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Selasa, 28 Februari 2023

NBA: Patrick Beverley is claiming he demanded a trade from Lakers - Silver Screen and Roll

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Patrick Beverley hasn’t been a Laker for multiple weeks now, but boy can he not stop talking about the franchise. Pat Bev was dealt on Feb. 9, yet here we stand on the final day of the month, and he’s still talking about the purple and gold on his podcast.

In the immediate aftermath of the trade, Beverley delved into why things didn’t work with the Lakers, which was fair and some interesting insight...before he took to trolling the franchise again as he claimed he was going to knock them out of the playoffs with the Bulls.

His latest podcast, though, is neither fair or interesting. In it, he claims he demanded a trade from the Lakers as he talked about what “really, really, really went down in LA.”

Everyone take a brief break and collectively roll your eyes in unison for this absolute nonsense.

Finished? Alright. Let’s talk about the insanity of this.

For one, it screams “You can’t trade me, I quit!” as the Lakers were shopping him for months and months before his “trade demand.” At least when the reports came out that Thomas Bryant asked for a trade, it made sense because his trade came out of absolutely nowhere. Pat Bev asking for a trade feels like he saw Bryant demand a trade and thought “hey, that’s a good idea!”

The notion that Beverley was asking out because “he didn’t like what was going on” is absolutely hilarious when you consider that less than 24 hours before he was traded, he tweeted this.

What could have possibly changed in the 21 hours between this tweet and the deadline that made him demand a trade? The answer is nothing. He’s attempting to save face and doing so poorly.

Beverley was supposed to be the glue guy and 3-and-D guard this team needed, especially next to LeBron James. Instead, he spent the first 34 games of the season shooting 33.3% from the 3-point line, 38% from the field, and not providing anything close to the on-court impact the Lakers needed and expected. That also doesn’t include the fact the Lakers had pretty bad vibes before the deadline, and Beverley was one of the reasons, at least reportedly.

So, what do you get if you mix an underachieving guard who was a strain to the team psychologically and was one of the few tradeable contracts on the roster? Someone who was always going to be dealt.

If Pat Bev wants to know what “really, really, really” happened in Los Angeles and why he “didn’t like what was going on,” then perhaps he should look in a mirror.

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude.

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Senin, 27 Februari 2023

Islanders in tricky spot at NHL trade deadline with Lou Lamoriello as wild card - New York Post

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SAINT PAUL, Minn. — After Sunday’s flurry of deals, it’s clear that the NHL is a seller’s market right now. For the Islanders, who already dealt their best prospect and (conditionally) their first-round pick, that means nothing good.

Right before the All-Star break, when the Isles were reeling, there was a strong case to trade players on expiring contracts. Scott Mayfield, Zach Parise and Semyon Varlamov would all have value to playoff teams, particularly Varlamov, given how some Western Conference contenders have struggled in net.

Now, though, the Islanders are 31-25-7 going into Tuesday’s match against the Wild and hold the first wild-card spot in the East. Even without Mat Barzal, they just put in one of their best performances of the season with Sunday’s 4-0 demolition of the Jets.

They are not about to wave the white flag on the season, and their players are not looking to go compete elsewhere. On the contrary, Varlamov and Mayfield have both told The Post that they not only want to stay this year, but that they want to stay in free agency. (Varlamov would likely have to take a pay cut for that to happen). Parise, age 38, is likely to make a decision on playing next year after this season ends, and is very much invested in the Islanders’ success right now.

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Islanders goaltender Semyon Varlamov and Scott Mayfield would be players the team could shed at the trade deadline.
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Never say never when Lou Lamoriello is involved, but it would be a shocker to see the Isles jump in as a seller, even if there might be a purely pragmatic case to be made in favor of doing so. More likely would be Lamoriello trying to find either a mobile defenseman or a winger who can bolster the Isles’ top nine with Barzal out for the time being.

That is where the market’s dynamic presents an issue for the Islanders.

To acquire Bo Horvat, the Islanders sent Aatu Raty and a top-12 protected 2023 first-round pick to Vancouver. The pick becomes an unprotected first-rounder in 2024 if it doesn’t convert, so in theory, the Islanders could still trade this year’s pick with protections from 13-32 under the same condition. That would, however, be committing to two more years without a first-round pick for a franchise that has not picked in the top 32 since taking Simon Holmstrom in 2019.

The Isles have other prospects who could in theory be made available, including Holmstrom, William Dufour and Arnaud Durandeau, who has impressed in an ongoing NHL cameo. None, though, are of the blue-chip variety.

Then there is the massive price Tampa Bay just paid to get Tanner Jeannot, a bottom-six winger, from the Predators: Five draft picks including a top-10 protected first-rounder in 2025 along with Cal Foote. There is nothing stopping Lamoriello from trading a bundle of picks for help, but the Islanders are not a player away from Stanley Cup contention, and they are not rich with assets.

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General Manager Lou Lamoriello is a wildcard at the trade deadline.
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The best interpretation of this for the Islanders is twofold. First: Lamoriello does not need to feel pressure to make a move. Second: unlike their neighbors, there is no sign of rumors creeping into the dressing room or pending deals impacting the lineup.

“Doesn’t matter where you are in the standings, the trade deadline’s always a topic,” Anders Lee said after Sunday’s game. “It doesn’t matter if you’re hunting to get into the playoffs, whatever it is, it always comes down to focusing on us and taking care of what we can take care of.”

The more realistic interpretation is that, with only a few days until the deadline, the Islanders are too good to sell but without an obvious way to add.

Then again, Lamoriello is not known for sticking to the obvious.

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Lightning jump into trade market, add Jeannot from Predators - ESPN

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The Tampa Bay Lightning traded for second-year Nashville Predators forward Tanner Jeannot on Sunday in a move that arms one team seeking a fourth straight Stanley Cup Finals appearance while the other continues its transition into a new reality.

A Jeannot trade was thought to be a possibility, but that speculation intensified Sunday when the Predators announced they held him out of a game against the Arizona Coyotes for trade-related reasons.

A few hours later, the Predators sent Jeannot, 25, to the Lightning in exchange for defenseman Cal Foote, their third-, fourth- and fifth-round picks in 2023, a second-round pick in 2024 and a protected 2025 first-round pick.

