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Does the NHL Trade Deadline Matter Anymore?

The National Hockey League trade deadline is Feb. 28 (2 p.m. CST). Here’s our question of the day: Does it matter?

I love watching the annual trade deadline shows on TSN, SportsNet and the Score. It used to be that no matter when they started or when they finished, the panelists would always have plenty to talk about. In fact, there used to be huge trades, trades that could change an entire division and sometimes a conference.

But since the NHL salary cap was instituted in 2005, the entire concept of the annual NHL trade deadline has changed dramatically. Unless a team is significantly under the cap, there is very little chance that it will add a number of high-priced players at the deadline. And while a team or two might consider adding some big money talent, they can’t unless they rid themselves of their own high-priced talent. And that’s why I like watching the trade deadline shows so much.

It’s painful, but it’s really entertaining. For six-to-eight hours (depending on the network), these highly-paid, well-coiffed TV stars and ex-players talk endlessly about who’s buying and selling and then they wait. And then they start talking about buying and selling again and then they wait some more. And then somebody trades a fifth round draft pick for a winger in Hershey and then they talk about buying and selling again. And then they wait.

With the salary cap, blockbuster trades on deadline day are unlikely.

Sure, there will be deals with veteran rent-a-players changing teams in the final year of a contract, so one team can take a run at the playoffs and the other can either dump salary or acquire a prospect. You can wager that Buffalo gets into that kind of scenario a few times.

However, if you think there will be a huge six-player deal involving the game’s biggest names on deadline day, don’t hold your breath. I can tell you, not even the poor guys who are going to be stuck in front of a national audience hoping and praying for a big trade, actually believe they’re going to see one. They’re too smart for that.

After all, take a look at last year. Here is an example of a big deal: Carolina sent Joe Corvo to the Washington Capitals in exchange for Brian Pothier, Oskar Osala and a second round draft pick in 2011.

Here’s another: Vancouver sent Mathieu Schneider to the Phoenix Coyotes for Dean Zimmerman and a sixth-round pick in 2010.

Want a third? Try this. This is what passes for a blockbuster these days and it’s the deal that kept the panels on Canada’s three sports networks on the edges of their seats for hours: Colorado sent Wojtek Wolski to the Phoenix Coyotes in exchange for Peter Mueller and Kevin Porter.

As we mentioned two weeks ago, there were only two big trade deadline deals last year and neither one took place at the deadline. On Jan. 31, the Toronto Maple Leafs sent Matt Stajan, Niklas Hagman, Jamal Mayers and Ian White to Calgary in exchange for Dion Phaneuf, Fredrik Sjostrom and Keith Aulie and on Feb. 4, a full month before the deadline, Atlanta sent Ilya Kovalchuk and Anssi Salmela to New Jersey in exchange for Jonny Oduya, Niclas Bergfors, Patrice Cormier and a 2010 first-round draft pick (which was eventually dealt to Chicago in the Dustin Byfuglien trade).

So perhaps, in the next few days, there might be a decent trade or two. But on deadline day? Not likely.

In the meantime, let’s look at 10 players who could be moved before or on the deadline. These guys might keep our national TV stars busy for eight hours:

1) Jean-Sebastien Giguere, Toronto Maple Leafs: James Reimer has to start playing regularly at some point and Giguere is grossly overpaid. However, he might help a team like Montreal down the stretch. He’s in the last year of his contract and I’d be surprised if any team wanted him, but if one did, it’s pretty certain, that team could get him. He has waived his no-trade clause.

2) Craig Rivet, Buffalo Sabres: The Sabres are falling out of contention so the veteran captain, whose contract runs out at the end of the season is likely to be the first to go. He’ll help a playoff contender. He’s done helping the Sabres. I wouldn’t be surprised if Rivet is moved any day.

3) Chris Phillips, Ottawa Senators: He’s 32 and in the final year of his contract playing for a bad team. He’s garner a draft pick or a couple of prospects from a contending team. Bryan Murray will move him if he can.

4) Thomas Kaberle, Toronto Maple Leafs: Brian Burke has been dying to move Kaberle for awhile. Now would be as good a time as any. He’s a free-agent at the end of the season and his $4.25 million will come off the Leafs’ cap anyway, but Burke’s a smart guy and he’d like to get something in return for a player like Kaberle, who could be a good player in the right situation. Kaberle says he will waive his no-trade clause.

5) Dustin Penner, Edmonton Oilers: He’s not as good as his $4.5 million salary this year would suggest, but he is a Top 6 forward for a number of teams and the non-stop rumours seem to suggest that L.A. is interested. However, the cap will be an issue.

6) Jason Arnott, New Jersey Devils: The Devils are playing better under Jacques Lemaire and so Lou Lamoriello might not move anybdy, but if he can get a draft pick for the 35-year-old Arnott, he’ll pull the cord.

