While it has been widely expected that the Vegas Golden Knights would be ready to start doing business with teams around the league on March 1st, it sounds now like they’ll miss the opportunity to be in calls on the trade deadline. The team could have never participated in deals involving active NHL or AHL players, but could have swapped picks or starting hammering out deals for the expansion draft. Now according to owner Bill Foley on KXNT, the team will only be able to have informal discussions because their paperwork won’t be filed in time.
In practice, this doesn’t stop George McPhee and the rest of the front office from being involved on deadline day, but nothing they do can officially be signed off or sanctioned by the NHL. That leaves room for doubt, and on a day where so much is at stake may scare off potential teams. Teams around the league are having a tough time deciding what to do because they run the risk of exposing a new asset in the expansion draft, and making hard deals with the Golden Knights might help to assuage those fears.
- While it’s been a slow lead up so far, Pierre LeBrun of ESPN spoke to one GM that wondered if the 48 hours before the expansion draft would be a little more hectic than the 48 before the March 1st deadline. With the Stanley Cup perhaps being awarded as late as June 15th, the protection lists being due June 17th, and the draft occurring on June 20th it is sure to be a hectic few days for teams to get their ducks in a row. As CapFriendly notes, the buyout window will (likely) open on the 15th giving those few days an extra wrinkle.
- The venerable Alex Prewitt of Sports Illustrated profiled the struggles of being a waiver-exempt young player with his latest piece on Anaheim Ducks defender Shea Theodore, who has been shuffled back and forth all season. Theodore has been involved in 13 transactions this year heading one way or the other between the NHL and AHL, and at this point doesn’t even remember most of them. “When you’re up and down so often, you don’t realize how many it’s actually been,” he tells Prewitt, before going into detail on his packing routine (or lack thereof). Theodore will actually be exempt for another two seasons, or 105 games depending on what comes first. While the Ducks—and Theodore himself—hope that he will be firmly entrenched in the lineup by then, it does show the value of having a player able to bounce back and forth. The San Jose Sharks do a similar thing with Mirco Mueller, who has played just four games for the NHL club despite being called up almost a dozen times.