NHL Rumor Mill – January 29, 2025

NHL Rumor Mill – January 29, 2025

What’s the latest on Canucks centers Elias Pettersson and J.T. Miller? Could Mikko Rantanen sign with the Oilers this summer? What’s next for the Avalanche and Hurricanes? Find out in today’s NHL Rumor Mill.

LATEST ON PETTERSSON AND MILLER

TSN: Vancouver Canucks president Jim Rutherford told The Globe & Mail’s Gary Mason that he can see no good solution to the rift between centers Elias Pettersson and J.T. Miller.

Rutherford indicated he felt there could be a long-term solution because everyone was working on it, including the two players. However, it would only be resolved for a short period before resurfacing. He said it “certainly appears that there’s not a good solution that would keep this group together.”

Vancouver Canucks center J.T. Miller (NHL Images)

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Pettersson and Miller denied a rift existed between them last month. Rutherford’s remarks leave no doubt there is an insurmountable issue between the two players adversely affecting the team.

The Canucks are exploring trade options involving Pettersson and Miller. Rutherford admitted the long-term outlook for the club will be affected. “We’ll have to do the best we can in trades,” he said. “Whatever assets you get in return, you may turn them into something else.”

Darren Dreger reports the Canucks aren’t interested in low-ball offers for either player. “It has to be respectable”, he said, pointing out that Pettersson and Miller are the Canucks’ top two forwards.

Miller carries a no-movement clause. Dreger said they’re willing to wait until the offseason if they don’t get suitable offers for him before the trade deadline.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Other clubs realize the Canucks are in a bind as the rift between those two affects the team’s performance so they’ll try to exploit that. Miller’s NMC complicates things as it limits potential trade destinations.

The Canucks will remain patient, hoping a rival club gets desperate enough to meet their asking price near the trade deadline. Otherwise, this situation could stretch into the offseason.

COULD RANTANEN SIGN WITH THE OILERS THIS SUMMER?

EDMONTON JOURNAL: David Staples cited NHL insider Andy Strickland predicting Mikko Rantanen will sign with the Oilers as a free agent this summer.

Rantanen, 28, was traded by the Colorado Avalanche to the Carolina Hurricanes last Friday. He’s in the final season of a six-year contract with an AAV of $9.25 million.

Strickland dismissed the salary cap difficulties the Oilers would face in signing Rantanen. He claimed there’s some belief that they could do it, and he pointed out that Rantanen and Oilers star Leon Draisaitl have the same agent. He also claimed his prediction was based on “informed speculation.”

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Strickland can dismiss the salary-cap concerns, but they’re too significant to ignore. If the ceiling reaches $92.4 million, as projected, the Oilers will have over $15 million in cap space, with 15 active roster players under contract.

Puck-moving defenseman Evan Bouchard is a restricted free agent with arbitration rights coming off a two-year contract with an AAV of $3.9 million. He reached a career-high 82 points last season. His production is down this season but he should still exceed 50 points.

Bouchard could seek between $9 million and $10 million annually. Assuming the Oilers convince him to accept a doubling of his current AAV to $7.8 million, it won’t leave enough to sign Rantanen and flesh out the rest of the roster. They must also ensure sufficient cap room to make Connor McDavid the NHL’s highest-paid player starting in 2026-27.

The Oilers could clear cap space by attempting to move players lacking no-trade protection like Viktor Arvidsson, Adam Henrique and Brett Kulak. They could also buy out the final season of Evander Kane’s contract, assuming he’s no longer on LTIR when the June buyout period rolls around. However, those moves will only further deplete their roster depth which will be difficult to replace if they sign Rantanen to an expensive contract.

Rantanen could seek a salary comparable to Draisaitl’s $14 million AAV. It could cost $16 million annually to keep McDavid in the fold. Even with the cap expected to reach $100 million in two years, it’s folly to have three forwards eating up over 40 percent of your annual cap payroll and expect to ice a roster deep enough to win the Stanley Cup.

