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NHL Trade Board: Which team will start a fire sale before Olympic roster freeze?

Matt Larkin
Jan 8, 2026, 10:55 ESTUpdated: Jan 8, 2026, 11:19 EST
Justin Faulk, Blake Coleman, Boone Jenner and Kiefer Sherwood

Something about an impending roster freeze, eh? It spikes NHL general managers’ heart rates and spurs them to do something. Before the 2025-26 holiday freeze arrived Dec. 20, we saw seven trades in December just in the three weeks leading up to that demarcation point. These weren’t just minor-league swaps, either. The Minnesota Wild landed Quinn Hughes in one of the decade’s biggest blockbusters. Phillip Danault went back to the Montreal Canadiens. The Edmonton Oilers finally moved on a goaltender with the Tristan Jarry acquisition.

Why bring this information up in early January? Because another roster freeze looms. On 3:00 p.m. ET Feb. 4, the 2026 Olympic roster freeze begins. No trades can happen from that point until 11:59 ET on Feb. 22 after the Winter Games wrap. We then have a sprint of not even two weeks between that point and the March 6 Trade Deadline.

In other words: the next four weeks represent a crucial window for teams to make their final trades of the 2025-26 campaign. If you subtract the 18-day Olympic freeze, it’s as if the Trade Deadline is six weeks out in terms of actual legal trading time.

We thus better get moving on our next Trade Board at Daily Faceoff – an exercise that is particularly fascinating and challenging this season given the unbelievable parity we’re witnessing. How can we define the true buyers and sellers when last place in the Eastern Conference is six points out of a playoff spot, or when first place in the Pacific Division is three points from being outside the playoff picture?

The board will thus continue to be fluid, which is why the tiered system of trade likelihood matters.

As a refresher, I’ve compiled names for this board via committee approach across The Nation Network, consisting of:

(a) Intel provided form the various insiders appearing across our shows and/or publishing content for us, from the Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman to DFO’s own Anthony Di Marco and more;

(b) My own information;

(c) Absorbing the external reporting and trade chatter already out there as public knowledge;

(d) Hypothesizing a handful of names not yet publicly on the block that could be later this season.

Let’s dive into the board:

TIER 1: Obvious trade candidates

Rasmus Andersson, D, Calgary Flames

Age: 29
Cap hit: $4,550,000, pending UFA
(Six-team no-trade clause)

The Flames still hover near the bottom of the Pacific Division and in contention for their first Draft Lottery win in franchise history, so there should be less of a should-we-shouldn’t-we tension around re-signing Andersson. It makes little sense to keep him now. He’s also spiking his value at the right time, on track for the best offensive totals of his career, and would help many a team seeking a puck-mover for the right side. He’s 29, and the Flames appear years from contending again. He’ll be entering his early-30s decline by the time the Flames ascend; it would be prudent to move him.

Brayden Schenn, C, St. Louis Blues

Age: 34
Cap hit: $6,500,000 through 2027-28
(15-team no-trade list)

Schenn is not a $6.5-million player anymore. The Blues would almost certainly need to retain salary to facilitate a trade, especially since he has a couple years of term left. But Schenn at a discounted price could still boost a team’s third line and bring brawny veteran leadership. My colleague Anthony Di Marco previously highlighted Schenn as a potential target for a team like the New Jersey Devils.

Kiefer Sherwood, RW, Vancouver Canucks

Age: 30
Cap hit: $1,500,000, pending UFA

As the Canucks trudge around the bottom of the Western Conference, they’ve started the retool/rebuild/whatever they want to spin it as with the Hughes trade. It would be silly, then, to hold onto Sherwood at this point. It’s clearly the right time to sell high on him. He’s as physical as wingers get, having set the single-season NHL record with 462 hits last year, and he’s scoring at a 33-goal pace this year. His value will never be higher than it is today – yet the peak selling window is shrinking. He was on a 40-goal pace the last time we published a trade board. The puck-luck regression has already begun. Per David Pagnotta, “Don’t be surprised” if something happens with Sherwood in the next week or two.

Ryan Hartman, C, Minnesota Wild

Age: 31
Cap hit: $4,000,000 through 2026-27
(15-team no-trade clause)

Ideally, a team acquiring Hartman uses him as a third-line center, not a second-liner, but the agitator has succeeded in the past playing as high as the first line, though he doesn’t seem to have the upside he once did. The Wild don’t appear to be done after landing Quinn Hughes. They want to upgrade at center next but may need to dump Hartman’s cap hit first and have been dangling him, reported Pagnotta on Daily Faceoff Live last week.