Acquiring Jeannot achieves a few items for the Lightning. It gives them another two-way, top-nine forward who can contribute in several areas. Though he had just five goals and 14 points on a team struggling to score and fading from the playoff race this season, he was a breakthrough star last season.

In helping Nashville seal a playoff berth in the Western Conference, Jeannot finished with 24 goals and 41 points, playing on several lines for coach John Hynes last season. He also scored two power-play goals, utilizing his 6-foot-2, 208-pound frame in front of the net as the Predators landed in the first round for the eighth straight season.

Jeannot could be used on the second-team power-play unit for Tampa Bay, but he could likely make more of an immediate impact on the penalty-kill units. Prior to the trade, he was second among Predators forwards -- and fourth overall -- in short-handed ice time this season.

Perhaps his most significant contribution before he even plays a game could be his contract situation. The forward is in the final season of a two-year contract carrying a team-friendly $800,000 cap hit. He will be a pending restricted free agent this offseason. The Lightning can either pay his $750,000 qualifying offer and keep him for one more season or they can take the offseason to negotiate a long-term deal.

As for the Predators, the trade is the latest sign of change. It started Saturday when they traded forward Nino Niederreiter to the Winnipeg Jets. On Sunday, general manager David Poile, the only GM in franchise history, announced he was stepping down at the end of the season, and former longtime coach Barry Trotz would be returning as his replacement.

Hours later, the Predators traded for Jeannot to accumulate the sort of haul that gives them a starting point for life in the post-Poile era. Foote, 24, who is the son of former NHL defenseman Adam Foote, was a first-round pick in 2017 by the Lightning. He has 15 points in 117 games and will also be a pending restricted free agent at the end of the season.

In terms of draft picks, the Predators will now have a number of options over the next three seasons they can use to either select prospects or utilize as capital in future trades. They will have 11 draft picks in 2023, nine in 2024 and eight in 2025.

Another piece to Jeannot's game that Tampa Bay may see sooner than later is his potential to land in the penalty box. He finished last season with 130 minutes in penalties, and has 85 this season.

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Britain and E.U. Agree on Northern Ireland Trade Deal - The New York Times

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LONDON — The agreement Britain and the European Union reached on Monday, after weeks of confidential talks and multiple false starts, could have far-reaching economic and political consequences — averting a potential trade war between Britain and the European Union and opening the door to the restoration of a devolved government in Northern Ireland.

It could also remove a lingering irritant between Britain and the United States. President Biden appealed to Mr. Sunak to negotiate an end to the trade impasse, and a deal could facilitate a visit by him to London and Belfast, Northern Ireland’s capital, to mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, which ended decades of bloodshed known as the Troubles.

But the deal is a major risk for Mr. Sunak, opening him up to a backlash from pro-Brexit hard-liners in his Conservative Party and the Democratic Unionist Party in Northern Ireland, which has campaigned to rewrite the post-Brexit trade rules, rather than simply modify them, as Mr. Sunak and Ms. von der Leyen have done.

Northern Ireland’s unique status — a part of the United Kingdom but sharing a land border with Ireland, which is a member of the European Union and its single market — has made its current trade terms a totemic issue for Brexiteers and unionists, the largely Protestant part of the territory’s population that wants it to remain in the United Kingdom.

The rules were designed to avoid checks at the land border, which would be unacceptable for Ireland and for Northern Ireland’s nationalists, the largely Catholic part of the population that wants the territory to be reunited with Ireland.

For Mr. Sunak, who came to power last October and is trailing the opposition Labour Party in the polls, the deal is a litmus test for his young government. A negative reaction could embolden one of his predecessors, Boris Johnson, who was ousted last year but who may harbor ambitions for a comeback.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain, left, at a shipyard in Belfast in December.Pool photo by Charles McQuillan

Part of the problem is that Mr. Sunak negotiated the deal with Ms. von der Leyen under a veil of secrecy. This has heightened suspicions among unionists and Brexit enthusiasts, who oppose any deal that applies E.U. trade rules in Northern Ireland, and does not treat it the same as the other countries of the United Kingdom.

Mr. Sunak has also been noncommittal about whether Parliament would be allowed to approve it. On Sunday, Mr. Sunak’s deputy prime minister, Dominic Raab, declined to confirm that lawmakers in Westminster would get to vote on the deal.

“Parliament will find a way to have its say,” Mr. Raab said on Sky News, without explaining what that meant.

The outline agreement would revamp a document known as the Northern Ireland Protocol, which was created to avoid the need for customs controls on goods crossing the politically sensitive border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, and came into force in early 2021. Under the protocol, Northern Ireland stayed within parts of Europe’s single market, abiding by its economic rule book.

But the protocol also created a different trade barrier that required checks on goods moving from Britain to Northern Ireland. That infuriated much of Northern Ireland’s unionist community, which feared that it drove a wedge between them and the rest of the United Kingdom.

Under the terms of the new deal, goods moving from Britain to Northern Ireland that were intended to stay there would pass through a “green” channel without routine checks. Those destined for Ireland would pass through a “red” channel that would have more controls.

Perhaps more important to the Democratic Unionists are moves to give Northern Ireland’s politicians an “emergency brake” on having to put in place any new or updated European legislation.

To protest the protocol, the Democratic Unionist Party has been boycotting Northern Ireland’s Assembly and devolved government. To ensure that power is shared between unionists and nationalists, the system shuts down unless the largest parties on both sides agree to participate.

Whether the new agreement is robust enough to persuade the party to go back into Northern Ireland’s government will be one test of the success of Mr. Sunak’s negotiation.

Jeffrey Donaldson, the leader of the Democratic Unionist party, in Belfast on Feb. 17. He acknowledged “significant progress” in the deal, but noted, “There remain key issues of concern.”Lorraine O’Sullivan/Reuters

In an interview with the Sunday Times, Mr. Sunak said, “I want to correct the democratic deficit because sovereignty is really important, and that’s why the idea that the E.U. can impose laws on Northern Ireland without them having a say isn’t acceptable.”

