It is a very rare feat that a player is traded in the middle of a 100-point season. One has to look as far back as Joe Thornton’s blockbuster move from the Boston Bruins to the San Jose Sharks in 2005, or Teemu Selanne’s move from the Winnipeg Jets to the Anaheim Mighty Ducks in 1995. It is near unprecedented that a 100-point scorer gets moved twice in the same year. But that’s exactly what transpired at the 2025 NHL Trade Deadline, after top winger Mikko Rantanen – pacing for 107 points before his first move – was dealt first to the Carolina Hurricanes and then to the Dallas Stars.
Both trades were groundbreaking. The first moved Rantanen away from the Colorado Avalanche after a decade with the organization; and the second marked the absolute peak of hurt feelings, poor fits, and extension negotiations. With the rare moves has come plenty of media attention, painstakingly scrutinizing the pair of deals from every angle. That has teased out plenty about the motivations and frustrations that drove Rantanen’s cross-country journeys.
The saga began when negotiations on a new contract extension between the Avalanche and Rantanen fell flat. The winger wanted a premium payment after posting career-years in each of the last two seasons – 105 points in 2022-23 and 104 points last year. But Colorado didn’t want to exceed their internal cap limit, and capped their offer to Rantanen at an eight-year, $93.2MM extension – or $11.65MM in per-season salary. But the Finnish wing wasn’t willing to dip that low. Rantanen conceded to take less than Edmonton Oilers star Leon Draisaitl, who earned $14MM on his own extension – but wouldn’t settle for too much lower than Avalanche co-star Nathan MacKinnon’s $12.6MM salary.
Ultimately, it seems the Avalanche and Rantanen were roughly $1MM apart on a new deal. Rather than trying to continue sparring – or risk bending their internal cap – Colorado opted to flip their superstar without much second thought. Rantanen shared he was shocked by the sudden move, which moved him to the Hurricanes alongside Taylor Hall in exchange for Martin Necas, Jack Drury, a second-round pick, and a fourth-round pick. At the time, Rantanen told Corey Masisak of The Denver Post, “I was ready to take a significant discount for my market value. We had some chats, like a couple days before. Then they traded me. That’s what happened. That’s why I didn’t expect what happened.”
Apparently, Rantanen’s frustrations over the trade boiled into his first days in Carolina. To make matters worse, he left for the 4-Nations Face-Off tournament just over a week after playing in his first Hurricanes game – uprooting him as he tried to adjust to the new setting. With so much swirling around the move, it seemed Rantanen wasn’t ever going to be comfortable in Carolina. Canes head coach Rod Brind’Amour told Sportsnet that Rantanen laid it out flat from day one, telling him “There’s four teams I’ll go play for, but [Carolina] is not one of them.” Those are harsh words for an incoming addition – and made it clear that Rantanen had no indication of re-signing in his new destination. That held true even as Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky began his own negotiations, reportedly offering Rantanen as much as $12.6MM and showing the flexibility to go up to Draisaitl’s $14MM mark if need be.
With that, it was back to the open market for Rantanen. He had four landing spots top of mind but the Hurricanes received rich interest from across the league. The New Jersey Devils were the first team attached to the second market, and were quickly joined by the Toronto Maple Leafs, Vegas Golden Knights, Los Angeles Kings, Florida Panthers, and Dallas Stars.
Negotiations stalled out at different points with each team, but were said to go well down towards completion with Toronto, Edmonton, and Dallas. The Leafs are said to have offered a compelling package of top prospects Fraser Minten, Easton Cowan, and draft capital for the 100-point scorer – but Carolina countered with a package involving Toronto’s own star winger Mitch Marner. Marner was unwilling to waive his full no-movement clause for the move – ultimately caving talks in.
With one Canadian club dissatisfied, Carolina moved on to talks with the Edmonton Oilers – who were able to better match Rantanen’s desires for an extension, but couldn’t put together a return strong enough to sway the Hurricanes brass. That’s certainly no surprise. Edmonton has just one pick in the top two rounds of the 2025 or 2026 drafts – a second in the latter year. Their prospect pool is also relatively scant, headlined by Matthew Savoie with little depth behind him.
Where one bed is too soft – banked on future assets and inter-conference matchups – and the other is too hard – stuffed with filler to make up for lacking future pieces – Carolina was able to finally land on a perfect middle-ground in Dallas. The Stars are quickly turning into a wagon, with star veterans Tyler Seguin and Jamie Benn continuing to perform (when healthy) while youngsters like Wyatt Johnston and Thomas Harley plant their feet at the top of the lineup. With that momentum, and a clear path to the postseason, Dallas was able to shed some layers to land a big fish. They offered Carolina high-upside youngster Logan Stankoven, two first-round picks, and two third-round picks in exchange for Rantanen – an offer far more impactful in the short and long term than Toronto or Edmonton mustered up.