WHAT’S NEXT FOR THE AVALANCHE AND HURRICANES?

THE HOCKEY NEWS: Adam Proteau believes the Colorado Avalanche aren’t done making deals after shipping Mikko Rantanen to Carolina on Friday.

The Avs have over $3.9 million in cap space. Proteau speculates they could attempt to improve their depth at center, replenish their stockpile of draft picks or add a third-pairing defenseman.

TSN: Chris Johnston believes the Hurricanes could still make moves by the March 7 trade deadline. He thinks they could attempt to upgrade at center after sending Jack Drury to Colorado in the Rantanen deal. Johnston also thinks they’re fine in goal now that Frederik Andersen has returned from knee surgery.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: The Hurricanes are in “win-now” mode so they could go shopping for more depth by March 7. The Avalanche could return to the market but their placement in the standings could determine whether they make another significant move or a smaller depth one.

Johnston’s colleague Pierre LeBrun reports the Hurricanes’ acquisition of Rantanen won’t change the trade deadline plans of the top teams in the Eastern Conference. They still intend to make moves but the Rantanen blockbuster won’t influence their decisions.










Sunday NHL Rumor Roundup – January 26, 2025

Sunday NHL Rumor Roundup – January 26, 2025

The ongoing fallout from Friday’s blockbuster trade involving Mikko Rantanen, plus the latest on Mitch Marner, Elias Pettersson and more in the Sunday NHL Rumor Roundup.

FALLOUT FROM THE RANTANEN TRADE CONTINUES

THE DENVER POST: Sam Keeler wonders if the Colorado Avalanche have other moves in store after trading away Mikko Rantanen to the Carolina Hurricanes on Friday for Martin Necas, Jack Drury and two draft picks. Otherwise, the move was a salary dump that waves the white flag on this season.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Speaking to reporters following the Rantanen trade, Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland didn’t sound like he’s planning a major acquisition before the March 7 trade deadline.

Carolina Hurricanes winger Mikko Rantanen (NHL Images).

MacFarland acknowledged trading Rantanen was a tough decision but felt it was important to get “two cost-controlled assets” like Necas and Drury, who are signed beyond this season. He also spoke of trying to replace Rantanen’s offense “in the aggregate,” pointing out that 50-goal scorers “don’t grow on trees, you have to usually draft and develop them”.

THE ATHLETIC: Pierre LeBrun reports Hurricanes GM Eric Tulsky is hopeful of signing Rantanen to a contract extension before his UFA eligibility on July 1. “As things stand right now, we have about $35 million or $40 million of space next year, depending on where the cap goes,” he said.

LeBrun noted that the Hurricanes are the only team that can offer Rantanen an eight-year contract, as he’ll only get a seven-year deal on the open market. Tulsky indicated he’d love to work out a long-term deal with the 28-year-old winger. A potential ace in the hole is Hurricanes center Sebastian Aho, who is good friends with Rantanen and could convince him to stay in Carolina.

Tulsky also didn’t rule out adding to his roster before the March 7 trade deadline. “There’s always room to keep improving,” he said.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Rantanen’s current cap hit is $9.25 million. His camp reportedly sought a contract extension comparable to Leon Draisaitl’s, with the Edmonton Oilers paying him $14 million annually starting in July. The Hurricanes will have the cap space to meet that asking price if that’s what Rantanen wants.

The Hurricanes are currently pressed against this season’s $88 million cap. Similar to the Rantanen deal, Tulsky will need to be more creative to make another significant addition by March 7.

LATEST TRADE RUMOR TIDBITS FROM SATURDAY’S “32 THOUGHTS”

SPORTSNET: Elliotte Friedman dismissed speculation suggesting the Avalanche have room now to acquire Sidney Crosby from the Pittsburgh Penguins and unite him with fellow Cole Harbour, NS native Nathan MacKinnon. “I don’t think so,” he said. “I know everybody would love that, but I don’t think that’s in the cards.”

