The New York Rangers are acquiring forward Tyler Motte from the Vancouver Canucks, per Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli. The Canucks will receive a 2023 fourth-round selection in return.
Motte, 27, has apparently generated plenty of interest over the past few weeks, which may make Canucks fans a little bit disappointed that the team was only able to secure a fourth-round pick from the Rangers at the deadline. The energy forward has continued to impress ever since the 2020 playoff run that introduced him to the national stage, but with such little offensive output, he falls into the category of many other bottom-six forward additions.
In 49 games this season, Motte has scored seven goals and 15 points, adding another 90 hits to his increasing total. Through 260 NHL games, he’s racked up 628 of those hits, including a whopping 200 during the 2018-19 season, his only full campaign to date. That’s exactly the kind of hockey that Rangers general manager Chris Drury has been trying to play ever since taking over, meaning Motte will fit right into a bottom-six that already includes players like Ryan Reaves (231 hits this season), Dryden Hunt (127), and Barclay Goodrow (102).
The Rangers obviously believe they’re good enough to compete this season, riding a hot goaltender and some potent scoring to battle for a playoff spot earlier than some predicted. They’ve now added Motte, Frank Vatrano, Andrew Copp, and Justin Braun to a group that was already in a playoff position. In each case, the player is a pending UFA, meaning they aren’t locked in past this season, when some of their younger players start to get expensive. Adam fox for instance will jump from an entry-level $925K to a whopping $9.5MM cap hit in 2022-23, while Mika Zibanejad will be earning $8.5MM. There will be time to add in the offseason, but making any deals with term obviously didn’t make sense to them this time around.
jdgoat
The Rangers did a great job upgrading their bottom six this deadline with Copp, Vatrano, and Motte. None are probably game changers but now they’re going to be that much tougher to play against when they have four pretty good lines.
Bucky76
It’s all about the coaching if there’s a player’s coach the players don’t mind going to that team and that’s what the Rangers have.