the trades begin.

There’s less than a week before the NHL trade deadline, but if history proves correct, most of the activity will occur before Feb. 26.

With two Canadian teams entrenched in a playoff spot, another on the bubble and three others having already put up the “For Sale” signs, this could be a busy period.

Here is a look at what the seven Canadian teams might, or might not, do in the next week (club records heading into Tuesday’s games):

CALGARY FLAMES

Record: 30-21-9, 10th place in West, two points back of wild card

UFAs: Matt Stajan, Kris Versteeg, Matt Bartkowski

What needs to happen: The Flames need to ensure they get into the playoffs, which could be tricky with goalie Mike Smith battling a lower-body injury and the team struggling for offence.

What shouldn’t happen: Calgary shouldn’t equate the eventual return of winger Kris Versteeg as the same as a trade-deadline acquisitio­n. He’s 31 and is only good for 10 to 15 goals when healthy.

Best-case scenario: As long as he doesn’t cost a first-rounder, which Calgary doesn’t have, Rangers winger Michael Grabner (25 goals) would give Calgary more offence than minor-league call-up Morgan Klimchuk.

Worst-case scenario: Stand pat and miss the playoffs. With Edmonton and Vancouver out of contention, this is Calgary’s chance to make some noise before those teams rebound.

EDMONTON OILERS

Record: 24-30-4, 13th place in West, 19 points back of wild card

UFAs: Patrick Maroon, Mark Letestu, Mike Cammalleri

What needs to happen: The Oilers need to fix what went wrong this season by turning the page on some of their slower, pasttheir-prime veterans and finding younger, faster depth players to take their place.

What shouldn’t happen: A quick fix is needed to get the Oilers back on track, but not at the expense of trading Jesse Puljujarvi, Kailer Yamamoto or this year’s first-round pick.

Best-case scenario: Instead of trading the 29-year-old Maroon, who has 14 goals and 30 points this season, the team re-signs him to a cap-friendly contract.

Worst-case scenario: Someone calls asking about Ryan NugentHopk­ins … and GM Peter Chiarelli doesn’t hang up the phone.

MONTREAL CANADIENS

Record: 22-29-7, 14th place in East, 13 points back of wild card

UFAs: Tomas Plekanec, Ales Hemsky, Antti Niemi

What needs to happen: The Habs need a No. 1 centre, but they aren’t going to be able to trade for one at the deadline, unless someone (Columbus?) is willing to part with a young centre (Pierre-Luc Dubois?) in exchange for Max Pacioretty.

What shouldn’t happen: He’s taken a step back this year, but trading Alex Galchenyuk for the sake of moving him would be another mistake given his age (24) and scoring history (30 goals in 2015-16).

Best-case scenario: Habs use their US$7-million in cap space to take on bad contracts in exchange for prospects and picks. Worst-case scenario: The team comes out of the deadline with the only move being Niemi for a conditiona­l pick.

OTTAWA SENATORS

Record: 21-28-9, 15th place in East, 13 points back of wild card

UFAs: Magnus Paajarvi, Johnny Oduya, Chris Wideman

What needs to happen: The Senators, who have already traded Dion Phaneuf, need to decide if they are rebuilding or re-tooling. That means figuring out if Erik Karlsson fits into their long-term plans.

What shouldn’t happen: Blowing it up now. While the Senators need to make changes, the time for trading Karlsson and other non-rentals is likely easier in the summer, when there are more suitors available.

Best-case scenario: Trade Karlsson to the Tampa Bay Lightning for defenceman Mikhail Sergachev, forward prospect Boris Katchouk, as well as the 2018 first-round pick.

Worst-case scenario: Trade Mike Hoffman, a 28-year-old who has the speed and skill to become a 40-goal scorer on a better team.

TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS

Record: 36-20-5, third place in Atlantic Division

UFAs: Tyler Bozak, Leo Komarov, James van Riemsdyk

What needs to happen: The Leafs need a fourth-line centre who can play up in the lineup in case of an injury, as well as an experience­d right-shot defenceman capable of playing in the top-two pairings if necessary.

What shouldn’t happen: The Leafs should not trade van Riemsdyk or any of their pending UFAs, even if it means they lose these players for nothing on July 1.

Best-case scenario: Take the plunge and acquire defenceman Mike Green and centre Luke Glendening, a penalty-kill specialist who has played for Babcock.

Worst-case scenario: The Leafs do nothing and, just before the playoffs start, lose Jake Gardiner and Nazem Kadri to injuries.

VANCOUVER CANUCKS

Record: 23-30-6, 14th place in West, 19 points back of wild card

UFAs: Henrik and Daniel Sedin, Thomas Vanek, Nic Dowd

What needs to happen: The Canucks effectivel­y took Erik Gudbranson off the market by signing the big blue-liner to a three-year, US$12-million contract. But the team is still in the early stages of a rebuild and in need of picks and prospects.

What shouldn’t happen: Henrik and Daniel Sedin won’t be moved, according to management. But extending Vanek just because he is putting up respectabl­e numbers next to Brock Boeser would be a long-term error.

Best-case scenario: Vanek, who was traded at last year’s deadline for a third-round pick and a prospect, goes to a contender for a similar bounty.

Worst-case scenario: The team does nothing and then re-signs Vanek and the Sedins.

WINNIPEG JETS

Record: 35-15-9, second in Central Division

UFAs: Shawn Matthias, Matt Hendricks, Toby Enstrom and Michael Hutchinson

What needs to happen: Nothing, really. The Jets are battling Nashville for first place in the Central and recently got back Mark Scheifele from injury and are expected to get Adam Lowry back sometime next month.

What shouldn’t happen: GM Kevin Cheveldayo­ff has typically been quiet at this time of year, but he’s also never had a legitimate Stanley Cup contender before. The lure of a championsh­ip could force him into making a move he regrets.

Best-case scenario: Jets acquire Mike Hoffman from the Senators, giving them more speed and even more depth on offence.

Worst-case scenario: After years of standing pat, the Jets decide to go all-in and part ways with Jack Roslovic or Kyle Connor for a gritty, depth forward.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES/FILES ?? Ottawa Senators forward Mike Hoffman, left, and New York Rangers counterpar­t Michael Grabner are two players being mentioned in NHL trade rumours with less than a week to go to the deadline. Both can score and are on teams expected to miss the playoffs.
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES/FILES Ottawa Senators forward Mike Hoffman, left, and New York Rangers counterpar­t Michael Grabner are two players being mentioned in NHL trade rumours with less than a week to go to the deadline. Both can score and are on teams expected to miss the playoffs.
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