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Penguins fans probably wouldn’t love that. Pundits seem to want to see that more than anyone else. Sure, it’s a dream pairing of “The Cole Harbour Boys”, but we’ll see it in next month’s 4 Nations Face-Off when they skate for Team Canada.

Asked if the Rantanen trade might affect Mitch Marner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Friedman said their situations aren’t comparable. He pointed out that Marner has a full no-movement clause whereas Rantanen’s was a partial no-trade.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Marner is finishing this season with the Leafs. Whether he’s still with them on July 1 is another matter.

Friedman noted the Chicago Blackhawks have a ton of cap room for next season and he expects they’ll be aggressive. As for why they accepted a low return of a third-round pick in the Rantanen trade, they got a higher pick for Taylor Hall than they would’ve received had it been straight up (“about 25 to 30 picks higher”). Meanwhile, they saved around a half-million dollars when one looks at what they would’ve had to pay Hall for the remainder of the season compared to what they’re paying to take on half of Rantanen’s remaining cap hit.

Turning elsewhere, Friedman reports the Buffalo Sabres are interested in Vancouver Canucks center Elias Pettersson. Other teams are also involved but Friedman said the Sabres are “definitely in there”.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Friedman didn’t resurrect his pitch of Pettersson to Buffalo for Dylan Cozens and Bowen Byram from earlier this season. Meanwhile, recent reports suggest the Canucks intend to retain Pettersson and trade J.T. Miller.

Friedman believes the salary cap will reach $100 million in two years. Some teams aren’t comfortable with that. He indicated some observers believe there will be clubs with no problem spending to the cap ceiling but others could stick with a lower internal cap.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: That’s the same thing we’ve seen around the league since the imposition of the cap 20 years ago. However, fewer teams could be willing to spend to the cap over time while more clubs crouch closer to the cap floor. It could create a two-tier league where the big-market clubs spend much more than their smaller-market peers like they did in the pre-cap era.










NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – January 26, 2025

NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – January 26, 2025

The Avalanche and Hurricanes play their first games since the blockbuster trade involving Mikko Rantanen, the Senators reveal their Quarter-Century Team, and more from a busy Saturday in today’s NHL Morning Coffee Headlines.

NHL.COM: Mikko Rantanen and Taylor Hall were held scoreless in their debuts with the Carolina Hurricanes as they dropped a 3-2 decision in overtime to the New York Islanders. Brock Nelson tallied the winning goal as the Isles overcame a 2-0 deficit. Jack Roslovic and Sebastian Aho scored for the Hurricanes, who remain second in the Metropolitan Division with 64 points. The Islanders (49 points) have won four straight and sit six points out of the final Eastern Conference wild-card berth.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: In case you missed it, Rantanan and Hall were traded to the Hurricanes on Friday evening in a three-team deal involving the Carolina Hurricanes and Chicago Blackhawks. Islanders goaltender Marcus Hogberg left this game in the third period with an upper-body injury while teammate Ryan Pulock (upper body) departed in the first period.

Meanwhile, former Hurricanes Martin Necas and Jack Drury didn’t fare any better in their debuts with the Colorado Avalanche as they fell 3-1 to the Boston Bruins. Morgan Geekie scored two goals while David Pastrnak had a goal and two assists for the Bruins, who moved into third place in the Atlantic Division with 56 points. Artturi Lekhonen replied for the Avalanche (58 points) as they hold the first wild-card spot in the Western Conference.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Necas and Drury were shipped from the Hurricanes to the Avalanche in the Rantanen trade. Colorado general manager Chris MacFarland acknowledged the move was a tough business decision. He wanted to re-sign Rantanen and improve his roster depth but couldn’t do both, so he chose the latter.

Rantanen’s departure saddened Avalanche star Nathan MacKinnon. “I never thought in a million years he’d leave. So yeah, it just sucks,” he said, calling Rantanen a great friend and teammate. “I’m gonna miss him”.

Edmonton Oilers forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (NHL Images).

