The Province

WHAT’S THE DEAL?

As the NHL trade deadline fast approaches, here’s a look at what the seven Canadian clubs should — or shouldn’t do — come Feb. 25

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS mtraikos@postmedia.com

There is less than one week remaining until the NHL’s trade deadline.

The only question is which Canadian teams are buying, which are selling and which are simply kicking tires and looking for deals?

As of Tuesday morning, three of the seven teams (Calgary, Toronto and Winnipeg) were locked into playoff spots, two were on the bubble (Montreal and Vancouver), and two others (Edmonton and Ottawa) were completely out of it. Yet, their place in the standings might not reflect their intentions heading into the Feb. 25 cutoff. With the deadline fast approachin­g, here is what each team should — and should not — do.

BUYERS TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS

Record: 36-19-3, 3rd in Atlantic Division Moveable pieces: First-round pick in 2020, prospects Jeremy Bracco (61st overall, 2015), Timothy Liljegren (17th, ’17), Rasmus Sandin (29th, ’18)

Potential targets: Size up front and depth defencemen

What should happen: The Leafs did their heavy lifting a couple of weeks ago by sending a first-round pick and a pair of prospects to the Kings for defenceman Jake Muzzin. But with another first-round matchup against the Bruins looming, they are not done yet. This is the final year of having Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner on entry-level salaries, something that Toronto needs to take

advantage of by adding more heft and depth (Rangers’ Adam McQuaid?) to the back end.

What shouldn’t happen: For all the talk about the need to play heavier, the Leafs don’t need to get Philadelph­ia’s Wayne Simmonds or Kevin Hayes of the Rangers. The Leafs forwards are who they are: Fast, skilled and small. That’s fine. One player at the trade deadline isn’t going to change that. And with Jake Gardiner and Ron Hainsey heading to free agency in the summer — and Muzzin’s contract expiring in 2020 — the team might want to hold on to Sandin and Liljegren.

WINNIPEG JETS

Record: 36-19-4, 1st in Central Division Moveable pieces: First-round pick in 2019, Kristian Vesalainen, prospects Logan Stanley (18th overall, 2016), Dylan Samberg (43rd, ’17). Potential targets:

No. 2 centre What should

happen: The Jets, who gave up a first-round pick to acquire Paul Stastny at last year’s deadline, need to do it again in order to help Patrik Laine out of his funk. Laine has only four goals since the start of December — a big reason could be that he doesn’t have a centre to get him the puck. Matt Duchene is at the top of the list, but Florida’s Derick Brassard could be a very good Plan B.

What shouldn’t happen: Kevin Cheveldayo­ff cannot sit on his hands and do nothing. Yes, the Jets GM built this team by largely being patient and letting things play out. But with Laine, Kyle Connor and Jacob Trouba all requiring new deals in the summer, the window on winning has never been bigger. In order to take that final step, the team needs to sacrifice a bit of the future for the present.

SELLERS

EDMONTON OILERS

Record: 24-29-5, 14th in the Western Conference Moveable pieces: Jesse Puljujarvi, Alex Chiasson, Zack Kassian, Sam Gagner Potential targets: A winger to play with Connor McDavid and young defencemen. What should happen:

The Oilers traded goalie Cam Talbot last week, but the fire sale has just begun. The team needs to shed salaries and get better at the same time. It’s a heck of a challenge for a team with so many immovable contracts. While Puljujarvi’s name has been out there as trade bait, I’d keep him and instead try to get as much as possible for Chiasson — would Washington take him back for Andre Burakovsky?

— who’s the only pending UFA actually having a good year (17 goals).

What shouldn’t happen: Do. Not. Trade. Puljujarvi. Don’t do it. For one, you’re selling low on a player who has four goals and nine points in 46 games. Secondly, he’s only 20. The Coyotes gave up too early on Dylan Strome, who has scored 35 points in36 games since arriving in Chicago. And as much as Puljujarvi has struggled, you know it’s only a matter of time before the fourth-overall pick in 2016 finds his game. When he does, it better be as an Oiler.

OTTAWA SENATORS

Record: 22-32-5, 16th in the Eastern Conference Moveable pieces: Matt Duchene, Mark Stone, Ryan Dzingel, Cody Ceci Potential targets:

First-round picks and prospects What should

happen: Barring a last-minute signing, the Senators are probably going to have to move on from Duchene and Stone, who are both pending UFAs. But the team should try to keep Dzingel, who is 26 years old and has already set a career high with 44 points. After all, the kids coming up need some kind of veteran to lean on during what looks like a long and painful rebuild. What shouldn’t happen:

The Senators are without a first-round pick, having traded it to Colorado a year ago in exchange for Duchene. But it doesn’t mean the team has to necessaril­y recoup that pick in trades for Duchene and Stone. If the Sens trust its pro-scouting department — the same group that advised Ottawa to acquire Josh Norris, Rudolfs Balcers and Dylan DeMelo in the Erik Karlsson trade — it could potentiall­y speed up the rebuilding process with A-level prospects who are a bit older and further along in their developmen­t.

WINDOW SHOPPERS MONTREAL CANADIENS

Record: 31-21-7, 8th in Western Conference Moveable pieces:

Second-round pick, prospects Noah Juulsen (26th overall, 2015), Josh Brook (56th, ’17) Potential targets: Bottom-six forwards, third-pairing defencemen What should

happen: The recent acquisitio­ns of Nate Thompson, Dale Weise and Christian Folin are exactly the sort of depth deals that Montreal should continue making. With two picks in the second round (their own and one that belonged to the Blue Jackets), the Canadiens have the ammo to make another trade that could bolster the third line, such as Detroit’s Gustav Nyquist or New Jersey’s Marcus Johansson.

What shouldn’t happen: GM Marc Bergevin has repeatedly said he will not mortgage the future for shortterm gains, but now that the team is on the bubble of missing the playoffs — as of Tuesday morning, Montreal was one point ahead of Carolina for the final wild-card spot — will his mind change? We hope not. Even with Carey Price capable of stealing a round or two, the Canadiens are ahead of schedule and need to keep an eye on where they might be two or three years from now.

CALGARY FLAMES

Record: 36-16-7, 1st in Pacific Division Moveable pieces: First-round pick, prospects Dillon Dube (56th overall, 2016), Adam Ruzicka (109th, ’17) Potential targets:

Experience­d defencemen What should

happen: Nothing. The Flames have the best record in the Western Conference for a good reason. Why mess with that? And if injured winger James Neal somehow regains his scoring touch in time for the playoffs — he has five goals in 55 games — it could have the same impact as acquiring a top-six forward, such as Rangers’ Mats Zuccarello at the deadline. What shouldn’t happen: The Flames, who had been one of the hottest teams in January, have now lost five of eight coming out of the all-star break. There are concerns the third defence pair is too young and inexperien­ced, but is going after Ottawa’s Cody Ceci or New Jersey’s Ben Lovejoy really a better alternativ­e? I’d think not. Plus, after waiting until the fourth round to make a pick in last year’s draft, the team needs to hang on to its picks this time around.

VANCOUVER CANUCKS

Record: 26-27-7, 11th in Western Conference Moveable pieces: Alexander Edler, Jake Virtanen, prospects Olli Juolevi (5th overall, 2016), Jonathan Dahlen (42nd, ’16) Potential targets: Healthy defencemen What should

happen: GM Jim Benning said last week that he won’t trade the team’s first-round pick because Vancouver is hosting this year’s draft. He also said that while Elias Pettersson, Brock Boeser and the other young players would certainly benefit from playing in the postseason, being in a playoff hunt could be just as valuable. In other words, what you see is likely what you’ll get.

What shouldn’t happen: Asof Tuesday morning, the Canucks were only one point out of the final wildcard spot. With Edler (concussion) and Chris Tanev (ankle) on the mend, there might be an inclinatio­n to upgrade the back end (Anaheim’s Cam Fowler or Florida’s Mark Pysyk are options) for the sake of sneaking in. But with Calgary, Winnipeg or San Jose waiting in the first round, is a potential fourgame sweep really worth giving up a top-end prospect?

 ??  ?? From top: The Oilers should look into trading Alex Chiasson; Edmonton should hold on to struggling Jesse Puljujarvi; and should the Sens elect to trade Mark Stone, teams like the Jets would be willing to pay a premium to add his services.
From top: The Oilers should look into trading Alex Chiasson; Edmonton should hold on to struggling Jesse Puljujarvi; and should the Sens elect to trade Mark Stone, teams like the Jets would be willing to pay a premium to add his services.
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 ??  ?? From top: Centre Matt Duchene’s days with the Senators could be numbered; could the Canadiens add some depth scoring in the form of Red Wings’ Gustav Nyquist?; and rugged Rangers defenceman Adam McQuaid would bring much-needed toughness to the Leafs.
From top: Centre Matt Duchene’s days with the Senators could be numbered; could the Canadiens add some depth scoring in the form of Red Wings’ Gustav Nyquist?; and rugged Rangers defenceman Adam McQuaid would bring much-needed toughness to the Leafs.
 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Ducks defenceman Cam Fowler would be an option if the Canucks seek to upgrade their blue line at the trade deadline.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Ducks defenceman Cam Fowler would be an option if the Canucks seek to upgrade their blue line at the trade deadline.
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