Another key reaction will be from Conservative Brexit supporters, including Mr. Johnson. He agreed to the protocol during his time in office, but later angered E.U. nations by introducing legislation intended to give the British government power to override some of it.

That bill is currently being examined by the House of Lords, the unelected revising chamber of the British Parliament, but Mr. Sunak has agreed to scrap it as a price for the concessions made by Brussels. Mr. Johnson, according to British news reports, has told allies that abandoning the bill would be a “great mistake.”

Some observers think Mr. Johnson is preparing to destabilize Mr. Sunak’s leadership and perhaps to try to oust him if the Conservative Party performs poorly in local municipality elections scheduled for May.

“He wants to bring down Rishi Sunak, and he will use any instrument to do it,” George Osborne, a Conservative and a former chancellor of the Exchequer, told Channel 4 in late February. “And if the Northern Ireland negotiations are that instrument, he will pick it up and hit Mr. Sunak over the head with it.”

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Minggu, 26 Februari 2023

'Powerhouse' East already in frenzy ahead of NHL Trade Deadline - NHL.com

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The New York Islanders got the trade frenzy started nearly four weeks ago, and ever since it's as if the top teams in the Eastern Conference have been playing a game of "we can top" that in what has been an active trade market.

On Sunday, the New Jersey Devils became the latest team to get involved, acquiring forward Timo Meier from the San Jose Sharks in a trade that involved nine players and four draft picks.

The Tampa Bay Lightning made news of their own about two hours later when they acquired forward Tanner Jeannot from the Nashville Predators.

They both followed the Islanders, New York Rangers, Toronto Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins, who beefed up their lineups by acquiring some of the top players -- some who were expected to be moved and some who weren't -- in advance of the 2023 NHL Trade Deadline on Friday at 3 p.m. ET. 

And the Rangers should have another big move coming (more on that later).

The Carolina Hurricanes and Pittsburgh Penguins have each announced their desire to add before the deadline. Maybe the Florida Panthers and Buffalo Sabres will be too. Heck, the Detroit Red Wings could also get in on the action.

The East is dominating the trade market and it should make for a wild ride on their side of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

"My take on it is, everybody wants to put all the really good players in the East through trades," Devils general manager Tom Fitzgerald said. "It's amazing."

[RELATED: 2022-23 NHL Trade Tracker | Players to watch ahead of NHL Trade Deadline]

It all began with center Bo Horvat going to the Islanders from the Vancouver Canucks on Jan. 30.

Since then, the Islanders are 6-3-2 and Horvat has five goals in 11 games. New York was two points out of the postseason at the time of the trade; it is now in position to be the first wild card into the playoffs from the East, three points clear of the cutoff line.

Of course, seeing that it was the Islanders who jumped the gun on the deadline, it figures the next team to do it would be the Rangers, who got in on the action Feb. 9, acquiring forward Vladimir Tarasenko and defenseman Niko Mikkola from the St. Louis Blues. 

Tarasenko, the marquee player in the trade, has four points (two goals, two assists) in nine games and the Rangers are 5-3-1 with him. Mikkola was plus-3 and played 25:34 in a 5-2 win against the Los Angeles Kings on Sunday.

The Rangers also got forward Tyler Motte from the Ottawa Senators on Feb. 19 to improve their bottom-six forward depth. 

But they're not supposed to be done yet. 

Multiple media reports are linking the Rangers to Chicago Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane, with a trade potentially happening as early as Wednesday depending on salary cap implications. 

If -- or at this point when -- that happens, it would give the Rangers a top-six forward group featuring Tarasenko and Kane as the right wings, Mika Zibanejad and Vincent Trocheck as the centers, and Artemi Panarin and Chris Kreider as the left wings. 

It would arguably be the best top six in the NHL.

But the Maple Leafs might quibble with that; they got forwards Ryan O'Reilly and Noel Acciari from the Blues on Feb. 17. O'Reilly has been playing on Toronto's second line with John Tavares and William Nylander. Auston Matthews, Mitchell Marner and Michael Bunting make up the first line.

The Maple Leafs are 4-1-0 since the trade and O'Reilly had a hat trick and an assist in a 6-3 win against the Sabres on Feb. 21.

Toronto, like the rest of the NHL, is chasing Boston, which has been the best team since the start of the season; that didn't stop them from adding defenseman Dmitry Orlov and forward Garnet Hathaway from the Washington Capitals on Feb. 23.

The Bruins felt they needed more depth at both positions, and they plucked it from the Capitals, who went from contenders to sellers in a matter of a few weeks. That's what a six-game losing streak will do to a team in the Eastern Conference this season.

New Jersey hasn't had that problem this season. The Devils are 17-4-3 since Dec. 30, their 37 points the most in the NHL in that span, and they made their big move to push the Hurricanes for first in the Metropolitan Division by getting Meier on Sunday. 

Meier has 31 goals in 57 games this season. He could play on a line with Nico Hischier or Jack Hughes when he recovers from his upper-body injury. Jesper Bratt could be on the other wing, or maybe Dawson Mercer. 

The Hurricanes are in first place in the Metropolitan Division, three points clear of the second-place Devils with a game in hand but were reportedly in the market for Meier until a few days ago.

Now that the team chasing them got Meier, the Hurricanes are a team to watch to see how they respond.

The Penguins are the same and maybe their 7-3 win against Lightning on Sunday, their second straight win following a four-game losing streak, is their way of telling general manager Ron Hextall to make a move to help them out.

What about the Sabres, Panthers and maybe the Red Wings too? Will they get involved to push out the Islanders and/or Penguins from a wild card spot? Will the Islanders, Maple Leafs, Bruins, Devils and Lightning make more moves before the deadline like the Rangers are expected to do?

They might have to if they want to keep up in the Eastern Conference.

"It's a powerhouse," Fitzgerald said.

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Sabtu, 25 Februari 2023

How 'invisible hand' is affecting Detroit Red Wings at trade deadline - Detroit Free Press

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. How 'invisible hand' is affecting Detroit Red Wings at trade deadline  Detroit Free Press
  2. Ability to deal cap space would spice up NHL market at trade deadline  New York Post
  3. Who says no? Could the Avalanche trade for forward help? Will the Kings load up?  The Athletic


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How Blackhawks, Rangers can still make a Patrick Kane trade work - NBC Sports

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SAN JOSE — The March 3 trade deadline is eight days away, which means a Patrick Kane decision should be coming any day now. And it appears his potential top landing spot is back in the mix.