Edmonton Oilers forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored twice, including the go-ahead goal in the third period to lift his club over the Buffalo Sabres 3-2. Stuart Skinner stopped 39 shots as the Oilers took over first place in the Pacific Division with 65 points. Alex Tuch and Jiri Kulich scored for the Sabres, who’ve dropped four of their last five games.

Columbus Blue Jackets forward Kirill Marchenko scored in overtime to lift his club to a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Kings. Blue Jackets defenseman Zach Werenski scored to extend his home points streak to 19 games as his club holds the final Eastern Conference wild-card spot with 55 points. Kevin Fiala had two assists and Quinton Byfield scored the tying goal for the Kings, who sit third in the Pacific Division with 58 points.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Sidelined Blue Jackets center Sean Monahan will miss an additional six to eight weeks as he suffered a setback in his recovery from a wrist injury.

The Seattle Kraken got a 28-save performance from goaltender Joey Daccord in a 4-1 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins. Jared McCann and Chandler Stephenson each collected two assists as the Kraken got their third win in their last four contests. Sidney Crosby tallied for the Penguins, who’ve lost three of their last four and sit seven points out of the final Eastern wild-card berth.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Penguins forwards Evgeni Malkin and Matt Nieto left this game with injuries. There was no postgame update on their conditions.

An overtime goal by Jack Hughes lifted the New Jersey Devils over the Montreal Canadiens 4-3. Jesper Bratt had a goal and an assist and Jake Allen made 29 saves against his former club. Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes kicked out 40 shots while Nick Suzuki had a goal and two assists for the Canadiens (53 points), who sit two points out of the final Eastern wild-card spot. The Devils (62 points) moved within two points of the second-place Hurricanes in the Metro Division.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: It was a costly victory for the Devils as captain Nico Hischier left the game in the third period after receiving an unpenalized cross-check to the mid-section from Suzuki in the previous period.

The Ottawa Senators nipped the Toronto Maple Leafs 2-1. Shane Pinto broke a 1-1 tie midway through the third period while Anton Forsberg made 28 saves for the win, moving the Senators (54 points) within one point of the final Eastern wild card position. Bobby McMann scored for the Leafs (62 points), who’ve dropped two in a row but remain in first place in the Atlantic Division.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Before this game, the Leafs placed forward Connor Dewar (upper body) on injured reserve and called up Nikita Grebenkin. They placed sidelined netminder Anthony Stolarz on long-term injury reserve (LTIR) to clear cap space for Grebenkin.

Meanwhile, Senators forward Nick Cousins is expected to miss some time after a knee-on-knee collision with Leafs rookie Jacob Quillan in the first period. His teammate, Nick Jensen, missed this game as he’s listed as day-to-day with an undisclosed injury.

Detroit Red Wings goalie Cam Talbot made 28 saves for his 33rd career shutout in a 2-0 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning. Marco Kasper and Michael Rasmussen were the goal scorers as the Red Wings (51 points) are four points out of the final Eastern wild card spot. Andrei Vasilevskiy turned aside 29 shots for the Lightning (55 points), who’ve lost three of their last four and dropped into the first Eastern wild-card berth.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: The Lightning and Blue Jackets are tied in points but the Bolts have more wins (26 to 24) and hold two games in hand over the Jackets.

The Dallas Stars got a 33-save shutout from Casey DeSmith to blank the St. Louis Blues 2-0. Evgenii Dadonov and Esa Lindell scored as the Stars picked up their third win in their last four games and sit second in the Central Division with 63 points. Blues goalie Jordan Binnington made 17 saves as his club sits five points out of the final Western wild card with 50 points.

Calgary Flames winger Andrei Kuzmenko tallied twice and added an assist in a 5-4 victory over the Minnesota Wild, handing the latter their fifth defeat in their last six contests. The Flames hold the final Western wild card with 55 points. Marco Rossi had three assists for the Wild as they cling to third place in the Central Division with 60 points.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Flames defenseman Kevin Bahl left this game after being boarded by Wild forward Jakub Lauko. There was no postgame update on his status.