But the move to Dallas wasn’t immediately fruitful. The Stars formed the framework of the trade, but needed to land an extension with Rantanen before things could go through. Dallas wasn’t nearly as liberal with their wallets as some of Rantanen’s other options, and held firm to the $12MM-per-year mark on a new deal. That number came in $500K less than what Carolina had offered Rantanen, which initially put the winger off and seemed to push the deal towards falling flat. But diligent negotiating, and surely a desire to end this saga, ultimately forced Rantanen to cave. He signed an eight-year, $96MM extension with Dallas on the day of the Trade Deadline – finally (finally) landing him in a place where he could plant his feet.
On the organizational level, it seems everyone emerged from the jungle happy. Colorado landed a major contributor in Necas, who already has 17 points in 16 games as MacKinnon’s new right-winger. Carolina may have lost that point-per-game scoring, but they reeled back in one of the league’s top 23-year-olds, and the draft capital to be satisfied even if he doesn’t pan out. And Dallas added a 100-point scorer to an organization that’s only had one – 2022-23 Jason Robertson – since 1990.
But the deal gets murky as you dig deeper. After beginning the saga with a surprising move to Carolina, Rantanen now finds himself standing directly opposite of his old battery-mate MacKinnon. Colorado and Dallas have fought for majority control of the Central Division for years, intermittently upended by the Winnipeg Jets or Minnesota Wild. It’s not exactly a two-horse race, but Dallas’ success hinges on their ability to beat Colorado in the regular and post seasons – and vice versa. The two sides have already faced off twice this season, splitting the results. They have one more meeting – on Sunday, March 16th – which will give Rantanen a chance to test out facing his former club before they likely reconvene in the playoffs. While all of Rantanen’s matches with the Stars will be closely watched – it will be those meetings against Colorado that many find the most telling, after a trade saga that dragged through months of confusion and rumors.
Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Carolina would probably want a do over. Why didn’t they do what Dallas did, not make the deal until extension signed? There’s no way they are happy the way this turned out. Going to the playoffs with Necas was the better option. Rookie GM got played.
Maybe. But they turned a year and a half of Necas, Chris Drury a 2nd, a 3rd and a 4th into Logan Stankoven, two first-round picks, and two third-round picks. How much have they hurt their odds in the playoffs this year?
Oh yeah, and Taylor Hall.
When looked at it like that:
Out:
Martin Necas – 1.5 yrs to UFA – streaky but good
Chris Drury – very replaceable 3rd 4th line utility player
2nd round pick
3rd round pick
4th round pick
In:
Logan Stankoven – young player that has potential and fits Carolina’s system. Lots of contract time left before UFA.
Taylor Hall – Aging veteran, but seems to fit very well into the system.
1st round pick (2026 – top 10 protected)
1st round pick (2028 – top 10 protected)
3rd round pick (2026)
3rd round pick (2027)
That’s a kings ransom for Carolina. Doesn’t help this year, but future is bright. No cups but plenty of playoffs lol
Don’t forget all the cap space the Canes now have due to these deals and Burns, Orlov and Andersen leaving after this season. The Canes may be able to reload before a rebuild ever happens…
What they gave up and what they received is fairly close in value. I like Stankoven a lot, but I think their odds to win a Stanley cup has definitely went down, especially in the next 2 seasons. All the picks and Drury don’t really impact cup odds at all.
That’s a good point, but they have a reputation issue, that has gotten worse after this Rantanen thing. If Marner declined, as reported, that makes it even worse. Rod’s system only fits certain players.
Touching on that. Rantanen straight up told Brindamour he didn’t want to be there and had 4 teams he’d sign with. Rod would never say that if it weren’t true. Colorado SMOKED a rookie GM. Tulsky should have put on a clown suit and makeup for the press conference. At least we would have gotten a laugh.
And don’t forget that the Owner is cheap and can’t do a deal if his life depended on it. 3rd class organization..
you guys keep sayin Chris Drury lol helluva player but I dont think he’s on the market these days
I think it’s Jack Drury
Marner declining to waive his no movement clause so he wasn’t traded to Carolina means nothing for their reputation. Marner wants to be in Toronto. I doubt he would’ve waived it to go anywhere.