According to Larry Brooks of the New York Post, the New York Rangers are not shutting the door on the possibility of acquiring the three-time Stanley Cup champion and former Hart Trophy winner, despite already trading for six-time 30-goal scorer Vladimir Tarasenko. They could still use a top-line right winger to bump down Jimmy Vesey in the lineup.

Kane, of course, wasn't shy about sharing his feelings on the Tarasenko trade that also included defenseman Niko Mikkola, even though he hadn't — and still hasn't — made a decision to that point.

"It’s not like the happiest I’ve been to hear about a trade," Kane said on Feb. 10. "I think the Rangers are a team that you definitely pay attention to and definitely are intrigued by, for obvious reasons. Obviously they made a move to get him and another big defenseman, so you’ve got to respect them going out and trying to make their team better.

"If things were going to happen, that was a team I was definitely looking at. It seems like they kind of filled their void and went ahead and made a deal, so it is what it is."

If there's legitimate mutual interest between Kane and the Rangers, it would take some serious gymnastics to make the finances work for New York. It's not impossible, though.

The Rangers could get Kane's cap hit to as low as $2.625 million by involving a third-party broker like Toronto did with Minnesota in the Ryan O'Reilly deal, but as of Thursday, the Rangers have $763,280 in cap space, according to Cap Friendly. Their projected deadline space is $908,667. 

If the Rangers move out Vitali Kravtsov ($875,000 million cap hit) and Jake Leschyshyn ($766,667), it would get them to roughly $2.4 million. That's about $225,000 short of being able to squeeze in Kane's $2.626 million.

If they can't find a way to trade or waive another contract, the only other option for the Rangers is to wait until as close to the deadline as possible to make the trade so that the Blackhawks could accrue as much of Kane's remaining hit as possible.

Kane's daily cap hit is $56,757. Stretch that over an eight-day span — which leads right up to the deadline — and it's $454,056 total. That would be enough for the Rangers to fit in Kane and be cap compliant.

The challenge for the Rangers is they would have zero flexibility for the rest of the season, barring an injury, and could be forced to carry only 20 players on the active roster. There would be very little wiggle room, which wouldn't be the worst thing but still something they'd have to manage. Agreeing on the potential package might actually be the easy part for the Blackhawks and Rangers.

There might not be a hotter stick in the NHL right now than Kane, who has seven goals and three assists over his last four games. He's playing his best hockey of the season, and the thought of landing a red-hot Kane after already acquiring Tarasenko is probably making the Rangers salivate.

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Rangers trade Vitali Kravtsov to Canucks amid Patrick Kane trade rumors - New York Post

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Vitali Kravtsov finally got his wish and it may allowd the Rangers to get their big wish as well.

The Rangers traded away the unhappy 23-year-old, who had requested to move on from Broadway. The Blueshirts announced they sent the winger to the Vancouver Canucks for forward William Lockwood and a 2026 seventh-round draft pick on Saturday, days before the March 3 NHL trade deadline.

The trade, along with waiving Jake Leschyshyn, frees up the necessary cap space for the Rangers to potentially acquire Blackhawks star Patrick Kane before the deadline.

“I think everybody is aware of what’s going on around us,” captain Jacob Trouba told reporters after the Rangers’ loss to the Capitals on Saturday.. “As a player, that’s not something for you to worry about. Your job is to play the game and be ready to play when the puck drops.”

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The Rangers traded Vitali Kravtsov to the Canucks on Saturday.
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Kravtsov had three goals and three assists in 28 games for the Rangers this season. The first-round pick in 2018 had been scratched the past seven games and just didn’t seem to fit into the team’s plans this season. Lockwood, 24, has one assist in 13 games for Vancouver this season. He had 12 goals and six assists in 26 games this season with Abbotsford of the AHL.

“He really worked hard and he tried this year, and we just couldn’t find a spot in our lineup for him,” Rangers coach Gerard Gallant said. ”It gives him a fresh opportunity. He was a good kid here. He came and he worked hard every day with us, and it’s just an opportunity for our team.”

— with AP

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Jumat, 24 Februari 2023

Capitals begin trade sell-off: Which players are most likely to go next? - The Athletic

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WASHINGTON — If there was any doubt about which direction Washington Capitals general manager Brian MacLellan was leaning ahead of the NHL’s trade deadline, the suspense is over.

He’s a seller for the first time during his nine-year tenure, and he got a head start Thursday night, dealing defenseman Dmitry Orlov and winger Garnet Hathaway to the NHL-leading Boston Bruins for three picks, including a 2023 first-round selection, and 33-year-old winger Craig Smith.

The deadline is March 3, and MacLellan is almost certain to trade other players as he attempts to kickstart a roster retool aimed at getting younger and faster and returning the Caps to contender status in short order. 

“This trade allows us to acquire draft capital, infuse youth and restock our system,” MacLellan said in a release.

As for Orlov and Hathaway, both players were told not to report to Capital One Arena prior to the Caps’ 4-2 loss to the 32nd-place Ducks. The defeat marked Washington’s sixth straight in regulation, the club’s longest such slump since October 2003.

Afterward, an emotional Caps’ locker room seemed stunned, both from the humbling defeat and from losing a pair of popular teammates shortly before the game.

“We’re going to miss those guys,” Trevor van Riemsdyk said. “They’re great guys, they’re great humans. Obviously that’s part of the business, and it’s a sad part. It is what it is. But that’s no excuse for not being able to find a way to win that game.”

Added Nick Jensen: “That aspect of hockey is really hard. The guys in this room, we go through all the highs and lows; we’re like brothers in here. So, when you see guys no longer showing up in the locker room, it’s definitely hard. It can be somewhat of a distraction, but it’s part of the game and it’s something you’ve got to move on from.”

Orlov, who had been the Caps’ fourth most tenured player after Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom and John Carlson, suspected a trade might be in the works after little headway had been made on an extension in recent weeks.  

