Overrated/Underrated – Filip Hronek, Trading with Pittsburgh, and Neck pillows

Dan and Sat debate whether topics like trading for Filip Hronek, the Penguins as a potential trade partner, and more are overrated or underrated.

This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

What are the Canucks thinking with the Hronek deal?

Dan and Sat discuss the Filip Hronek trade and what might be next for the Canucks ahead of the deadline. Also, hear from Kevin Woodley of InGoal Magazine to talk about the deal and Thatcher Demko. Plus, The Athletic's Max Bultman stops by to talk about the Red Wings side of the deal.

This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

Patient Sens win Chychrun trade, Caps retool underway, and 4 other NHL items

That's it?

That's all Jakob Chychrun fetched after more than a year on the trade market?

Really?!

The Arizona Coyotes traded Chychrun, a top-four, cost-controlled defenseman, to the Ottawa Senators on Wednesday in exchange for three draft picks - a 2023 first-rounder, a 2024 second-rounder, and a 2026 second-rounder. (The 2024 second-rounder becomes a first in 2024 or 2025 in the unlikely scenario that the Senators make the conference finals this season.)

Jana Chytilova / Getty Images

Senators general manager Pierre Dorion emerges from this negotiation looking ingenious. Two firsts and a high-end prospect was the reported asking price from the Coyotes for several months, and Dorion cut that package roughly in half. By moving out Nikita Zaitsev's $4.5-million cap hit last week, Ottawa had the requisite cap space to absorb the entirety of Chychrun's $4.6-million hit.

Although slow-playing a negotiation for a player of Chychrun's caliber doesn't always pay off, it did this time. Dorion was incredibly patient. No matter how it's spun in Arizona, GM Bill Armstrong simply didn't get enough value back.

Chychrun, the best blue-liner available in the lead-up to the trade deadline, was such a desirable asset in part because he's under contract through the 2024-25 season. The 6-foot-2, 220-pounder has averaged 23 minutes a night the past three seasons for the Coyotes. He transitions the puck extremely well, boasts a booming shot, and squashes opposing attacks with physicality and stick work. In a nutshell, Chychrun is a modern two-way defenseman.

Norm Hall / Getty Images

Sitting out the past eight Coyotes games for "trade-related reasons," Chychrun last played on Feb. 10. He's recorded seven goals and 21 assists in 36 games after starting the year on injured reserve. The shot-generation machine ranks fifth among all defensemen in shots on goal per 60 minutes.

On the season, Arizona outscored the opposition 35-25 at five-on-five when Chychrun was on the ice. Without him patrolling the blue line at five-on-five, the 21-30-9 Coyotes were outscored 105-71 for an ugly minus-34 rating.

Chychrun, who turns 25 later this month, will be a major boost to Ottawa's playoff push. The Sens were five points out of a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference heading into Wednesday's slate of games. They're in a six-team battle with the Detroit Red Wings, Florida Panthers, Buffalo Sabres, Pittsburgh Penguins, and New York Islanders for the conference's two wild-card spots.

This trade injects yet another key contributor to the Sens' impressive 26-and-younger core. Chychrun joins Thomas Chabot and Jake Sanderson on the back end, while Brady Tkachuk, Alex DeBrincat, Drake Batherson, Shane Pinto, Tim Stutzle, and Josh Norris comprise a stellar six-pack up front.

Dorion deserves an "A" grade for his work on Wednesday. Well done, Pierre.

Capitals trying to thread needle

The Washington Post / Getty Images

Washington Capitals GM Brian MacLellan didn't make a single trade for seven-plus months. Over the past week, with his club sputtering on the ice, MacLellan's flipped the script, trading away five NHL regulars in four swaps.

The Caps selling, while a rare sight, isn't shocking. The Eastern Conference is stacked, and Washington, lacking finish and crushed by injuries all season, is too far back in the playoff hunt. Standing pat or buying would have made zero sense.

MacLellan actually took concrete steps toward a retool, as none of his deals were half measures. He was aggressive. He focused his moves on nothing but the future, and he didn't get greedy. The Caps acquired four draft picks and two NHL players, and one of the players - forward Craig Smith - is a pending unrestricted free agent who'll likely walk this coming summer.

The GM's next steps will be extra intriguing.

John McCreary / Getty Images

Franchise owner Ted Leonsis has been on record saying the Caps won't be rebuilding during the tail end of Alex Ovechkin's illustrious career. Fair. With that in mind, MacLellan must continue reshaping the roster beyond this past week's activity, which has seen Lars Eller, Dmitry Orlov, Garnet Hathaway, Marcus Johansson, and Erik Gustafsson depart, and Rasmus Sandin arrive.

Washington has loads of cap space and term tied up in Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom, Evgeny Kuznetsov, Tom Wilson, T.J. Oshie, Dylan Strome, John Carlson, Nick Jensen, and Darcy Kuemper. But the roster doesn't scream "imminent Stanley Cup contender!"

Perhaps Wilson and Oshie should be next to leave. Maybe top prospects and first-round picks can be flipped for more young NHLers like Sandin. These subsequent moves aren't necessarily urgent; they can wait until the summer. The main objective would be to enter 2023-24 with a younger, faster lineup.

