Journal Pioneer

Draft tensions

NHL GMs anxiously prepare for ‘unknown’ of expansion

- BY JONAS SIEGEL

The last time the NHL had an expansion draft, Steve Yzerman was coming off a Selke trophy-winning season as captain of the Detroit Red Wings. Seventeen years have passed, and it appears general managers are still determinin­g how to best protect their rosters, even as a key deadline for the Vegas Golden Knights draft draws near. Though Yzerman, now the GM of the Tampa Bay Lightning, made a bold strike Thursday when he sent promising 23-year-old Jonathan Drouin to Montreal, he thought caution was mostly ruling the day.

“The league has been pretty quiet,” Yzerman said.

Teams have until today at 5 p.m. Atlantic to submit a list of players protected from exposure to the Golden Knights – either seven forwards, three defencemen and one goaltender or eight skaters and a goalie.

Fear of losing a valuable asset for nothing has some searching out trade options.

“We have an idea of who we’re going to protect, but I’m not going to let anybody know what those players are because we’re still talking to different teams and we still might make a move,” Canucks GM Jim Benning said.

“Nothing’s set in stone until Saturday at 5 o’clock Eastern when we have to submit the list.”

In trading away Drouin, the Lightning opened up one more space on their protection list, which might mean 24-year-old centre Vladislav Namestniko­v will remain in Tampa.

“It’s a part of the reason we like this trade,” Yzerman said of the deal, which netted Mikhail Sergachev, a defensive prospect with high upside and is exempt from exposure to Vegas.

“We were able to acquire a player that we do not have to protect and it gives us a little more clarity there.”

Still, wariness lingers for the domino effect of trading a player who might be picked by Vegas simply to gain an asset. “The problem in that is you’re going to lost one player no matter what right,” Benning said.

“So if you have five defencemen, say, and you can only protect three – so you trade one defenceman off for a draft pick or young assets and then you’re going to lose another defenceman to Las Vegas and then all of a sudden, you’re two D down, you know what I mean?

“So you’re better off just taking your lumps, know you’re going to lose a player and just move on.”

Such a reality confronts squads with deep defence cores like Minnesota and Anaheim. With too many quality defenders to protect, both have been reportedly seeking trades.

While scooping up a potential star in Drouin, the Canadiens will likely lose a better asset to Vegas – perhaps Paul Byron or Charles Hudon – in addition to Sergachev and a conditiona­l second rounder in 2018.

“We gave up a lot but I’m convinced we got back a big piece,” Habs GM Marc Bergevin said.

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