“It was not a terrible surprise,” agent Mark Gandler said. “But once it’s done, after being in Washington for 11 years, being drafted by the team, it’s going to put you in a kind of shock, whether you are prepared for it or not.

“He’s also excited because he wants to win another Cup. Once you have one, it’s hard to get it out of your blood.”

Hathaway, meantime, is going to the team he cheered growing up in Kennebunkport, Maine.

“He’s disappointed to be leaving the boys but he’s excited to live out his childhood dream of playing for the Bruins,” agent Matt Keator said. “He’s kind of made to be a Bruin because he plays the style that the fan base loves. 

“Basically,” Keator added, “the comments on Twitter have been, ‘I guess we have to go from hating Garnet Hathaway to love him.’”

What’s next for the Caps? Well, it could be quite a lot, actually. So let’s take stock of who’s probably staying and who else might be on the move in the coming days.

Not available

Nicklas Backstrom 

The 35-year-old is rounding into form after missing the first half of the season while recovering from hip surgery. He may not be the first-line center he once was but the hope is that he can be a productive middle-six center/power play maestro for the Caps during this transitional phase. 

John Carlson

The 33-year-old No. 1 defenseman has been sidelined since being struck on the side of the head with a 90-mile-per-hour slap shot on Dec. 23. He’s begun skating prior to the team’s practices in recent weeks but remains a ways away from returning.

Darcy Kuemper

Signed to a five-year contract on the opening day of free agency last summer, Kuemper, who turns 33 in May, is the No. 1 goaltender going forward. He’s been mostly solid in his first season in D.C. and is tied with the Islanders’ Ilya Sorokin for the most shutouts with five.

Charlie Lindgren

Inked to a three-year contract in the offseason, the 29-year-old did exactly what he was signed to do in December: he went 9-2-0 with a .929 and a 2.02 goals-against average to keep the Caps in the hunt while Kuemper recovered from a head injury.

Ivan Miroshnichenko

The Caps’ pick at No. 20 last summer is widely considered the organization’s top prospect. Having recovered from Hodgkin’s lymphoma, the 19-year-old winger has three goals and an assist for the KHL’s Avangard Omsk.

Alex Ovechkin

Duh. Signed through 2025-26, the Caps captain is about to be at the center of one of the biggest stories in sports as he chases down Wayne Gretzky’s record for the most goals in NHL history. The 37-year-old entered Thursday’s game with 812 career goals, or 83 shy of leapfrogging The Great One.

Dylan Strome

In January, the 25-year-old center signed a five-year, $25 million extension that kicks in next season. Interestingly, he’s signed through 2027-28, a year longer than anyone else on the roster.

Tom Wilson

Like Backstrom, the big winger, who turns 29 next month, is still getting up to speed after missing the first half of the season due to knee surgery and another seven games because of an ankle injury. He’s viewed as a big part of the team’s future and, potentially, the successor to Ovechkin as captain.

2023 first-round picks

After Thursday’s trade, MacLellan now has two first-round picks — the Caps’ and the Bruins’. Don’t expect him to part with either.

T.J. Oshie is a heart-and-soul player but has struggled with injuries lately. (Raj Mehta / USA Today)

Make it good 

Alex Alexeyev 

The 2018 first-round pick isn’t ready for a full-time role but the hope is that he’ll get there. With Orlov gone and other defensemen potentially on the move in the coming days, there figure to be openings on the blue line next season. It should also be noted that Alexeyev, 23, is a pending restricted free agent.

Nic Dowd

The checking line center, who turns 33 in May, is in the first year of a three-year extension that averages $1.3 million per season, a team-friendly cap hit given the important role he plays at even strength and on the penalty kill.

Martin Fehervary

The 2018 second-rounder isn’t having as strong a season as he did last year but, at 23, he’s established himself as a solid NHLer with some runway to improve. Like Alexeyev, he’s a restricted free agent at season’s end.

Evgeny Kuznetsov

The top-six center, who turns 31 in May, entered Thursday’s game on pace for 13 goals and 63 points — a drop-off from the 24 goals and 78 points he produced a year ago. His shooting percentage is a career low 6.9. Kuznetsov has two years remaining on his contract at a cap hit of $7.8 million per.

Hendrix Lapierre

The 2020 first-round pick has had an up-and-down season in Hershey, amassing 10 goals and 13 assists in 47 games. The hope is that Lapierre, who turned 21 earlier this month, blossoms into an important piece for the organization in the future.

Connor McMichael

After spending all of last season in Washington, the 2019 first-rounder started the season on the Caps’ roster. But McMichael, 22, struggled to find a foothold and is now in AHL Hershey, where he’s got 12 goals and 13 assists in 36 games. Like Lapierre, the hope is that he eventually plays a big role in D.C. but he’s not off limits if the return makes sense.

Sonny Milano

Washington just signed the middle-six winger, who turns 27 in May, to a three-year, $5.7 million extension that kicks in next season. With eight goals and 15 assists in 46 games, he’s been a pleasant surprise. 

T.J. Oshie

He’s a heart and soul player, a big piece of the team’s leadership and an important part of the offense. But he’s also 36 and has struggled to stay healthy in recent seasons, due in no small part to his hard-nosed playing style.

Aliaksei Protas

The 22-year-old can play center or wing and, at 6-foot-6, 225 pounds, he possesses the prodigious size that MacLellan covets. He’s highly regarded internally, but similar to Lapierre and McMichael, he’s not considered untradeable as the Caps seek to reinvent themselves on the fly.

Trevor van Riemsdyk

The Caps like TvR, who turns 32 in July. He’s consistent and can play up and down the lineup. He’s also a free agent at season’s end. At this point, it feels like he’s more likely to be re-signed than flipped for a late-round pick.

Lars Eller is the only remaining Capitals player on The Athletic’s Trade Board. (Scott Taetsch / Getty Images)

Let’s talk

Nicolas Aube-Kubel

The bottom-six winger, who turns 27 in May, was claimed off waivers in November and has been in and out of the lineup. He’s a UFA at season’s end, won the Stanley Cup last season in Colorado and could provide speedy depth for a team that’s prepping for a deep run.  