Vancouver Canucks captain Quinn Hughes scored both goals in his club’s 2-1 win over the league-leading Washington Capitals. Kevin Lankinen stopped 32 shots for the Canucks (52 points) for their third win in their last 11 games (3-6-2) as they sit three points behind the Flames. Pierre-Luc Dubois replied for the Capitals as their 12-game points streak ended (9-0-3).

The Anaheim Ducks beat the Nashville Predators 5-2. Mason McTavish scored twice while Trevor Zegras had a goal and an assist for the Ducks. Gustav Nyquist and Ryan O’Reilly tallied for the Predators as their five-game win streak ended.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Anaheim Ducks goalie John Gibson left this game following the first period with an upper-body injury.

Florida Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad had a goal and an assist in his return from injury as his club cruised to a 7-2 win over the San Jose Sharks. Matthew Tkachuk had a goal and two assists as the Panthers (61 points) sit one point behind the Atlantic Division-leading Maple Leafs. Cody Ceci and Will Smith tallied for the Sharks, who’ve lost six straight games.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Before this game, the Sharks placed forward Ty Dellandrea (upper body) on injured reserve.

IN OTHER NEWS…

NHL.COM: The Ottawa Senators unveiled their Quarter-Century Team on Saturday.

Forwards Daniel Alfredsson, Jason Spezza and Dany Heatley, defensemen Erik Karlsson and Wade Redden, and goaltender Craig Anderson comprised the First Team.

The Second Team featured forwards Marian Hossa, Mark Stone and Brady Tkachuk, defensemen Zdeno Chara and Chris Phillips, and goaltender Patrick Lalime.

NEW YORK POST: The Rangers signed defenseman Will Borgen to a five-year, $20.5 million contract extension. Borgen, 28, was acquired from the Seattle Kraken last month in exchange for winger Kaapo Kakko. The average annual value of his new deal is $4.1 million.










NHL Rumor Mill – January 25, 2025

NHL Rumor Mill – January 25, 2025

In today’s NHL Rumor Mill: the latest on Canucks centers Elias Pettersson and J.T. Miller, a look at potential Blackhawks trade candidates, and updates on the Islanders and Canadiens.

LATEST ON PETTERSSON AND MILLER

THE PROVINCE: Patrick Johnston cited TSN’s Pierre LeBrun reporting the Vancouver Canucks and Carolina Hurricanes were close to a deal. In the end, the Hurricanes opted for Mikko Rantanen, acquiring him on Friday night in a blockbuster three-team trade with the Colorado Avalanche and Chicago Blackhawks.

Vancouver Canucks center Elias Pettersson (NHL Images).

Based on what the Hurricanes gave up for Rantanen (forwards Martin Necas and Jack Drury, two draft picks), Johnston believes the rumored deal with the Canucks had to involve Elias Pettersson. He pointed out the Hurricanes inquired into Pettersson’s availability last season before he signed his eight-year contract extension.

Meanwhile, Johnston reports the offers for Canucks center J.T. Miller are currently weak, despite his 103-point performance last season.

THE HOCKEY NEWS: Adam Kierszenblat cited CHEK-TV’s Rick Dhaliwal indicating the Canucks called the Hurricanes about Martin Necas.

According to Dhaliwal, the trade would’ve involved J.T. Miller. However, the Hurricanes declined and sent Necas to the Avalanche in the Rantanen deal.

Meanwhile, Remy Mastey reports Miller hasn’t made a formal trade request, but there’s a sense that the 31-year-old center’s time with the Canucks is coming to an end.

Mastey cited Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli reporting the Canucks and Miller have reached the point where it’s time to move on from each other.

The New York Rangers have been in discussions with the Canucks about Miller. However, the holdup is the Canucks want to get maximum value in return.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Miller and Pettersson have dominated the rumor mill for a month after reports of a rumored rift between the two made the rounds. It’s believed the Canucks prefer to move Miller and retain Pettersson, who is five years younger and has more productive years ahead of him.