Steven Stamkos, C, Nashville Predators

Age: 35
Cap hit: $8,000,000 through 2027-28
(No-movement clause)

Stamkos is not the superstar he was in his Tampa Bay Lightning glory days, but he’s been far better this season than last, scoring at a 35-goal pace. Couldn’t he still help a contender as a cog in a high-functioning machine who assists the power play with his one-timer? Picture late-career Brett Hull as a Detroit Red Wing. Despite Nashville’s surge to the fringe of the Western Conference Wildcard picture, there’s been no indication trade talks are called off as a result.

Ryan O’Reilly, C, Nashville Predators

Age: 34
Cap hit: $4,500,000 through 2026-27

It was jarring to see O’Reilly mercilessly trash his own play in a post-game scrum a couple months back. The last time he spoke like that, he was on his way out of Buffalo, and he makes too much sense as a popular trade target given he’s a Conn Smythe Trophy winner and brainy two-way center who plays a clean shutdown game. He still has enough gas left in him to bolster a contender’s middle six.

Justin Faulk, D, St. Louis Blues

Age: 33
Cap hit: $6,500,000 through 2026-27

(15-team no-trade list)

Faulk plays 22 minutes a night in his sleep. He’s still plenty mobile for his age. He’s one of the game’s more prolific shot blockers. He chips in a healthy amount of goals from the point, and he’s a right shot. So, yeah, he’ll have plenty of suitors should the Blues decide they can’t recover from their lackluster first half. Unlike Andersson, Faulk offers the extra year of term as a ‘luxury rental’ to boot.

Jonathan Marchessault, RW, Nashville Predators

Age: 35
Cap hit: $5,500,000 through 2028-29
(15-team no-trade list)

If you’re shopping in Music City, Conn Smythe winners apparently do grow on trees? Marchessault is another. But he’s a much more difficult player to appraise compared to Stamkos and O’Reilly. Is Marchessault worth taking on for three more seasons after this one? Was his 42-goal season at 33 years old an extreme outlier a couple seasons back? Given his competitiveness and playoff success, he’d still be a pretty nice depth add if Nashville retained some money. As Pagnotta explained on DFO Live this week, Marchessault is still in play despite the team’s improvement of late. He hasn’t suited up since mid-December, but his lower-body injury isn’t expected to shelf him long term.

Blake Coleman, LW, Calgary Flames

Age: 34
Cap hit: $4,900,000 through 2026-27

(10-team trade list)

He’s a proven two-time Stanley Cup winner who can deliver 20 goals, occasionally more, while assisting on the penalty kill and playing a feisty, physical game. What contender wouldn’t want him for third-line and PK1 work? The Flames could always sit on him a year and move him as a rental next season, but the demand for his services should be sufficient this year when it’s stretch-run time. A reunion with the team that drafted him, the New Jersey Devils, could make sense given he can play center in a pinch, but should we also keep an eye on his other former team, the Tampa Bay Lightning? The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun floated that idea.

Ondrej Palat, LW, New Jersey Devils

Age: 34
Cap hit: $6,000,000 through 2026-27
(10-team trade list)

It’s no secret the Devils badly want to dump cap space. Moving Palat is the easiest way to do it, especially because his front-loaded contract means he isn’t owed much more real money. He could go to a bottom-feeder team looking for a draft pick in return for taking on Palat’s cap hit or to a team with slightly bigger aspirations who could use a veteran two-time Stanley Cup champ in their room. I’d assume New Jersey would have to retain some money in the latter scenario – but with a lower acquisition cost if they don’t have to surrender draft capital.

Pavel Mintyukov, D, Anaheim Ducks

Age: 22
Cap hit: $918,333
, pending RFA

After multiple healthy scratches this season, Mintyukov is open to being moved if it means he’ll get a larger opportunity elsewhere, Friedman reported earlier this season. Mintyukov was the 10th overall pick in the 2022 Draft and still has a do-it-all skill set, but he’s been passed on the Ducks’ depth chart by dynamic young D-men such as Jackson LaCombe and Olen Zellweger, albeit Mintyukov is back on the second pair of late. Mintyukov’s potential hasn’t gone anywhere after just 169 career games. He makes a helluva buy-low on a franchise looking to retool.