Lars Eller

One of two players on The Athletic’s trade board — Orlov was the other — Eller figures to be on the move before the deadline. The bottom-six center, who turns 34 in May, has a wealth of playoff experience (96 games) and a knack for scoring big goals. 

Erik Gustafsson

Gustafsson, who turns 31 next month and is playing on an expiring one-year, $800,000 contract, is the league’s most efficient offensive defenseman in terms of cost per point ($23,529) with seven goals and 27 assists entering Thursday’s game.

Matt Irwin

The No. 7 defenseman has appeared in 42 games this season due in large part to the injuries the Caps have absorbed on the back end. Irwin, 35, is a UFA and has 47 games of playoff experience.

Nick Jensen

After Orlov, Jensen is the Capitals defenseman who could probably fetch the most in a trade. The 32-year-old is a good defender who can anchor the penalty kill and provide value for a contender with an expiring contract that has a $2.5 million cap hit.

Marcus Johansson

The 32-year-old is as versatile as they come and, with an expiring one-year, $1.1 million contract, he doesn’t cost a lot, either. He can play either wing, center in a pinch and on both special team units. It wouldn’t be a surprise if contending teams are very interested.

Anthony Mantha

Mantha’s had an uneven season, his second full campaign in D.C. When he’s on, the 28-year-old can put his mark on a game. But that hasn’t happened often enough for coach Peter Laviolette, who scratched the big winger four times in a span of six games last month. He has another year on his contract at $5.7 million and is currently on injured reserve, a couple of factors that could give pause to any potential suitors. 

Conor Sheary

The winger, who turns 31 in June, has 12 goals and 18 assists but has cooled off considerably of late, recording just one goal in his last 23 games. He did, however, win the Stanley Cup twice with Pittsburgh, an intangible that inexperienced teams crave this time of year.  

(Photo of Nick Jensen and Anthony Mantha: Scott Taetsch / Getty Images)

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Robert Gasser's trade to Brewers brought family full circle - MLB.com

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PHOENIX -- Robert Gasser, the left-handed pitching prospect in Brewers camp after coming over in last summer’s Josh Hader trade, grew up looking at the Western Union telegram on the wall of his parents’ El Dorado Hills, Calif., home. Dated June 6, 1984, it is addressed to Gasser’s father, Jim, from then-Brewers scouting director Ray Poitevint.

Congratulations, you are hereby notified that the Milwaukee Brewers Baseball Club selected your name in the 27th round of the regular phase of the Rule 4 summer free agent selection meeting for the purpose of negotiating a professional baseball contract.

The elder Gasser, a right-handed pitcher in his day, has fond memories of his brief brush with the Brewers. Milwaukee scout Guy Hansen introduced Jim Gasser to the circle change and helped him blossom when he declined the Brewers’ offer and instead pitched at Moorpark College. The decision to forego pro ball with the Brewers looked good after the Giants drafted Jim Gasser in the eighth round in 1986.

An elbow injury, however, derailed his career. Tommy John surgery was still in its infancy.

“That was the end of me,” Jim said.

Nearly four decades later, his son is living the dream denied to his dad. Jim and Sheila Gasser had two children who would grow up to be athletes; Hannah was on the rowing team at San Diego State and her younger brother Robert “ate, drank and slept sports” as a boy, his dad said. But Robert didn’t start pitching full time until his sophomore year of high school (he idolized Oakland lefty Barry Zito and his big breaking curveball) and didn’t feel like he gained momentum until his senior year.

He played college ball at New Mexico in 2018, then broke through in '19 after transferring to Delta College, and later to the University of Houston. The Padres made Robert a second-round pick in 2021. The transformation from undersized center fielder to top pitching prospect happened fast.

“A bunch of us dads coached a group of kids that were super good and super into baseball, so we started our own travel ball team,” Jim Gasser said. “I think there were 10 or 11 Division I college kids that came off that team, and Robert was the little guy with a cannon. But he was a little guy.

“So, he was our center fielder, our bunt guy, hit-and-run, move-the-runners-over guy. All of a sudden, he started to grow. Once he started growing into his body in high school, that’s when he started to shine in high school.”

That development continued at Robert’s various college stops.

And he continued to grow.

“Honestly, the COVID year helped me out,” Robert Gasser said. “It allowed me to take a step back and think about, ‘What do I need to improve upon to go to the next level?’ I’ve never thought about working a regular job. I’ve never thought about doing anything other than baseball, so it was like, 'I need to figure out a way to improve.'”

A successful pro debut with the Padres in 2021 lifted Gasser into the top half of MLB Pipeline’s list of San Diego's top prospects. He knew the Padres were active on the trade market and prepared himself for a potential move to the Nationals, knowing San Diego was pushing hard for Juan Soto.

Instead, it was the Brewers. Milwaukee sent Hader to San Diego for Gasser, outfield prospect Esteury Ruiz (later flipped for All-Star catcher William Contreras) and pitchers Taylor Rogers and Dinelson Lamet. It was a bona fide blockbuster.

Outfielder Monte Harrison, one of the then-Brewers prospects traded to Miami for Christian Yelich in 2018, has spoken in recent days about the pressure that goes along with being dealt for a star. Gasser handled it well; the Brewers pushed him to Double-A Biloxi, then to Triple-A Nashville to finish last season. All told, he posted a 3.94 ERA and better than 11 strikeouts per nine innings in a career-high 27 starts over the year.

“When you’re traded for a player like that, it’s absolutely a big deal,” said Brewers manager Craig Counsell. “It tells you something about who you are, and I think it also tells you something about the expectations people have for you. Sometimes the expectations can be heavy and cause anxiety and weigh on you. But that’s part of why this is a hard job.”

“This is a great organization because they moved me quick, so obviously they see some value in me,” Robert Gasser said. “They’re invested in me. As long as I put the work in, I think it will be a great relationship.”

It begins Sunday. Gasser is on the list to pitch in one of the Brewers’ split-squad games, probably on the road at the Rockies. He’s never stepped on a big league field and never pitched in a Major League Spring Training game.

“Confidence is the biggest thing. I want to be confident,” he said. “Everyone has said, ‘If you just be yourself, it’s going to go well.' I think that’s my goal.”