It’ll be interesting to see what effect the Rantanen trade will have on the Canucks’ efforts to move Miller. The Rangers, Hurricanes, New Jersey Devils, New York Islanders and Dallas Stars have been linked to the Canucks veteran but the Rangers are believed the only team to make an offer. The Hurricanes are out while the Devils, Isles and Stars are rumored to be mildly interested.

POTENTIAL BLACKHAWKS TRADE CANDIDATES

THE ATHLETIC: Before the Chicago Blackhawks traded Taylor Hall to the Hurricanes in the Rantanen deal, Scott Powers examined their potential trade candidates.

Powers indicated the Blackhawks received calls about defenseman Seth Jones but nothing out of the ordinary. They’re unlikely to move anyone who isn’t on an expiring contract.

The Blackhawks are unlikely to re-sign UFA-eligible forward Ryan Donato. They don’t expect defenseman Alec Martinez to request a trade as he remains focused on helping them for now.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Forwards Pat Maroon and Craig Smith are the Blackhawks’ other pending UFAs.

CAPITALS INTERESTED IN BROCK NELSON

THE HOCKEY NEWS: Stefen Rosner cites industry sources claiming the Washington Capitals have checked in on Brock Nelson. The 33-year-old New York Islanders center is eligible for UFA status on July 1.

Any potential team acquiring Nelson could prefer signing him to a contract extension. However, Rosner indicates the Capitals are believed to have no issue with him as purely a playoff rental.

Rosner pointed out the Capitals lack the cap space to take on Nelson’s $6 million cap hit. He speculates the Isles might be willing to retain part of his salary if an interested team is willing to pay more in return.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Islanders GM Lou Lamoriello insists he’s not focused on the trade deadline, centering instead on his club’s pursuit of a playoff berth. However, Nelson could become available if the Isles fail to gain ground in the Eastern Conference playoff race.

Nelson is a three-time 30-plus goal scorer with postseason experience. The Capitals won’t be the only team pursuing him if Lamoriello makes him available before the March 7 deadline.

SHOULD THE CANADIENS PURSUE SIDNEY CROSBY?

THE MONTREAL GAZETTE: Jack Todd believes the rebuilding Canadiens should take the advice of Global’s Brian Wilde and look into acquiring Sidney Crosby from the Pittsburgh Penguins.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: I defer to TSN’s Chris Johnston: “Unless something changes – and at this point I have ZERO reason to believe it will – Sidney Crosby isn’t being traded out of Pittsburgh. He’s an untouchable as far as the Pens are concerned, plus he’s got a no-movement clause and no desire to be dealt.”










NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – January 25, 2025

NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – January 25, 2025

Recaps of Friday’s games, how the three-team trade that sent Mikko Rantanen to the Hurricanes went down, the Islanders unveiled their Quarter-Century Team, and more in today’s NHL Morning Coffee Headlines.

RECAPPING FRIDAY’S ACTION

NHL.COM: A hat trick by Cole Perfetti powered the Winnipeg Jets to a 5-2 win over the Utah Hockey Club, snapping the latter’s three-game win streak. Jets winger Nikolaj Ehlers had a goal and two assists as the Jets (69 points) moved within three points of the league-leading Washington Capitals. Nick Schmaltz and Barrett Hayton scored for Utah with team captain Clayton Keller picking up two assists.

Winnipeg Jets winger Nikolaj Ehlers (NHL Images).

SPECTOR’S NOTE: This was a milestone game for Ehlers, becoming the first Dane in NHL history to reach the 500-point plateau.

Tampa Bay Lightning winger Nikita Kucherov scored in overtime and collected two assists in regulation play to down the Chicago Blackhawks 4-3. Nick Paul and Jake Guentzel scored two unanswered goals as the Lightning overcame a 3-1 deficit. Frank Nazar and Louis Crevier each had a goal and an assist for the Blackhawks.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: This was Kucherov’s 100th career multi-point game. The win moved the Lightning into third place in the Atlantic Division with 55 points.

