While the Blue Jackets have taken care of most of their offseason business, there are a couple of matters for them to still attend to. The biggest one is the Patrik Laine situation. The winger has made it known that he would like to be traded and has been cleared from the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program. However, GM Don Waddell indicated in an interview with Mark Scheig of The Hockey Writers that they are not particularly close to finding a change of scenery for him:
Well, he’s still a Blue Jacket today and as we speak, I don’t have anything (newsworthy of) interest, but nothing that I had to make a decision on yet. Just some teams do their homework and trying to talk with Patrick and his agent and he thought about giving full permission to talk to teams. So, but as we are talking, I don’t have anything that on the table that would even make any sense for the Blue Jackets to make that deal.
The 26-year-old was limited to just 18 games last season where he had six goals and three assists before being shut down due to shoulder surgery in December; he entered the assistance program just over a month later. For someone who has a cap hit of $8.7MM, that’s far from a great return.
However, Laine has a track record of being a productive scorer. He has three 30-goal campaigns under his belt and three more of at least 22, two of which came in 2021-22 and 2022-23, seasons where he missed at least 26 games due to injury. With that in mind, there is some recent success which should be of some value for interested teams. But until they can make the money work (either with Columbus retaining money, taking a pricey contract back, or both), it doesn’t look like this is going to come to a quick resolution.
One element that might be resolved quickly, however, is Cole Sillinger’s next contract. A report from The Athletic’s Aaron Portzline surfaced a little more than a week ago that the two sides were close on a new deal. That still hasn’t been made official yet but Waddell acknowledged that an agreement is nearly done:
Yeah, we’re real close. His agent has been very, there’s been lots of talks going on, all very positive talks. We’re all within the striking distance. It’s just a matter of they have a position, we have a position and there’s no doubt in my mind it’ll get worked out.
The 21-year-old was the 12th overall pick in 2021 and made the jump to the NHL right away, notching 31 points in his rookie year before struggling considerably in his sophomore season. However, Sillinger was able to rebound somewhat last season, notching 13 goals and 19 assists in 77 games while logging over 16 minutes a night of ice time. That said, this appears to be a situation where a short-term second contract makes sense for both sides to better assess what Sillinger’s true offensive upside will be.
Meanwhile, Waddell provided an injury update on prospect Cayden Lindstrom. The Blue Jackets drafted the middleman with the number four pick in June following a strong, albeit injury-riddled, WHL season with Medicine Hat where he had 27 goals and 19 assists in just 32 games. Lindstrom has been working his way back from a back injury but has not yet been cleared to resume skating. Accordingly, the GM suggested that he might not participate in next month’s rookie tournament unless he is deemed fully recovered at that time.
Lastly, Waddell didn’t rule out the possibility of giving out one or two tryout agreements in the coming weeks. However, he noted that his preference is to have smaller groups for training camps and with an overhaul of the coaching staff, having the smaller group makes more sense this time around. That said, with eight exhibition games in an 11-day stretch, having a veteran or two to help meet the minimum quota probably wouldn’t hurt.