Vancouver Sun

Flurry of trades expected with teams realizing they're out of NHL playoff race

- STEPHEN WHYNO

Last Friday's game between the Philadelph­ia Flyers and Washington Capitals had the potential to upend not only the playoff race in the Eastern Conference but the NHL trading market with the deadline coming up fast.

Despite the 5-2 Capitals win, Washington is now expected to sell after falling flat in a loss to Arizona two days later. The Flyers could do some deals because it is unexpected­ly in a playoff spot with less than six weeks to go in the regular season.

With many teams in limbo, the weekend provided some much-needed clarity around the league one year after the 2023 trade season featured a ton of bigname players changing places well before the deadline. Expect a flurry of activity before Friday's noon deadline.

“Everybody's kicking tires,” Coyotes general manager Bill Armstrong said. “I think there were some big guys that went early and everybody's trying to put some pieces together on their team that will help it and people are trying to look for the best value possible.”

There is value to be found at just about every position for Stanley Cup contenders looking for an upgrade.

Need a scoring winger? How about Pittsburgh's Jake Guentzel.

A No. 1 goaltender? Calgary's Jacob Markstrom is signed through 2026. A do-it-all fourth-line centre? Washington's Nic Dowd is under contract for two potential playoff runs. Defencemen? Philadelph­ia has three pending free agents in Sean Walker, Nick Seeler and Marc Staal.

“We're still open,” Flyers GM Daniel Briere said Friday night in Washington.

“There's been a lot of discussion­s. There's a lot going on. You've seen what's happened in the market. There's obviously a lot of defencemen that are gone now, so we're getting a lot of calls on our guys.”

Dallas last week got arguably the best defenceman available in acquiring Chris Tanev from the Flames and didn't have to give up a first-round pick. Calgary's Noah Hanifin could still be traded, along with Capitals veteran Joel Edmundson, among others.

What might start the dominoes falling? Pittsburgh lost at Calgary and Edmonton on back-to-back days, which could push GM Kyle Dubas closer to being a seller after he said their play would determine how he approaches the deadline.

While the Capitals and Penguins, and to some extent the St. Louis Blues, are among the recent champions looking to tweak their rosters, the list of those competing for the Cup this season include Toronto, Detroit, Vegas, Colorado, Dallas, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Vancouver, Boston, Florida and the New York Rangers.

They are expected to be the league's biggest buyers, looking for the right combinatio­n of rental players and those signed beyond this year.

“There's people calling on everything right now,” Armstrong said Sunday, pumping the brakes on the rental market because recent seasons have made his colleagues rethink the process. “People are understand­ing how important the draft is and probably more now just trying to hold on to their picks and not give up as much on the trade deadline.”

Teams worth watching include the Capitals, who may trade at least Edmundson and Anthony Mantha; New Jersey, which could decide the future of Tyler Toffoli; Anaheim, which may trade Adam Henrique and perhaps all-star Frank Vatrano; and the San Jose Sharks off-loading a handful of players in their lost season.

No team is more fascinatin­g than the Flyers, who are surprising­ly contending but are balancing winning now with accumulati­ng assets for years to come when they can try to win it all.

“I'd have to say it's a good problem to have because if the team doesn't play the way they have, we're not getting the attention from other teams about our players,” Briere said. “Everything's on the table, and we're trying to figure out what's best for the future.”

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES ?? Jake Guentzel might be available with the Pittsburgh faltering as Friday's NHL trade deadline approaches.
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES Jake Guentzel might be available with the Pittsburgh faltering as Friday's NHL trade deadline approaches.

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