National Post

NHL TRADE RECAP

WHO WENT WHERE AND WHO SAT STILL.

- Mi Tr chael a i ko s mtraikos@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/ Michael_ Traikos

The road to the Stanley Cup is going through Tampa Bay — or is it Winnipeg, or Pittsburgh? Or Vegas, Boston or Nashville, or maybe San Jose?

It’s tough to say after the significan­t improvemen­ts the NHL’s top contenders made before Monday’s NHL trade deadline. Most teams in contention got better. Almost every player that was rumoured to be on the move is now wearing a different jersey.

While Erik Karlsson remains an Ottawa Senator and Max Pacioretty will finish the season as the captain of the Montreal Canadiens, this was one of the busier trade deadlines in terms of sheer impact. There were 16 trades involving 31 players and 18 draft picks. Some were short- term rentals. Some deals included players who had years remaining on their contracts. Some, like the St. Louis Blues’ Paul Stastny and Chicago Blackhawks’ Ryan Hartman, were surprises.

It was hard to find a team that wasn’t going for it. General managers parted with first-round picks like Oprah Winfrey giving out automobile­s. Almost every team got one.

With six weeks to go to the playoffs, the balance of power hasn’t really shifted. If anything, the gap between the contenders and the pretenders has widened.

Tampa Bay, which made the biggest splash in trading for Ryan McDonagh and J.T. Miller, still looks like the team to beat — but the first-place Lightning were always the team to beat regardless of what they did or did not do on Monday.

Getting McDonagh and Miller puts the Lightning in very good position — for both this season and next, considerin­g neither is a rental player.

The Washington Capitals reportedly won last year’s trade deadline when they acquired defenceman Kevin Shattenkir­k, but at the end of the playoffs, it was the Pittsburgh Penguins hoisting their second straight Cup after picking up depth defenceman Ron Hainsey for a second-round pick and a minor-league prospect.

That’s usually the way it goes at this time of year. It’s the little trades that tend to have the biggest impacts. Justin Schultz was proof of that in 2016, as were Antoine Vermette in 2015, Marian Gaborik in 2014 and Michal Handzus in 2013.

If that’s the case, maybe Toronto’s acquisitio­n of depth centre Tomas Plekanec turns out to be the steal of the year — or perhaps Dallas and Philadelph­ia made the right moves in doing absolutely nothing on Monday.

Then again, it’s hard to give a failing grade to the teams that mortgaged their future and tried to buy a ticket to the Stanley Cup final.

The Penguins set the tone days before the deadline when they acquired Derick Brassard to give them the best centre corps in the NHL. The Bruins then addressed their need for secondary scoring by trading for Rick Nash and Tommy Wingels. From there, it was like watching a high-stakes poker game, with each and every team raising the ante.

San Jose rolled the dice on Evander Kane, giving up two picks, including a conditiona­l 2019 firstround selection, and a prospect.

The Nashville Predators pried 23- year- old Hartman out of Chicago and a fifth- round pick for a king’s ransom — sending back forward Victor Ejdsell, a first- round pick and a fourth-round pick.

The Vegas Golden Knights, which had been playing with house money all year, pushed in their chips and gave to Detroit their 2018 first-round pick, a 2019 second-round pick that originally belonged to the New York Islanders and Vegas’ 2021 third- round pick for underachie­ving winger Tomas Tatar.

Even Winnipeg, which in the past has hit the snooze button on trade deadline, decided to go allin and give up forward Erik Foley and two draft picks for Stastny, a 32- year- old rental player with 12 goals this season in 63 games. But he is a six-time 20-goal scorer.

So who put themselves in the best position to win the Cup? Well, practicall­y everyone.

From the East, it’s hard not to like Tampa Bay. The team was already filled with all-stars, including Nikita Kucherov, Steven Stamkos, Brayden Point, Victor Hedman and goalie Andrei Vasilevski­y. While they didn’t land Karlsson, acquiring McDonagh and Miller might make even more sense.

It didn’t come cheap. The Lightning parted with forward Vladislav Namestniko­v, a couple of top-end prospects in Brett Howden and Libor Hajek, as well as a first-round pick and a conditiona­l secondroun­d pick. But McDonagh gives the Lightning a top- four defence corps that rivals Nashville’s as the best in the NHL, while Miller, a winger, could end up becoming a better two-way fit than the one-dimensiona­l Namestniko­v.

In the West, things are a bit more open with only three points separating the top three teams.

At the same time, Winnipeg sent a pretty big statement that it plans on avoiding another first- round sweep with the acquisitio­n of Stastny. Giving up a first-round pick and more for another top- six forward might have seemed unnecessar­y for a team that already has Blake Wheeler ( 72 points), Patrik Laine ( 51), Mark Scheifele ( 49), Nikolaj Ehlers (46) and Kyle Connor (40). But excess was the name of the game at this year’s deadline.

The again, don’t sleep on Toronto and Dallas. They didn’t do much, but you don’t always have to to win a Cup.

 ??  ??
 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Newly acquired centre Tomas Plekanec — shown Monday night in Tampa Bay as he suited up with the Maple Leafs for the first time — just may be the steal of the year, writes Michael Traikos.
CHRIS O’MEARA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Newly acquired centre Tomas Plekanec — shown Monday night in Tampa Bay as he suited up with the Maple Leafs for the first time — just may be the steal of the year, writes Michael Traikos.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada