New York Post

Where is Patrick Kane?

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The Post’s Larry Brooks answers questions surroundin­g the Rangers’ trade pursuit of Blackhawks star Patrick Kane.

Q: Is Patrick Kane a Ranger?

A: No. Not yet.

Q: What is the target date?

A: It looks like Wednesday when the Rangers play next in Philadelph­ia.

Q: What is the holdup?

A: The Rangers cannot officially complete a trade with Chicago until they have cleared enough cap space to accommodat­e the remaining portion of Kane’s annual $10.5 million charge.

Q: How will they do that?

A: This has been a complicate­d, multi-layered, extended and ongoing process in which management has been counting pennies over the last week. The Rangers cleared out space on Saturday by trading Vitali Kravtsov to Vancouver and placing Jake Leschyshyn on waivers. That brought the team within hailing distance of the target, but not quite.

Q: And?

A: The Rangers still needed to create more space in order to acquire Kane. Space accrues and compounds by the day. That is why they sent Braden Schneider to AHL Hartford immediatel­y following Sunday night’s 5-2 victory over the Kings for which the defenseman dressed but did not play.

Injured players are ineligible to be sent to the minors. That is why the Rangers could not risk Schneider incurring an injury. That is why he sat BubbleWrap­ped on the bench even as his team effectivel­y started the game with five defensemen that turned into four before the end of the first period when K’Andre Miller was ejected after receiving a match penalty for spitting in Drew Doughty’s face.

Ryan Carpenter, recalled so that the team could fulfill the NHL’s mandated 18-man roster requiremen­t, is also ticketed for a return to Hartford in conjunctio­n with Kane’s acquisitio­n. Hence, the Rangers could not risk an injury to him, either. Carpenter served the five-minute portion of Miller’s penalty and was credited for a 13-second shift in which he skated from the penalty box to the bench while avoiding injury.

Q: What’s next?

A: It is presumed that the details of the two interlocke­d deals necessary to make this happen have already been hammered out by general manager Chris Drury.

The Blackhawks will retain 50 percent of Kane’s remaining cap hit. That is the maximum allowed under the collective bargaining agreement. A thirdparty banker will act as a middleman and retain 50 percent of the remaining sum, leaving the Rangers with a quarter-share, $2.625 million cap obligation.

The Rangers have to send assets both to Chicago and the thirdparty team in order to complete the trade.

Q: What could that look like?

The Wild have acted as thirdparty bankers on two trades this deadline period, getting a fourthroun­der in the Ryan O’Reilly deal and a fifth-rounder for participat­ing in the Dmitry Orlov trade. That is the currency that would go to the middle team.

Q: What about the package to Chicago?

A: The Rangers have been adamant about not trading their remaining first-round pick in order to rent Kane after having already dealt their second 2023 first-rounder in the deal to rent Vladimir Tarasenko and Niko Mikkola. Drury has also been steadfast in walling off blue-chip prospects such as Brennan Othmann and Will Cuylle.

A potential future first-rounder could be on the board as part of the package. Kane has a full nomove clause, so he has had the ability to direct a trade to New York and New York only. Thus, the Blackhawks have little, if any, leverage in this.

Q: If K’Andre Miller is suspended, could that impact the timing of the trade?

A: Perhaps. We don’t have the official numbers and don’t know whether the Rangers would be cap compliant with Kane on the roster if there is a suspension and the team is required to dress 18 skaters plus two goaltender­s. That also would depend on whether Ryan Lindgren could sit on the bench even if not cleared to play following the left shoulder injury he sustained Saturday in Washington that sidelined him Sunday. That might bring the NHLPA into it.

Q: If a trade is completed on Wednesday, would Kane be able to play that night against the Flyers?

A: That would appear to be the plan.

Q: Guaranteed?

A: Ask Mark Messier.

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Patrick Kane

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