Dallas Stars winger Jason Robertson tallied twice in a 4-3 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights. Wyatt Johnston, Matt Duchene and Evgenii Dadonov each collected two assists for the Stars, who moved ahead of the Minnesota Wild into second place in the Central Division with 61 points. Jack Eichel scored two goals for the Golden Knights, who’ve lost five of their last six games and cling to first place in the Pacific Division with 64 points.

The New York Islanders picked up their third straight win by defeating the Philadelphia Flyers 3-1. Brock Nelson had a goal and an assist while Ilya Sorokin made 29 saves for the Islanders (47 points), who sit six points behind the Columbus Blue Jackets for the final Eastern Conference wild-card berth. Tyson Foerster replied for the Flyers (50 points), who remain three points behind the Blue Jackets.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: The Islanders announced yesterday the signing of Tony DeAngelo to a one-year contract for the remainder of this season. This move suggests Isles blueliner Noah Dobson will be sidelined for the rest of the season. DeAngelo must first clear waivers before he can join the Islanders.

HEADLINES

The NHL world is still buzzing over Friday night’s blockbuster trade that saw the Colorado Avalanche ship Mikko Rantanen to the Carolina Hurricanes in a three-team deal involving the Chicago Blackhawks.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Follow this link for trade details and my reaction. The Hurricanes also acquired prospect forward Nils Juntrop from the Blackhawks in the deal.

THE ATHLETIC: Chris Johnston reports the Hurricanes may have been the only suitor for Rantanen given the Avalanche’s asking price. He revealed Hurricanes general manager Eric Tulsky was involved in trade talks with the Vancouver Canucks involving Elias Pettersson earlier this month and J.T. Miller earlier this week before shifting to Rantanen.

According to Johnston, the origins of this trade go back to last June when the Hurricanes were at an impasse in contract talks with Martin Necas. The Avalanche raised the issue at the time but a deal didn’t take place. The discussions resumed two months ago and eventually grew more serious.

League sources told Johnston that there were no advanced discussions with the Rantanen camp about a contract extension before the deal went down. The 28-year-old forward is UFA-eligible on July 1. Johnston claims Rantanen was blindsided by this move by the Avalanche.

SPORTSNET: Elliotte Friedman reports the Blackhawks brokered this deal between the Avalanche and Hurricanes. If Rantanen hits the open market on July 1, Friedman wouldn’t be surprised if the Blackhawks pursued him.

THE DENVER POST: Corey Masisak believes the Avalanche replaced Rantanen in the short term with a very good player in Necas. However, he noted that the 26-year-old lacks Rantanen’s track record of success, especially in the postseason.

Masisak also observed the move gave the Avalanche some salary-cap wiggle room for the rest of the regular season and possibly much more in the offseason.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: The Rantanen deal was the biggest in-season NHL trade in the salary-cap era since the Boston Bruins shipped Joe Thornton to the San Jose Sharks 20 years ago. It could open the floodgates to more creative moves involving big-name talent before the March 7 trade deadline. I’ll have more about that in today’s Rumor Mill update.

NHL.COM: The New York Islanders revealed their Quarter-Century Team on Friday.

The First Team comprises forwards Brock Nelson, John Tavares and Josh Bailey, defensemen Nick Leddy and Adam Pelech, and goaltender Ilya Sorokin.

The Second Team features forwards Anders Lee, Mathew Barzal and Frans Nielsen, defensemen Kenny Jonsson and Ryan Pulock, and goalie Semyon Varlamov.

THE HOCKEY NEWS: Derek O’Brien cites reports from several Swedish media sources indicating Vancouver Canucks center Elias Pettersson was defrauded by a Swedish real estate broker who is now in prison.

Pettersson lost the deposit on a luxury villa north of Stockholm that was revealed to have many flaws that required repairs. He successfully sued the broker to have the mortgage contract cancelled but it’s unlikely he’ll ever get the deposit back.