It won't be easy, but MacLellan is trying to thread the needle with this retool.

Karlsson and the Norris

The description for the Norris Trophy is as follows: "An annual award given to the defenseman who demonstrates throughout the season the greatest all-round ability in the position."

The key phrase there, especially within the context of this season's Norris discussion, is "greatest all-round ability." Erik Karlsson, a two-time winner who has an eye-popping 77 points in 61 games, is firmly in the running for defenseman of the year, yet he falls way short of being a well-rounded player.

Kavin Mistry / Getty Images

Karlsson is an offensive wizard - one of the best creators from the back end in NHL history, in fact - but his defensive play leaves something to be desired. Two stats help illustrate: The San Jose Sharks have scored 78 goals with Karlsson on the ice during five-on-five action - tops in the NHL. They've also surrendered 63 goals with No. 65 on at five-on-five - tops in the league, too.

Karlsson's extreme numbers raise a philosophical question, though: At what point is the offensive value so overwhelming that contributions on defense are more or less unimportant? Brian Leetch was the last defenseman to hit triple digits in points, way back in 1991-92, and Karlsson's on pace for a tidy 103.

Put another way, is Karlsson's "defense" actually his ability to generate offense for an 18-31-12 team? He's been everything to the Sharks, not only leading the club in ice time (25:34), assists (58), and points but also managing to pace every NHLer - even Connor McDavid - in even-strength points (53).

The Sharks have accounted for 53.7 of the expected goals during Karlsson's five-on-five minutes, which means he's more than offsetting his goals against with positive offensive impact. (That said, he's not exactly a world-beater in xGF%, ranking 47th among the 183 defensemen who've played at least 500 five-on-five minutes.)

Cale Makar, Rasmus Dahlin, Josh Morrissey, and Adam Fox are Karlsson's main competition, with roughly a quarter of the season remaining. If his production falls off, one of those other four could swoop in as the Norris favorite. If his production doesn't fall off, we've got a hot debate on our hands.

Parting shots

Ken Holland: I have no rooting interest in the NHL, but there are situations I feel passionately about. For example, the Oilers needing to do something significant ahead of the deadline. With McDavid and Leon Draisaitl at the peak of their powers and the Western Conference wide-open, general manager Holland most notably had to improve his blue line. On Tuesday, the famously conservative executive acquired Mattias Ekholm from the Nashville Predators. Does this trade solve all of Edmonton's issues? No, but it's a start for the Oilers to add a 6-foot-4 defensive defenseman who isn't a liability with the puck on his stick and has term left on his contract. So I'm happy to give Holland a thumbs up. Anxious to see what he has in store in the final days.

Mike 'Suitcase' Sillinger: Every year around this time, Sillinger's name surfaces as a historical reference point. The former forward played for 12 teams over a 17-year NHL career, getting traded a record nine times (twice at the deadline). Yeah, there's no mystery surrounding the "Suitcase" nickname. Sillinger's son, Columbus Blue Jackets center Cole Sillinger, says while he either wasn't born or doesn't remember any of his dad's trades because he was too young, he still gives it to Mike every now and then. "I always bug him," Cole said Tuesday in an interview. "It's like, 'Oh, no one wanted you!' And then he goes, 'Well, that's where you're wrong - everyone wanted me!'"

Jake Walman: What a glow-up 2022-23 has been for the 27-year-old Detroit Red Wings defenseman. Walman, who earlier this week signed a three-year contract extension carrying a $3.4-million annual cap hit, is flourishing in a top-pair role alongside Moritz Seider. An effortless skater with a bullet of a shot and good hockey sense, Walman's broken out in his sixth pro season. Most notably, the Wings have outscored the opposition 32-20 and own 54.7% of the expected goals in Walman's 653 five-on-five minutes this season. Walman, a 2014 third-round pick of the St. Louis Blues, was sent to Detroit in the Nick Leddy trade at last year's deadline. Nice find by GM Steve Yzerman.

Takes, Thoughts, and Trends is theScore's biweekly hockey grab bag.

John Matisz is theScore's senior NHL writer. Follow John on Twitter (@MatiszJohn) or contact him via email (john.matisz@thescore.com).

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Penguins add Granlund from Predators

The Pittsburgh Penguins acquired forward Mikael Granlund from the Nashville Predators in exchange for a 2023 second-round pick, the teams announced Wednesday.

The deal comes shortly after the Pens flipped Teddy Blueger to the Vegas Golden Knights.

Granlund has recorded nine goals and 27 assists in 58 games with the Preds this season. A veteran of 11 NHL seasons, the 31-year-old can play all three forward positions. However, his underlying numbers over the past three seasons have been poor.

Evolving-Hockey

The 31-year-old is signed through 2024-25 with a $5-million cap hit.

A three-time 60-point producer, the Pens will look for Granlund to add an offensive spark to the team's bottom-six forward group if they wish to play him in that role. It's possible he plays wing on one of the top two lines centered by Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.

