Orlando Sentinel

Acquiring forward Jeannot underscore­s aim for 1 more Cup

- By John Romano

TAMPA — No doubt about it, the cost of this Lightning trade was outrageous.

Yet for general manager Julien BriseBois, the price of doing nothing was far higher.

That’s the calculatio­n. That’s the dividing line between reckless and bold. BriseBois knew he was giving up more than he was getting back on paper, but he was willing to pay the additional freight that comes with chasing a Stanley Cup.

So he made a trade that was daring, audacious and, quite possibly, foolish. He gave up defenseman Cal Foote and five draft picks to acquire Tanner Jeannot, an undrafted forward with five goals in 56 games with Nashville this season.

BriseBois may be the only general manager in the NHL who would have made that trade this week, but that’s because he’s the only GM with a generation­al roster and an obligation to horde as many championsh­ips as possible before Tampa Bay’s window slams shut.

Even so, the easier path would have been to do nothing. If he said the cost was too high, the salary cap was too tight or that the draft cupboard already had been picked bare, no one would have argued with him.

Instead, he placed a bet on his guys. He bet that Steven Stamkos, Victor Hedman, Nikita Kucherov, Andrei Vasilevski­y, Brayden Point and the rest of the Lightning core still have another year or two or three of championsh­ip hockey with the right pieces surroundin­g them.

“My job, my responsibi­lity as the custodian for this group, is to sometimes take risks to maximize our potential return on this era,” BriseBois said Monday morning. “And that’s what I did [Sunday] night. We’re taking a risk. A calculated risk.

“The reality at the trade deadline is you’re going to have to overpay. That’s how you get the player.”

The official tally — third-, fourth- and fifth-round picks in 2023, a secondroun­der in 2024 and a firstround­er in 2025 — sounds like a king’s ransom for a player who does not have a royal pedigree.

And it means the Lightning now have dealt seven first-round picks and four second-round picks in the past five years. Not to mention, they have traded the players they drafted in the first round in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017 and 2019, including Foote. That’s more than a decade’s worth of top prospects that have been jettisoned in the name of winning today.

And you know what? It’s been worth it, so far.

The Lightning have won 84 postseason games since 2015. The next-closest franchise has won 45. That’s the kind of domination that books and documentar­ies are made of. Tampa Bay has appeared in six conference finals, four Cup finals and won it all twice.

So the thought that BriseBois is looking at the 2023 version of the Lightning and sees a pathway to another championsh­ip should be exhilarati­ng no matter what the future cost.

The Lightning changed their fortunes forever when they started investing in players such as Pat Maroon, Kevin Shattenkir­k, Barclay Goodrow and Blake Coleman — players who might not challenge for end-ofyear awards but who made the Lightning a nasty and desperate team come playoff time.

And that’s what BriseBois sees in Jeannot.

Put him on the third line with Nick Paul and Ross Colton, and the Lightning may have a group that could approximat­e the grit that the Yanni Gourde, Coleman and Goodrow line once had.

The Lightning do not need Jeannot to score. They’ve got enough of that. He’s here to shut down the top lines of playoff opponents by any means necessary.

“He’s hard to play against. He plays with pace, finishes checks often and hard. He can defend. He manages the puck well; he brings his teammates into the fight,” BriseBois said. “By all accounts he’s an all-around great teammate. He’s the type of player who helps you win when it gets hard.”

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