So far, so good. Even last season after the trade, when expectations were ratcheted up.

“I think he pretty much kept his head down and kept grinding at it,” Jim Gasser said. “I think that was hard. He held his cards close to his chest, anyways. But he has a good opportunity, and God willing, he’ll make that a good trade for Milwaukee.”

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Raiders: 2 best players to trade for in 2023 NFL offseason - ClutchPoints

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The Las Vegas Raiders have spent a lot of money in the last few years but don’t have a ton to show for it. In 2022, the team truly fell apart, starting the season with Super Bowl expectations and finishing with an abysmal 6-11 record. Now the team must go all in this NFL offseason, and make Raiders trades for Aaron Rodgers and Jalen Ramsey.

Raiders trade for Aaron Rodgers

The Raiders officially parted ways with long-time starting quarterback Derek Carr in the 2023 NFL offseason, so no matter what else happens, the team will have to find a new signal-caller for the next campaign.

There are a few options the team can go with. They can stick with Jarrett Stidham, who played well at the end of last season, or they could sign a free agent, such as Derek Carr 2.0, Jimmy Garoppolo. They can also draft a QB with the No. 7 pick in the 2023 NFL Draft.

However, the best move for the franchise is to make a Raiders trade for Green Bay Packers QB Aaron Rodgers.

With the way the Raiders are built in 2023, the team has a two to three-year window to win a championship. After that, the big deals for Davante Adams, Maxx Crosby, Hunter Renfrow, Chandler Jones, and Darren Waller either expire or get way too big.

This means that by the time a young QB comes good, the stars of the Raiders will be on their way out. Taking on Rodgers, who likely has two to three seasons left in his career makes the most sense.

Rodgers didn’t have a great season in 2022, passing for 3,695 yards, which is his worst total in any full season he’s played since becoming the Packers’ starter in 2008. Still, that was with rookie wide receivers and a questionable offensive line. Without that, he’s only a tear removed from back-to-back NFL MVP seasons.

A Raiders trade for Aaron Rodgers will likely include giving up the No. 7 pick. However, it shouldn’t have to include multiple first-rounders like the Russell Wilson, Matthew Stafford, and Deshaun Watson trades because of Rodgers’ advanced age.

If the Raiders can get Rodgers in the door at a reasonable price as far as draft picks go, it will be worth it to have a proven superstar to lead the team’s offensive stars for the next two seasons.

Now, all that needs to happen is for the QB to announce his decision about leaving Green Bay after pondering his future for a week in the dark.

Go get Jalen Ramsey this NFL offseason

Two years ago, the Los Angeles Rams went all-in for a Super Bowl. They traded for quarterback Matthew Stafford, cornerback Jalen Ramsey, edge-rusher Von Miller, and signed Odell Beckham Jr.

These moves paid off with a Lombardi Trophy in early 2022.

That’s the blueprint these Raiders trades have to follow in the 2022 NFL offseason. In fact, the team should follow it so closely that they should also trade for Jalen Ramsey.

The Raiders defense wasn’t great last season. Despite Maxx Crosby’s big year (12.5) sacks, the team finished 26th in scoring defense and 30th in sacks with just 27. One of the reasons for these poor numbers is the lack of a shutdown cornerback to give Crosby and Chandler Jones more time to work.

With a Raiders trade for Jalen Ramsey this NFL offseason, Las Vegas gets arguably the best cover corner in the league. Filling this position is especially important for the Raiders as they are likely to lose a starting CB in free agency in Rock Ya-Sin.

Ramsey is more than a replacement CB, though. He’s also a leader who knows what it takes to win the Super Bowl. Even with talent like Crosby and Jones on the Raiders D, there is precious little championship (or even playoff) experience on that side of the ball. This fact makes Ramsey even more valuable in Vegas.

The Rams CB will make over $25 million next season, so taking him on is a big financial commitment. This might work in the Raiders’ favor, though. With a $32.1 million dead cap hit in 2023, maybe the Rams will be willing to trade Ramsey after June 1, which will allow them to spread that cap hit out.

If that’s the case, the Raiders won’t have to plunder their entire 2023 NFL Draft to get these deals done. Even if they do, though, giving up a second- and third-round pick for Ramsey, it will be well worth it to build a contender next season around these two Raiders trades for Jalen Ramsey and Aaron Rodgers.

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Kamis, 23 Februari 2023

How Hawks, Rangers can still make a Patrick Kane trade work - NBC Sports

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SAN JOSE — The March 3 trade deadline is eight days away, which means a Patrick Kane decision should be coming any day now. And it appears his potential top landing spot is back in the mix.

According to Larry Brooks of the New York Post, the New York Rangers are not shutting the door on the possibility of acquiring the three-time Stanley Cup champion and former Hart Trophy winner, despite already trading for six-time 30-goal scorer Vladimir Tarasenko. They could still use a top-line right winger to bump down Jimmy Vesey in the lineup.

Kane, of course, wasn't shy about sharing his feelings on the Tarasenko trade that also included defenseman Niko Mikkola, even though he hadn't — and still hasn't — made a decision to that point.

"It’s not like the happiest I’ve been to hear about a trade," Kane said on Feb. 10. "I think the Rangers are a team that you definitely pay attention to and definitely are intrigued by, for obvious reasons. Obviously they made a move to get him and another big defenseman, so you’ve got to respect them going out and trying to make their team better.

"If things were going to happen, that was a team I was definitely looking at. It seems like they kind of filled their void and went ahead and made a deal, so it is what it is."

If there's legitimate mutual interest between Kane and the Rangers, it would take some serious gymnastics to make the finances work for New York. It's not impossible, though.

The Rangers could get Kane's cap hit to as low as $2.625 million by involving a third-party broker like Toronto did with Minnesota in the Ryan O'Reilly deal, but as of Thursday, the Rangers have $763,280 in cap space, according to Cap Friendly. Their projected deadline space is $908,667. 

If the Rangers move out Vitali Kravtsov ($875,000 million cap hit) and Jake Leschyshyn ($766,667), it would get them to roughly $2.4 million. That's about $225,000 short of being able to squeeze in Kane's $2.626 million.