If he centers one of the bottom two lines, it'll be a defensive downgrade from Blueger, who excelled in a shutdown role but provided little offense.

The Predators, meanwhile, have now traded away Nino Niederreiter, Tanner Jeannot, Mattias Ekholm, and Granlund - all players with team control - since Saturday.

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Lightning trade Namestnikov to Sharks

The Tampa Bay Lightning dealt forward Vladislav Namestnikov to the San Jose Sharks for forward Michael Eyssimont, the Sharks announced Wednesday.

The Lightning are retaining 50% of Namestnikov's $2.5-million cap hit.

Namestnikov is a pending unrestricted free agent. He's now been traded five times since February 2018. The 30-year-old is in his ninth full season. He made his NHL debut with the Lightning in 2014 but played only three more games at the highest level that season. Namestnikov rejoined Tampa as a free agent in 2022 after stints with the New York Rangers, Ottawa Senators, Colorado Avalanche, Detroit Red Wings, and Dallas Stars.

Eyssimont is a pending RFA. The Sharks claimed the 26-year-old off waivers from the Winnipeg Jets in early January. He's in the final season of a two-year pact he inked with the Jets in July 2021. It carries a cap hit of $750,000.

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Penguins ship Blueger to Golden Knights

The Pittsburgh Penguins traded forward Teddy Blueger to the Vegas Golden Knights for a 2024 third-round pick and defenseman Peter DiLiberatore, the teams announced Wednesday.

Blueger has recorded two goals and eight assists in 45 games this season. He's never cracked 30 points in his five-year NHL career but has proved to be an effective defense-first center.

Blueger carries a $2.2-million hit, creating more cap flexibility for the Pens, who are still in a playoff spot. He's set to be an unrestricted free agent at the end of the year.

DiLiberatore, 22, has posted three points in 18 games with the AHL's Henderson Silver Knights this season. He was taken in the sixth round by Vegas in 2018.

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Sabres send goalie prospect Portillo to Kings for 3rd-round pick

The Los Angeles Kings organization has invested further in the goaltending position.

The Buffalo Sabres traded coveted goalie prospect Erik Portillo to the Kings for a 2023 third-round pick, the teams announced.

Wednesday's deal comes less than 24 hours after the Kings acquired netminder Joonas Korpisalo from the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Portillo was the Sabres' third-round pick in 2019. He remains unsigned and is eligible to become an unrestricted free agent this summer. His path to playing time in Buffalo would've potentially been blocked by 23-year-old Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, who's already in the NHL, and 21-year-old Devon Levi, who's also unsigned but is a more highly touted goalie prospect.

The Kings' goalie depth chart is made up of Korpisalo, a pending UFA, journeyman Pheonix Copley, and Cal Petersen.

Portillo, who stands 6-foot-6, has posted a .908 save percentage in 31 games at Michigan this season. The Swede was named to the Big Ten Second All-Star Team a year ago when he recorded a .926 save percentage in 42 appearances with the Wolverines.

Sabres general manager Kevyn Adams said the team tried to sign Portillo in the summer, according to WGR's Paul Hamilton. Adams added he intends to sign Levi as soon as his college season is over.

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Coyotes trade Chychrun to Senators for 3 picks

The Ottawa Senators have won the Jakob Chychrun sweepstakes.

Ottawa acquired the defenseman from the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for a top-five protected pick this year, a 2024 conditional second-rounder, and a 2026 second-round selection, the Sens announced Wednesday.

If the Coyotes land in the top five of this year's draft, that pick will slide to next year and become an unprotected first-rounder. If the Senators reach the Eastern Conference Final this spring, the 2024 second-round choice becomes a top-10 protected first-rounder in the same year; if Arizona is in the top 10, the pick becomes an unprotected 2025 first-round selection.

Chychrun was - and has long been - one of the most tantalizing trade targets on the market. The 24-year-old is signed through 2024-25 at a $4.6-million cap hit.

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Coyotes send Gostisbehere to Hurricanes

The Arizona Coyotes traded defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere to the Carolina Hurricanes for a 2026 third-round pick, the teams announced Wednesday.

An offensive-minded blue-liner who excels at quarterbacking a power play, Gostisbehere recorded 10 goals and 21 assists in 52 games for the Coyotes this season. He's entering the final year of his contract and carries a $4.5-million cap hit.

Gostisbehere, 29, projects to slot in on the left side of the third pair of Carolina's blue line behind Jaccob Slavin and Brady Skjei. He'll likely get some time on the second power-play unit, too, as Brent Burns currently runs the top unit.

The Pembroke Pines, Florida, native is vying for his third 50-point season. Gostisbehere tallied 51 a year ago with the Coyotes and 65 in 2017-18 with the Philadelphia Flyers, when he finished 10th in Norris Trophy voting. He was also the Calder Trophy runner-up to Artemi Panarin in 2015-16 when he racked up 17 goals and 29 assists in 64 contests.

The Coyotes acquired Gostisbehere, a second-round pick, and a seventh-rounder from the Flyers for nothing during the 2021 offseason.

Arizona now has 23 picks in the first three rounds over the next four drafts.

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