When the New York Rangers selected Lias Andersson seventh-overall in the 2017 NHL draft, it was a long time coming. The Rangers hadn’t selected in the first 40 picks for four consecutive drafts, and had just one top-10 pick (Dylan McIlrath at #10 in 2010) in the previous twelve. To get Andersson, they’d had to move Derek Stepan and Antti Raanta, two extremely important pieces of their 2016-17 season. They had sold assets for the first time in many years, and now Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet seems to think they may not be done. In his latest “31 Thoughts” column, Friedman writes that New York is not interested in just being an average NHL team, and could be heading towards a partial rebuild with an appetite for prospects and draft picks.
Speculation from this opening salvo will surely run rampant around the hockey world, with players like Mats Zuccarello and Ryan McDonagh both listed outside of the perceived untouchables. The Rangers have several pending unrestricted free agents and others with just one year remaining on their deal after this season, including the above mentioned duo. Zuccarello and McDonagh would be huge trade deadline additions if the Rangers don’t right the ship entirely, and with a 4-7-2 record they have an early fight on their hands for relevancy in the Metropolitan Division.
If the Rangers are truly committed to a quick rebuild led by Andersson and fellow first-round pick Filip Chytil, you have to wonder where Rick Nash will find himself playing down the stretch. The 33-year old winger has just four points through 13 games, but is carrying an incredibly low 4.3% shooting percentage that is sure to rebound to somewhere closer to his career average of 12.2%. Nash has a partial no-trade clause, but perhaps a bigger impedance for a trade is his salary. Not only does he carry a $7.8MM cap hit, but Nash is owed $8.2MM in salary this season and none of it was paid out in signing bonuses. Finding a team that has both the cap space and available real cash will be tricky, and might require the Rangers to retain some salary.
Still, the team will be one to watch all season for how they react to a poor start. They actually have quite a reasonable schedule coming up this month, without a single back-to-back situation and four instances of at least two days in a row off. If they take advantage of that, it might not look so dreary as they head into winter and really start discussing trades.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Doc Halladay
There’s been talk around the Montreal media about the Habs and Rangers talking trade. The main names I’ve seen being speculated on are Kreider, McDonagh, Galchenyuk, Pacioretty and Shaw.