Brad Lambert, C, Winnipeg Jets

Age: 22
Cap hit: $886,667 through 2026-27

As insider Frank Seravalli reported earlier this season, Lambert has been granted permission to seek a trade. Even during his draft year, he carried boom-bust status as a clearly gifted but volatile talent, and he’s skewed more toward the bust side, struggling to break through and earn a large opportunity at the NHL level. Still, he’s young enough and skilled enough that perhaps he’d blossom on a team willing to play him more. An interesting reclamation project.

Mario Ferraro, D, San Jose Sharks

Age: 27
2025-26 cap hit: $3,250,000, pending UFA

If Macklin Celebrini has anything to say about it, the Sharks will remain in playoff contention and won’t be sellers come March. But I’m still expecting they won’t quite be ready to break through and will move a few pending UFAs. Ferraro is a warrior who would make a fine addition to a second or third pair on a contender and whose defensive metrics would likely improve in that environment.

Michael Bunting, LW, Nashville Predators

Age: 30
Cap hit: $4,500,000, pending UFA

Bunting’s 10-team no-trade list disappeared after last season, so he’s a clear trade candidate playing on an expiring deal. Throughout his career, he’s shown the ability to produce in spurts when paired with high-end linemates. His agitation skills can also shift momentum in playoff series if he stays on the right side of the line, which isn’t always a guarantee. Bunting’s value isn’t nearly what it was a couple years back, but he could still be a sneaky-helpful depth addition.

Evander Kane, LW, Vancouver Canucks

Age: 34
Cap hit: $5,125,000, pending UFA
(16-team trade list)

The local-boy-returns-home story was neat, but Kane is an expiring, declining asset on a sinking ship. He won’t be a frontline player again at this stage of his career, but could a veteran contender with a strong dressing-room culture find a spot for him as a bottom-six shift disturber who can still chip in the odd goal? I think yes, if Vancouver retains half his salary.

John Kllingberg, D, San Jose Sharks

Age: 33
Cap hit: $4,000,000, pending UFA
(No-trade clause until Jan. 30, then 14-team no-trade list)

Maybe Klingberg landing on injured reserve is a blessing for the Sharks. Hear me out: Klingberg was almost playing too well, to the point he might have convinced the Sharks to make him part of their medium-term plans, a la Alex Wennberg. But GM Mike Grier is probably better off selling high on Klingberg’s revival, finding a trade partner needing power-play augmentation. Maybe the injury layoff keeps Klingberg’s value in the sweet spot for a trade. Interestingly, he has a no-trade clause until Jan. 30, at which point it changes to a 14-team no-trade list.

Andrew Mangiapane, LW, Edmonton Oilers

Age: 29
Cap hit: $3,600,000 through 2026-27
(No-trade clause)

It just hasn’t worked in Edmonton. He’s scored five times in 40 games, he’s buried on the fourth line, he expressed anger over a recent healthy scratch, and his agent has been granted permission to find a trade for him. Maybe a new environment energizes Mangiapane, but his trade value isn’t exactly high right now, so a deal isn’t a lock to get done immediately.

Lukas Reichel, LW, Vancouver Canucks

Age: 23
Cap hit: $1,200,000, pending RFA

That was quick. The Canucks acquired Reichel from the Chicago Blackhawks in October, and the Canucks made him available for a trade by November. He’s running out of chances to translate his speed and skill into NHL production. Prospects of this ilk are common: your skill set only works on a scoring line, and if there are no opportunities there, your skill set doesn’t work on a depth line. It’s difficult for players like that to find homes at the NHL level. He passed through waivers unclaimed in December, which gives you a sense of how he’s valued around the league at the moment.

Emil Andrae, D, Philadelphia Flyers

Age: 23
Cap hit: $903,333, pending RFA

Even though his under-the-hood numbers were strong last season, the undersized Andrae hasn’t won over the Flyers brass, per Di Marco, and doesn’t appear to be part of their long-term plans. His play driving continues to be better than the eye test, so he could actually be a low-key steal of an acquisition for a team that knows how to deploy him.

Teddy Blueger, C, Vancouver Canucks

Age: 31
Cap hit: $1,800,000, pending UFA

(12-team no-trade list)

Blueger has played just two games this season as he works his way back from a lower-body injury. He’s due to return this month, however, just in time to boost his trade value. Strong on draws and a penalty-kill fixture, he’s a prototypical fourth-line pivot.

Mathieu Joseph, RW, St. Louis Blues

Age: 28
Cap hit: $2,950,000, pending UFA

The Blues remain open for business. And while they have multiple higher-end assets potentially available, plenty of teams can use fast, feisty checking forwards like the 2020-21 Stanley Cup winner Joseph and can likely get him for a mid- to late-round pick.