DAILY FACEOFF: Carolina Hurricanes winger William Carrier underwent surgery to repair a lower-body injury and is expected to be sidelined for at least two months.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: If Carrier is out for the season the Hurricanes could place him on long-term injury reserve and use the salary-cap savings to add another player before the trade deadline. He’s in the first season of a six-year contract with an AAV of $2 million.

Boston Bruins goaltender Jeremy Swayman is expected to return to action on Saturday against the Avalanche. He missed the Bruins’ 2-0 win over the Ottawa Senators on Thursday with a minor upper-body injury.

Pittsburgh Penguins winger Bryan Rust is listed as day-to-day with a lower-body injury.

NHL.COM: St. Louis Blues forward Oskar Sundqvist was fined $2,000.00 for embellishment by the department of player safety.

TORONTO SUN: The Maple Leafs recalled goaltender Matt Murray and returned Dennis Hildeby to their AHL affiliate.

CALGARY SUN: The Flames assigned little-used defenseman Tyson Barrie to their AHL affiliate for conditioning. He’s appeared in nine games this season, the last being on Nov. 12.

THE BUFFALO NEWS: Sabres center Ryan McLeod is expected back in the lineup when his club faces the Edmonton Oilers on Saturday. He missed the last three games with a nagging injury.

DAILY FACEOFF: The San Jose Sharks signed center Colin White for the remainder of the season on a two-way contract. He began this season on a minor-league deal with their AHL affiliate.










Avalanche Trade Mikko Rantanen To The Hurricanes In Three-Team Deal

Avalanche Trade Mikko Rantanen To The Hurricanes In Three-Team Deal

Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli reports the Colorado Avalanche have traded forward Mikko Rantanen to the Carolina Hurricanes in a three-team deal involving the Chicago Blackhawks.

According to Seravalli, the Blackhawks are sending Taylor Hall to the Hurricanes. Other reports suggest Martin Necas will be heading to the Avalanche.

Colorado Avalanche trade Mikko Rantanen to the Carolina Hurricanes (NHL Images).

Details to follow…

**UPDATE**

The trade is as follows:

Mikko Rantanen and Taylor Hall to the Hurricanes.

Martin Necas, Jack Drury, a 2025 second-round pick and a 2026 fourth-rounder from the Hurricanes to the Avalanche.

A third-round pick going to the Blackhawks, who retain half of Rantanen’s $9.25 million cap hit. They retained no portion of Hall’s cap hit.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: It’ll take a lot to top this blockbuster as the biggest trade of 2024-25, perhaps even of the entire calendar year of 2025, and we’re only just over three weeks into the new year.

This move signals the Hurricanes are going for it this season. Rantanen is one of the league’s elite scorers, on pace for his third straight 100-point campaign with 64 points in 49 games. He was also a Stanley Cup champion with the Avalanche in 2022 and his experience should prove helpful.

Hall is a former winner of the Hart Memorial Trophy (2018). His best seasons are behind him but he’s still a well-respected playmaking winger. He’s going from one of the league’s worst clubs to one of the better ones as his presence also bolsters the Hurricanes’ offense.

It’s been reported that Rantanen informed Avalanche management of his intention to test the free-agent market in July. Rather than stick with him as an own rental for one last playoff run, the Avs opted to ship him out for Necas and Drury. It remains to be seen if the Hurricanes will attempt to re-sign him before July 1.

Necas is a scoring forward who can play center or wing. The 26-year-old’s production cooled a bit following a hot start but he’s 12th among this season’s leading scorers with 55 points in 49 games, putting the 26-year-old on pace to exceed his career-high 71 points in 2022-23. He’s in the first season of a two-year deal with an average annual value of $6.5 million.

Drury, 24, saw checking-line duty with the Hurricanes. He missed 10 games with an injury hand and has nine points in 39 games after reaching 27 points in 74 games last season.

How Necas and Drury fit in with their new club will be interesting. The deal also freed up cap space for the Avalanche, creating speculation they’re not done making moves.

The Blackhawks used their cap space to facilitate this deal and move Hall to a playoff contender. In return, they received the 2025 third-round they traded to the Hurricanes last year.