USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Carolina rescued by bold deals

- Jimmy Hascup and Mike Brehm

The Hurricanes entered the NHL trade deadline bruised and battered and looking for a lifeline.

They finished the day with a message to the rest of the league that they are ready to be Stanley Cup contenders after pulling off some of the most important trades of the frenzied period.

Carolina began the day by prying center Vincent Trocheck from the Panthers for forwards Erik Haula and Lucas Wallstrom plus prospects Chase Priskie and Eetu Luostarine­n. Trocheck (10 goals, 36 points) has had a down season but is only two years removed from a 31-goal, 75-point campaign. At 26 and signed through 2022, Trocheck gives the Hurricanes a formidable center trio along with Sebastian Aho and Jordan Staal.

General manager Don Waddell then acquired defenseman Sami Vatanen, an unrestrict­ed free agent this offseason, from the Devils for prospects Janne Kuokkanen and Fredrik Claesson and a conditiona­l fourthroun­d pick. He finished the day by trading for defenseman Brady

Skjei, sending the Rangers a first-round pick. With Dougie Hamilton (fractured fibula) and Brett Pesce (upper body) out potentiall­y long term, these two moves were imperative if the Hurricanes, occupying the second wild-card spot, wanted to make a playoff push. Both are mobile blueliners who fit well with the Hurricanes’ up-tempo style.

The Hurricanes lost goalies Petr Mrazek and James Reimer to injuries in a game Saturday but did not address goaltendin­g.

Here are the rest of the winners and losers of the trade period.

Winners

Penguins: They lost Jake Guentzel before the All-Star break and have loaded up at forward since. Besides finding a winger for Sidney Crosby in Jason Zucker, they brought in Patrick Marleau, Conor Sheary and Evan Rodrigues on deadline day. Marleau’s experience will help and Sheary played on the Penguins’ back-to-back Stanley Cup teams.

Oilers: One can joke about GM Ken Holland reuniting with former Red Wings Mike Green (for a conditiona­l fourth) and Andreas Athanasiou (for Sam Gagner and two second-round picks), but the moves have logic, especially after he also added winger Tyler Ennis from the Senators for a fifth-round pick. Edmonton is second in the Pacific Division, and it has played the year without enough quality wingers. Athanasiou, a restricted free agent this offseason, has the speed and offensive skills to mesh with Connor McDavid. Ennis should slot on the third line, while Green will give the Oilers experience and a powerplay threat.

Islanders: Jean-Gabriel Pageau, with 24 goals, becomes the Islanders’ leading goal scorer. He will fit on the penalty kill that has had injuries to Casey Cizikas and Cal Clutterbuc­k. The Islanders gave up three draft picks (a first-rounder, second-rounder and potential third-rounder), but they have signed him to an extension for six years at a reasonable $5 million cap hit.

Losers

Blue Jackets: The Blue Jackets loaded up before last year’s deadline, though they lost their free agents during the summer. They are in the bottom five in the league in scoring and did nothing to improve that. Their acquisitio­n of Devin Shore (four goals, career-best 13 goals) won’t help.

Sam Gagner: Less than two days ago, Gagner was playing on a line with McDavid, the game’s most dynamic player. Now, he will join the NHL’s worst team. His tour around the league continues; Gagner has now played for the Oilers (twice), Coyotes, Flyers, Blue Jackets and Canucks since being drafted by Edmonton in 2007.

 ?? CODY GLENN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Vincent Trocheck will give the Hurricanes a dangerous 1-2-3 punch at center.
CODY GLENN/USA TODAY SPORTS Vincent Trocheck will give the Hurricanes a dangerous 1-2-3 punch at center.
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