Oskar Sundqvist, C, St. Louis Blues

Age: 31
Cap hit: $1,500,000, pending UFA

See above re: Joseph, but as a bonus, fellow checker Sundqvist is a two-time Stanley Cup winner with a heavy game at 6-foot-3 and 220 pounds.

TIER 2: Names to keep an eye on

Alex Tuch, RW, Buffalo Sabres

Age: 29
Cap hit: $4,750,000, pending UFA

(Five-team no-trade list)

Tuch was pretty open about wanting to remain a Sabre after last season ended, but no extension got done, and every ensuing report on the negotiations suggested the two sides were far apart. That’s likely because Tuch knows he can land a life-changing deal on the open market since so many of the top 2026 UFAs have already re-signed. So much has changed since our last trade board, though. The Sabres replaced GM Kevyn Adams by promoting Jarmo Kekalainen, then they exploded for a 10-game winning streak. So we have a new GM who has already expressed interest in retaining Tuch plus a Sabres team that has clawed its way back into contention. We thus may have to wait until the 11th hour to understand what makes sense for Buffalo and Tuch. He’d obviously be a massive get for any contender given his blend of size, scoring touch and penalty-killing acumen.

Brandon Carlo, D, Toronto Maple Leafs

Age: 29
Cap hit: $4,100,000 through 2026-27
(Eight-team no-trade list)

Mike Komisarek 2.0? Carlo was big, physically imposing, heavy on opposing forwards…until he became a Maple Leaf, apparently. He’s a shell of his old self. He averaged 4.66 hits per 60 in nine seasons as a Boston Bruin. As a Leaf: 3.05, including 1.91 this season. Maybe that’s because he wasn’t healthy, dealing with a foot injury that required surgery after a setback. Or maybe Carlo isn’t cut out for the market. Still just 29, he could return to form in the right situation, and his AAV remains a bargain. He seemingly fit a need for the Leafs a year ago, but now they’re big, slow and redundant on ‘D.’ They won’t get the equivalent of Fraser Minten and a first-round pick for Carlo, but maybe they can recoup the pick portion of that package somewhere. He returned from his injury this week, but with righty Chris Tanev likely done for the rest of the regular season and the Leafs creeping back into the playoff picture, is Carlo no longer expendable? That’s why I’ve dropped him from the sure-thing trade tier into the maybe tier.

Andrei Svechnikov, LW, Carolina Hurricanes

Age: 25
Cap hit: $7,750,000 through 2028-29

(10-team trade list)

Svechnikov has teased the ceiling of a top-end NHL power forward throughout his career, but he can’t quite seem to break through. As reported by Friedman earlier this season, Svechnikov wasn’t happy with his early-season usage to the point he was open to a trade. But the Canes’ asking price might be too prohibitive to make an in-season deal easy to execute. Not that it stopped GM Eric Tulsky from making multiple out-of-this-world moves last year, so anything is possible.

Nazem Kadri, C, Calgary Flames

Age: 35
Cap hit: $7,000,000 through 2028-29
(13-team no-trade list)

The classic conundrum for Flames GM Craig Conroy: even if you’re in the midst of a rebuild and have already traded most of your core over the past couple seasons…don’t you need a few veteran tone setters to hang around and teach the kids how to win? That would be a reason to hold Kadri. But he could also command a significant return given his impact as a scorer and emotional leader. Now that the Habs landed Danault, would the Wild be the most logical place for Kadri to land? They have interest, reports Di Marco.

Boone Jenner, C, Columbus Blue Jackets

Age: 32
Cap hit: $3,750,000, pending UFA
(Eight-team no-trade clause)

Here’s where the East’s parity makes things so complicated. If the Blue Jackets can get hot for a couple weeks: no reason to deal their captain and all-time games leader and more reason to expect he’ll re-sign. If not: a heart-and-soul forward like Jenner would invite a feeding frenzy if he’s available.

Jordan Kyrou, RW, St. Louis Blues

Age: 27
Cap hit: $8,125,000 through 2030-31
(No-trade clause)

Kyrou’s a first-line talent with three 30-goal campaigns to his name. But he’s been a disaster this year, an $8.125-million healthy scratch at one point, and it sure feels like he could use a reset on a new team. Note that he controls his destiny via a full no-trade clause that doesn’t become a modified no-trade until the final season of his deal.

