After a challenging 2020-2021 season, Boston Bruins winger Jake DeBrusk requested to be traded from the team. The team acknowledged his request, but since then there has been seemingly little progress towards a resolution of the issue. That lack of progress should not be confused with a retraction of the request, though. DeBrusk still desires a trade from the Bruins, and as Pierre LeBrun of TSN explains, DeBrusk’s camp is “willing to work on an extension to help facilitate a deal” so that the player can be traded to another team. For an acquiring team to retain an unextended DeBrusk’s rights beyond this season, they would have to issue him a qualifying offer worth $4.41MM against the cap. LeBrun notes that “a lot of teams are concerned” about that figure, which could explain why DeBrusk remains a Bruin several months after his request to be traded became public.
Looking at the situation from Boston’s perspective, it is clear that DeBrusk is in the middle of a bounce-back season, as was cemented by a hat trick against the Los Angeles Kings. He has 14 goals and 24 points in 48 games, which is a 24-goal, 41-point pace, production that is more in line with his past seasons. DeBrusk’s re-emergence as a legitimate scoring threat, especially recently, should in theory help him secure a trade, but the looming trade deadline complicates things. The Bruins are currently solidly in place in the Eastern Conference’s first wild card playoff spot, and taking away DeBrusk’s production as the team intends on competing for a Stanley Cup would not be ideal. That being said, one wonders if keeping a player who wants out on a team with sky-high aspirations is just as problematic. Moreover, there is the opportunity a DeBrusk trade would hypothetically provide the Bruins. Moving DeBrusk could help Boston target a replacement forward from the trade market, giving them more assets to trade and more cap space to work with. The team knows DeBrusk doesn’t want to be a Bruin, so perhaps a DeBrusk trade could go hand-in-hand with Boston acquiring a forward to replace him.
For an acquiring team, DeBrusk represents an interesting opportunity as well as a bit of a risk. On one hand, there are a lot of things to DeBrusk that make him an attractive trade target. He has flirted with scoring 30 goals before and is still only 25 years old. Given his recent inconsistency, he is likely to cost under $4MM on an extension, and is, according to LeBrun, willing to negotiate an extension with a team that acquires him. So any team can look at DeBrusk and see a potential 30-goal-scorer that they can lock into a bargain contract. But on the flip side of that, DeBrusk’s 27-goal-season was his sophomore campaign in 2018-19, and since then he has struggled to match that level of production. His bouts of inconsistency and inability to truly seize a top-six spot in Boston are red flags, and with a hefty $4.41MM price tag attached on a qualifying offer, what happens if he struggles to transition to a new team? DeBrusk is a difficult player to fully get a grip on, so he could be a bit of a leap of faith for any team that trades for him. But the upside is definitely there.
Compared to other options on the trade market, DeBrusk is a riskier proposition. As previously mentioned, his inability to cement himself as a reliable NHL scorer makes him more of a lottery ticket than proven veteran scorers such as Phil Kessel. But DeBrusk is younger, offers more long-term viability, and has the upside to be a multi-year fixture in a team’s top-six. A team acquiring DeBrusk would likely be in a different place in their competitive timeline than a team acquiring Kessel, because DeBrusk’s value is more theoretical, more long-term, while Kessel or other veteran wingers would in all likelihood provide a more immediate boost.
Interestingly, DeBrusk is not the only Bruins 2015 first-round pick to request a trade from the organization. Winger Zachary Senyshyn, the player the Bruins picked immediately after DeBrusk, also filed a trade request earlier this season. While DeBrusk may be viewed as a disappointment in the eyes of some observers in Boston, Senyshyn has been undoubtedly the more disappointing pick for the Bruins. Senyshyn has only appeared in 14 career NHL games and has a single goal to his name. With Senyshyn and DeBrusk requesting trades from the organization, it is clear that the team’s long-term plans for their offense have shifted away from those two former top picks. The situation with the two of them is definitely one to keep an eye on, especially as the trade deadline gets closer and closer.
66TheNumberOfTheBest
Kapanen for DeBrusk, who says no?
jmartin87
The Bruins say no.
wreckage
Yamamoto for Debrusk?
Nha Trang
That’d be intriguing; two talented players with major consistency problems. DeBrusk is having the better season (and, I think, is the better player), but meeting Yamamoto’s qualifying offer would be a snap. I think a straight up swap would be the kind of deal that’d benefit both teams … maybe Edmonton chipping in a low-round pick to offset the Bruins needing to retain salary on DeBrusk to make the numbers work.
ericl
Keeping DeBrusk isn’t an issue for the Bruins. He is liked in the locker room and Patrice Bergeron has recently spoken highly about the way DeBrusk has been playing and working. The Bruins only move DeBrusk if it benefits them. Otherwise, they’ll keep him and move him in the offseason. They aren’t going to trade him for the sake of trading him.
kiwimlbfan
@ericl – I haven’t followed this, what’s his issue with Boston?
Nha Trang
Well, we don’t know what’s going on in his head, but here’s how it’s played out. DeBrusk’s been pretty inconsistent the last couple years, and a fair bit of it seems to be that his effort comes and goes. So in consequence he’s been bounced around from line to line, often winding up on a fourth trio. He’s also been benched outright, or made a healthy scratch, and this has happened a few times per season … along with concurrent remarks from the coach to the press about DeBrusk’s need to stop faffing around and get his head in the game.
So while he hasn’t said so publicly, we figure in Boston that DeBrusk is just fed up with it and wants to be better appreciated.
Bucky76
Bruins don’t need any more small players that have no b***s to go some where they need muscle..DeBrusk,Studnicka and Clifton to Islanders for Bailey, Johnston and yes Chara…Bruins would have to take on maybe a million more in salary…maybe..