Necas has 15 playoff goals in his career, doesn’t play defense and has an expiring contract next year so yeah doesn’t really hurt the Canes
I would expect Mikko has some sort of negotiator’s remorse. Could’ve had 8/12 in Col and continue on in the only situation he’s ever known. I have some sympathy for him in that regard. It’ll suck seeing him in a Stars uniform going forward. At least in Carolina he was in the East and out of sight
Although it feels a little weird that Colorado up & dealt him when their offer was $11.6 and Rantanen reportedly said he wouldn’t settle for “too much lower” than $12.6 which seems pretty obvious that an offer of $12 would have let everyone walk away happy & content in a new deal. Although maybe his agent was indeed playing chicken and lost. Still seems weird though.
Stars chip incoming.
The Adam Gold clip from his Canes Corner postgame (ESPN Radio not Sporsnet) of Brind’Amour talking about Rantanen having no intention of signing and him also talking about Guentzel walking was intended to refute the idea that players don’t want to play in Carolina… but it really seems to question management when you listen to it.
Due to the 4-Nations tournament and lack of home games, Rantanen never had much time in Carolina. Not everyone likes Brind’Amour’s system, but Rantanen was pouting and giving a half-assed effort when playing here. He made no effort to fit in. As a Canes fan, I’m glad he’s gone.
As for Guentzel, he had great chemistry with Aho and scored more than a point-per-game while he was here. Owner Tom Dundon was late to the table in offering Guentzel what he wanted, so that loss is on management, not on RBA’s system. Carolina could have kept Guentzel.
Also, don’t forget that the original Rantanen deal brought Taylor Hall to Carolina to be combined with the Dallas return of Stankonen and 4 picks. Hall has worked out nicely and likely will be re-signed.
@raven88… not sure how this is a reply to the notion that Brind’Amour’s comments seemed especially critical (though unintentionally I believe) of Canes management? Even if it wasn’t his intent, he sounded somewhat frustrated with the situation in the front office.
I was agreeing that Guentzel walking was a problem with management, but suggesting that Rantanen’s leaving was more of a problem with Rantanen than with management. Carolina offered Rantanen the dollars he wanted, but Rantanen didn’t want to play here.
From everything I’ve read, when the deal with Colorado was done, Rantanen was undecided whether he would sign with Carolina—at least so he said at the time. Maybe Tulsky could or should have done more to ensure that there was a reasonable possibility of Rantanen signing here. If management made a mistake with Rantanen, that was it—it wasn’t the money like it was with Guentzel.
Brind’Amour’s system is not a good fit for everyone. To be sure, he has managed to take a team that lacks a true superstar and make the whole greater than the sum of the parts. But, IMHO, Carolina would really benefit from a superstar. These 100-point players typically do most of their scoring on the rush, not on the grind. So Brind’Amour needs to make some adjustments to his system or else Carolina seems destined to be the bridesmaid and never the bride when it comes to the playoffs.
And don’t get me started on why he buries Jarvis on the line with Staal and Martinook . . . .
Thanks for the clarity… I agree with all of that.
#freeSethJarvis
No talk about the tax implications of playing in Texas? I don’t think he was “forced” into signing a lower deal than he wanted. I think he was shown that his take home pay would be the same as a higher deal in Colorado or Carolina and made an informed choice.
I don’t think there’s any chance taxes played a role in what happened to Colorado. Maybe they were one of several factors that made Dallas preferable to Carolina.
Bottomline is the Canes wanted to improve their team for this season and they clearly fell short of that. Next season might be a different story if they can leverage those draft picks for a top talent, but this was a rookie GM mistake.
Is the path through the Metro ever gonna be this easy again? With a “red carpet” to the Conference Final they absolutely should have made sure they improved for the here and now… did they?
Nope.
Really good question. This was def the year, as the only competition right now are the Caps. The Rangers have fallen well short of expectation, and should rebound next season; the Devils were hit with injuries, but were hot on their tails until the injury bug hits, so chances are that they will join in on the race next season; and CBJ should join the race in the next couple of years if their young guys continue to develop. The Canes’ window might be starting to close, so this misstep might cost them
You’re probably right—the Canes are no better off, although they may not be much worse off if Stankonen and Hall continue to shine, and then there’s Jankowski. The Dallas trade tree is not completed. Carolina has lots of cap space next year and some good picks to trade. They need to go out and get a great second-line center and maybe even somebody like Marner (apparently Dundon is willing to pay what’s required). They’ll also have Nikishin coming in on D.
I never thought the Canes were in a good position this year to win the Cup, even with the demise of NY and NJ and even if we had kept Necas and Drury. We don’t have the forward talent, and both our D and our goaltending have been very inconsistent.
I don’t think Washington would be an easy out if they ended up being a 2nd round opponent.
Good chance they’ll be the easiest of the four second round home teams.
Mikk-hoe Rantanen