Jean-Gabriel Pageau, C, New York Islanders

Age: 33
Cap hit: $5,000,000, pending UFA

(16-team no-trade list)

Pageau could be off the table if the Islanders stay competitive all year. What a fun story they’ve been, led by historically amazing rookie blueliner Matthew Schaefer. If they slip, Pageau should attract interest, however. He’s a classic third-line center who excels on faceoffs and historically elevates his scoring rate in the playoffs. I moved Anders Lee down a couple tiers, as you can’t trade your captain when you’re second in the division, but Pageau is averaging his lowest ice time in 11 years and feels more expendable.

Sam Montembeault, G, Montreal Canadiens

Age: 29
Cap hit: $3,150,000 through 2026-27

Yes, he was always keeping the seat warm for Jacob Fowler, but we all thought Montembeault had a lot more time, right? His game went in the toilet this season, costing him an Olympic roster spot with Canada and earning him a conditioning stint with AHL Laval last month. He’s back with the big club now and trying to recapture his game, but a three-goalie battery feels crowded, and Montembeault has showcased sufficient upside to warrant another team taking a chance on him.

Nick Robertson, RW, Toronto Maple Leafs

Age: 24
Cap hit: $1,825,000, pending RFA

Robertson has seemingly been on the trade block for so long that he’s paying rent at this point. He also requested to be moved before the 2024-25 season. Does it still make sense to deal him, though? With all their injuries this season, the Leafs have finally granted Robertson his wish and played him higher in the lineup for spurts, and he has produced on and off, though not without the odd healthy scratch. Dealing him would make an old, slow team older and slower, so it’s hardly a foregone conclusion we see him moved, especially as injuries continue to plague Toronto’s roster top to bottom.

Cam Talbot, G, Detroit Red Wings

Age: 38
Cap hit: $2,500,000, pending UFA

Trade Talbot? When you’re in second place in the Atlantic Division? It’s a back-burner idea GM Steve Yzerman could explore if he thinks prospect Sebastian Cossa is ready to stick in the NHL and form a tandem with John Gibson. After a slow start, Gibson has a .925 save percentage since Dec. 1, and the goalie market is so thin that Talbot could fetch a useful return. Cossa has a .938 SV% in the AHL right now, by the way.

Rasmus Ristolainen, D, Philadelphia Flyers

Age: 31
Cap hit: $5,100,000 through 2026-27

Ristolainen is back after triceps surgery and playing north of 20 minutes a night. If available, he should attract some trade interest now that his contract is more palatable given the rising salary cap and the fact he has just one season left after this one. Under the tutelage of John Tortorella and Brad Shaw, Ristolainen improved as a rangy, physical defender, and Rick Tocchet, in theory, should be another good fit to help Ristolainen’s game. But is he still actually on the block with the Flyers so competitive this season? Yes and no. The Flyers aren’t actively shopping him but are definitely still open to moving him for the right price, Di Marco reported earlier this week.

Matias Maccelli, LW, Toronto Maple Leafs

Age: 25
Cap hit: $3,425,000, pending RFA

Maccelli would’ve landed in tier 1 a month ago. But since the Leafs bumped out assistant Marc Savard and handed the power-play reins to Steve Sullivan, Maccelli is seeing looks on the top unit and seems rejuvenated. If he maintains the newfound momentum, maybe he’s not a lock to be traded after all.

Jared McCann, LW, Seattle Kraken

Age: 29
Cap hit: $5,000,000 through 2026-27
(10-team no-trade list)

The Kraken can’t seem to get out of their own way, winning just enough to remain in the playoff race. If they’re smart, they’ll understand the need to reset and that McCann would be quite a coveted asset approaching the deadline. He’s had a hard time staying healthy this year but was pretty durable before 2025-26 and averages 31 goals per 82 games in four seasons and change since joining the Kraken.

Dougie Hamilton, D, New Jersey Devils

Age: 32
Cap hit: $9,000,000 through 2027-28
(10-team trade list)

Hamilton’s no-movement clause softened to a 10-team trade list beginning with this season. He’ll always have his knuckle-draggin’ haters as a player with lackadaisical body language, and his scoring has evaporated this year, but he’s perennially a strong play-driving defenseman. Not that he’s on this board for his perceived external trade value per se; it’s more that the Devils would like to offload his hefty cap hit to clear space. It’s unlikely to happen unless he goes to one of his 10 desired teams, Friedman reported a couple weeks ago.

