Chicago Sun-Times

Hawks get Senators’ Zaitsev, 2 picks

- BY BEN POPE, STAFF REPORTER bpope@suntimes.com | @BenPopeCST

DALLAS — The Blackhawks added two draft picks and an active NHL player in exchange for nothing Wednesday, hours before their 4-3 victory against the Stars.

General manager Kyle Davidson’s first move of the trade-deadline period couldn’t have turned out much better.

Jettisoned in a salary dump by the Senators, overpaid veteran defenseman Nikita Zaitsev, 31, is headed to the Hawks. Zaitsev carries a $4.5 million salary-cap hit through the end of next season.

As a reward for taking him, the Hawks also received the Senators’ second-round pick in 2023 and fourth-round pick in 2026. The trade was officially for “future considerat­ions,” which means nothing.

“We are getting an NHL-caliber defenseman and acquiring very valuable draft capital in this upcoming draft and beyond,” Davidson said in a statement. “Nikita gives us added depth on the right side [of the defense], and we anticipate him joining us soon.”

Zaitsev signed with the Maple Leafs as a Russian free agent in 2016 and has played in 426 games for the Leafs and Senators since, including 28 games — with five assists — this season. His analytics have rapidly gone downhill, though. His five-on-five scoring chance ratio has sat below 47% for four consecutiv­e seasons.

Immigratio­n paperwork might cause a slight delay, but he’s expected to join the Hawks soon, according to a source.

The Hawks now hold two first-round, three second-round and two third-round picks in this summer’s draft, with more likely on the way from additional trades in the coming weeks. They own six picks in the first three rounds of the 2024 draft, as well.

More trade buzz

Davidson is anything but finished after dipping his toes in the trade waters. Patrick Kane is making his job simultaneo­usly easier and harder, for one thing. On the ice, Kane is riding a hot streak, proving he’s still the same deadly offensive weapon he always has been and boosting his value.

He erupted for three points in less than eight minutes in the second period, setting up Max Domi for a goal before scoring two himself to rally the Hawks from a 3-0 deficit to tie the score. He has notched double-digit points in his last four games.

Off the ice, however, TSN’s Pierre LeBrun reported Wednesday that if Kane informs the Hawks that he’s willing to be traded — and that will happen soon if it happens at all — he likely will give them only one acceptable destinatio­n.

That will put the Hawks in a difficult negotiatin­g position with virtually zero leverage, reducing how much they’ll be able to get in return, but Davidson has repeatedly insisted he’s happy to respect Kane’s wishes.

It’s possible the Rangers might not be out of the Kane conversati­on, after all, despite their acquisitio­n of Vladimir Tarasenko this month and Kane’s public disappoint­ment at the time. The Rangers would have to get extremely creative with cap hits to fit him in, but the New York Post’s Larry Brooks reported that they’re trying to find a way to make it viable.

Meanwhile, Zaitsev adding “depth” could help the Hawks move on more easily — from a personnel standpoint — from Jake McCabe, who has been heavily discussed in rumors recently. So has forward Sam Lafferty, who has particular­ly appealed to teams looking for penalty-kill help. He’s tied for the NHL lead in short-handed goals with four. He and McCabe dressed as normal, though.

Plenty of other players on the active roster can’t be ruled out of trade possibilit­ies, either — nor can additional instances of weaponizin­g cap space to take on other teams’ bad contracts.

 ?? CLAUS ANDERSEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? For taking on Nikita Zaitsev’s contract, the Hawks received the Senators’ second-round pick in 2023 and their fourth-round pick in 2026.
CLAUS ANDERSEN/GETTY IMAGES For taking on Nikita Zaitsev’s contract, the Hawks received the Senators’ second-round pick in 2023 and their fourth-round pick in 2026.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States