If they can't find a way to trade or waive another contract, the only other option for the Rangers is to wait until as close to the deadline as possible to make the trade so that the Blackhawks could accrue as much of Kane's remaining hit as possible.

Kane's daily cap hit is $56,757. Stretch that over an eight-day span — which leads right up to the deadline — and it's $454,056 total. That would be enough for the Rangers to fit in Kane and be cap compliant.

The challenge for the Rangers is they would have zero flexibility for the rest of the season, barring an injury, and could be forced to carry only 20 players on the active roster. There would be very little wiggle room, which wouldn't be the worst thing but still something they'd have to manage. Agreeing on the potential package might actually be the easy part for the Blackhawks and Rangers.

There might not be a hotter stick in the NHL right now than Kane, who has seven goals and three assists over his last four games. He's playing his best hockey of the season, and the thought of landing a red-hot Kane after already acquiring Tarasenko is probably making the Rangers salivate.

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Penguins Make Jeff Petry Available Before NHL Trade Deadline - Pittsburgh Hockey Now

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Things are beginning to shake loose on the NHL trade market, although the Pittsburgh Penguins’ trade activity and hopes to improve before the March 3 deadline have as much to do with how much salary they can move as it will with who is available.

Tuesday, a Western Conference team executive confirmed to National Hockey Now that Penguins defenseman Jeff Petry has been made available.

“He’s out there,” said the source.

NHN has not been able to verify interested teams, as the source also confirmed Penguins GM Ron Hextall’s well-known desire for confidentiality in such matters.

Petry, 35, has two more seasons after this, with a salary-cap hit of $6.25 million and is the Penguins’ second highest-paid player behind Sidney Crosby.

He does have a 15-team no-trade clause.

Hextall targeted the offensive defenseman last summer and dealt LHD Mike Matheson and a fourth-rounder to Montreal for Petry and forward Ryan Poehling.

However, the Penguins have developed greater needs than a competent right-side defenseman and second power-play QB. They need to move significant salary if they hope to bolster their third line which, statistically, is one of the worst lines in the league.

The Penguins are currently using their LTIR pool with 14 forwards and seven defensemen.

Petry has been solid but not especially impactful with the Penguins. In 40 games, he has 19 points, including three goals.

Penguins right-defenseman Jan Rutta, also capable of second-pair minutes, is close to returning after missing more than a month with an upper-body injury.

Moving Petry would likely clear enough salary for at least one Penguins trade, large or small, to bolster their third line or address other needs. Still, few teams have the cap space to accept Petry’s salary without sending a significant salary the other way.

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Rabu, 22 Februari 2023

Senators trade Nikita Zaitsev to Blackhawks: How the deal helps Chicago’s salary cap floor - The Athletic

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The Senators have traded defenseman Nikita Zaitsev to the Chicago Blackhawks in exchange for future considerations, Ottawa announced Wednesday. Chicago also receives a second-round 2023 draft pick and a fourth-round 2026 draft pick in the deal. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Zaitsev has five assists and zero goals in 28 games this season for the Senators, his fourth with the team.
  • The 31-year-old has one year remaining on a seven-year, $31.5 million deal he signed in May 2017.
  • The Blackhawks now have nine picks in the first two rounds over the next two drafts (four first-round picks and five second-round picks).

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

What they’re saying

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

What Zaitsev means for Chicago

The Blackhawks have a bevy of young defensemen knocking on the door of the NHL, and Zaitsev appears to be another veteran body in the way. But with Jake McCabe, Jack Johnson and Connor Murphy all on the trading block, it’s possible a few spots will open up anyway for the likes of Isaak Phillips, Ian Mitchell, Alex Vlasic and 2022 first-rounder Kevin Korchinski.

Davidson’s priority at this point is accumulating as much draft capital as possible as the NHL squad bottoms out. And he hasn’t even moved Patrick Kane, McCabe or Sam Lafferty yet. This also helps the Blackhawks reach the cap floor next season, with Jonathan Toews ($10.5 million), Kane ($10.5 million) and about $3.6 million of Duncan Keith’s recapture penalty coming off the books. — Lazerus

Why did the Senators make this move?

This absolutely feels like a precursor to another trade for Ottawa. By dumping Zaitsev’s contract, the Senators are out from his contract, which carried a $4.5 million cap hit through the end of next season. Ottawa is clearing out cap space, likely with the intention of adding another defenceman at some point before the March 3 deadline.

It would seem strange that general manager Pierre Dorion would suddenly feel the need to send a second- and fourth-round pick to Chicago to take Zaitsev’s contract unless he had something else brewing. We’ll likely be able to analyze this trade from an Ottawa perspective once the other shoe drops. — Mendes

Why Zaitsev didn’t fit in Ottawa

Over the past couple of seasons, Zaitsev has become a lightning rod for criticism in the Senators’ fan base. His play in the defensive zone was likely not commensurate with his $4.5 million salary and he found himself demoted to the AHL at the end of November. Even though Zaitsev returned to the club in December and played a fairly steady role, it felt like his days were numbered after the demotion.

At this stage of the game, he’s likely a sixth or seventh defenceman on most NHL teams. He doesn’t generate a ton offensively, but he’s able to kill penalties if needed. When he first arrived in Ottawa in 2019-20, Zaitsev was hailed as the long-term fit alongside Thomas Chabot on Ottawa’s top pairing. However, as the years progressed, Zaitsev found himself sliding down the depth chart. — Mendes

What’s next for the Blackhawks?

Weaponizing cap space is important and a key part of Davidson’s grand plan. But the real fireworks should begin any day now, with pretty much the entire roster short of Seth Jones and Philipp Kurashev available to anyone who wants to throw a draft pick Chicago’s way.

Kane is the headliner, of course, but the Blackhawks believe they can leverage a first-round pick for McCabe — easily their best defenseman this season — if they retain half of his $4 million cap hit over the next two seasons. Lafferty, a speedy penalty-killer who has scored 10 goals this season (including four shorthanded), is on the market, too, and the Blackhawks are hoping he’s worth a second-rounder to somebody. — Lazerus

Required reading

(Photo: Nick Turchiaro / USA Today)

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