Nick Foligno, C, Chicago Blackhawks

Age: 38
Cap hit: $4,500,000, pending UFA

Think Kyle Okposo in 2023-24. Foligno is almost at the end of the line, but perhaps a contender would pick him up as a legendarily great dressing-room presence in hopes of getting him a ring. He has no official movement restrictions on his contract, but he took a leave of absence earlier this season to be with his daughter who had heart surgery, so he obviously would only be traded if he really wanted to go.

Ryan Strome, C, Anaheim Ducks

Age: 32
Cap hit: $5,000,000 through 2026-27

Strome’s average ice time has dropped below 12 minutes per game, and that’s when he’s not healthy scratched. He’s simply not a big part of Anaheim’s core anymore, it seems, despite the fact he’s a respected dressing-room leader on a young team. Could there be a hockey trade out there involving a team that could use him for a larger role in its top nine?

Owen Tippett, RW, Philadelphia Flyers

Age: 26
Cap hit: $6,200,000 through 2031-32

As Di Marco reported a couple months back, the Flyers aren’t sure if Tippett belongs in their long-term plans. He’s maddeningly inconsistent. But he’s also big and incredibly fast and seems like the type of player who would explode into 40-goal production if he landed in the right situation. He has six years left on his deal, so dealing him would mean GM Danny Briere is executing a whopper of a hockey trade. But it’s worth noting Tippett has no restrictions on movement right now yet does beginning next season with a 10-team no-trade list. With the Flyers in the playoff hunt now, maybe this is more of a late-June idea.

TIER 3: Big names, blockbuster potential, but too soon

Artemi Panarin, LW, New York Rangers: It makes sense for the Blueshirts to get younger going forward. If they fall out of the race, they could kickstart a retool with the return for the Bread Man.

Erik Karlsson, D, Pittsburgh Penguins: Everyone needs that righty puck-mover on ‘D.’ Karlsson’s contract isn’t an albatross anymore since it ends next year, and the Pens could retain money on it. But they’re still in the playoff the hunt, to everyone’s surprise.

Morgan Rielly, D, Toronto Maple Leafs: Plenty of term left and has never wanted out of Toronto, but if the Leafs are in the basement by Deadline Day, maybe they blow it up.

Jordan Binnington, G, St. Louis Blues: Wouldn’t make sense to do anything before the Olympics. Would make things awkward between Binnington and Blues/Canada GM Doug Armstrong in Milan. And with Binnington having such a bad year, the Winter Games offer a great opportunity to re-establish his trade value. His stock can’t get much lower than it is right now.

Elias Pettersson, C, Vancouver Canucks: Some reports of teams kicking the tires on him, but it simply isn’t easy to execute an in-season trade for someone with a full NMC and six more seasons at an $11.6-million AAV. Maybe a summer blockbuster to pursue?

Owen Power, D, Buffalo Sabres: Change-of-scenery candidate, but the GM switch from Adams to Kekalainen slows things down in my mind. Jarmo will need more runway to decide what to do with his (surging) team.

TIER 4: Theoretical trade chips if their teams fall out of contention

Jaden Schwartz, LW, Seattle Kraken
Nick Schmaltz, RW, Utah Mammoth
Rickard Rakell, LW, Pittsburgh Penguins
Anders Lee, LW, New York Islanders
Bryan Rust, RW, Pittsburgh Penguins
Erik Haula, C, Nashville Predators
Connor Murphy, D, Chicago Blackhawks
Scott Laughton, C, Toronto Maple Leafs
Jamie Oleksiak, D, Seattle Kraken
Calle Jarnkrok, RW, Toronto Maple Leafs
Troy Stecher D, Toronto Maple Leafs
Anthony Mantha, LW, Pittsburgh Penguins
Charlie Coyle, C, Columbus Blue Jackets
Mason Marchment (again), LW, Columbus Blue Jackets
Jason Dickinson, C, Chicago Blackhawks

Laurent Brossoit, G, Chicago Blackhawks
Gustav Nyquist LW, Winnipeg Jets
Luke Schenn, D, Winnipeg Jets
Logan Stanley, D, Winnipeg Jets
Ryan Lomberg, LW, Calgary Flames
Jordan Eberle, RW, Seattle Kraken
Timothy Liljegren, D, San Jose Sharks
Eeli Tolvanen, LW, Seattle Kraken
Nick Leddy, D, San Jose Sharks
Maxim Tsyplakov, RW, New York Islanders
Jake DeBrusk, LW, Vancouver Canucks

TRADED from previous board

Quinn Hughes
Stuart Skinner
Marco Rossi
Yegor Chinakhkov
Mason Marchment

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