7) Keith Ballard, Vancouver Canucks: He makes $4 million a year and he’s a decent rearguard, but the Canucks are loaded on defense and they wouldn’t mind acquiring draft picks or a young centre. Ballard’s been a healthy scratch far too often this season to make the kind of money he makes.

icon cool Does the NHL Trade Deadline Matter Anymore? Alex Kovalev, Ottawa Senators: The Senators want to get younger and they’de love to be able to move Kovalev. He’s playing well —  three goals and five points in his past three games — but the Sens are going nowhere and they’ll take draft picks to move him. Word out of Pittsburgh is that his old team, the Penguins, might be interested after losing Evgeni Malkin tore up his knee and is done for the season.

9) Alexei Ponikarovsky, Los Angeles Kings: He makes $3.2 million a year, but he hasn’t been as good as hoped (he has four goals and four assists in 36 games). If the Kings could move Ponikarovsky, it would allow GM Dean Lombardi to improve in other areas. It might also allow Lombardi to acquire a big forward like Penner. Trouble is, Ponikarovsky is not worth the financial burden. Who else would want him?

10) Tim Connolly, Buffalo Sabres: The Sabres might not want to try to sign this first-line forward because he makes a load of dough and is probably going to want more next year. Trouble is, he has only eight goals and 16 assists in 40 games and has been a terrific underachiever. Fact is, the Sabres are going to try and cut salaries at the deadline and Connolly’s is the first one they’d love to eject.

The Playoffs Are Coming. It’s Manitoba’s Best Year Ever.

This was a big week around the National Hockey League.

Jonathan Toews and the Chicago Blackhawks clinched a playoff berth, Travis Zajac continued to have the best year of his career as he leads the New Jersey Devils into the post-season and Barry Trotz, the head coach of the Nashville Predators, keeps the Preds winning even though they don’t have enough personnel or enough star personnel to be as good as they are.

Some notes from a week in the hockey trenches observing the brilliance of the Manitoba kids in the NHL…

1) This is as good a time as any to praise the Finnish Flash, Teemu Selanne. Last Sunday night, Selanne scored his 600th career goal to become only the 18th player in history to reach the 600-goal plateau.

Congratulations to a great guy, a guy who scored his first 147 with the Winnipeg Jets.

2) When he played for the Toronto Maple Leafs, Winnipeg-born Alexander Steen appeared to be spinning his wheels, going nowhere fast. Now, as a member of the St. Louis, Steen is having a career year.

Through 60 games, Steen has 21 goals and 21 assists and is a plus-five on a minus team. He’s the Blues third leading scorer and is tied for the team lead in goals even though he’s played 10 and 11 fewer games than the two players ahead of him.

After struggling in Toronto and often being a healthy scratch, he has become a big time offensive player in St. Louis. At 26, he is developing into one of the two or three best players on the Blues.

3) If there was one player who could have played on Canada’s Olympic team and didn’t, it was Tampa Bay’s Steven Stamkos. Now, as the season winds down and Tampa misses the playoffs, Stamkos, who was a great friend of 92-CITI-FM and the old Cosmo Show, has a chance to show how good he really is.

Heading into the weekend, Stamkos was tied with Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin for the NHL goal-scoring lead with 45. Could Steven Stamkos win the Rocket Richard Trophy? You bet he could.

4) The Calgary Flames, and the red-hot Nigel Dawes of Winnipeg, have an uphill battle to make the Stanley Cup playoffs, but we will know by this coming Sunday whether the Flames have what it takes to reach the post-season.

The Flames started a five-games-in-seven-days stretch with a 4-3 loss at Minnesota on Sunday. They beat the Anaheim Ducks in Calgary on Tuesday night, but lost a big game to the Islanders, 3-2, on Thursday night. They play at Boston on Saturday and at Washington on Sunday and if they don’t win both of them, they’ll be pretty much done.

5) Manitoba’s top young players have had rock solid seasons in 2009-2010.

Winnipeg-born Duncan Keith, a Chicago Blackhawks defenseman, has 13 goals and 52 assists for 65 points, 31st overall in the NHL and second among defensemen. He’s also a plus-18.

New Jersey rightwinger/centre Travis Zajac has 23 goals and 38 assists for 61 points, 34th in scoring in the NHL. He’s also a plus-16.

Winnipeg-born Patrick Sharp (plus-22) of the Blackhawks has 22 goals and 39 assists and is also 34th in NHL scoring.

Winnipeg’s Jonathan Toews, the captain of the Blackhawks, has 22 goals and 37 assists for 59 points and is a plus-20. He’s 43rd in scoring.

Winkler’s Dustin Penner has 27 goals and 28 assists and is a plus-5 on a very minus Edmonton Oilers team.

Meanwhile, Alexander Steen of Winnipeg and Eric Fehr of Winkler each have 21 goals while Nigel Dawes of Winnipeg has 13.

This might be Manitoba’s best year ever in the NHL.

If Heatley says “No”, it’s Bad for Hockey and the NHL Needs to Intervene.

Free Agent Frenzy, Day 1…

Granted, there is a chance Dany Heatley could still end up as a member of the Edmonton Oilers, but let’s get something straight here: When you ask for a trade and then decide not to waive your no-trade clause (Who’s the idiot GM who puts that crap in a contract anyway?), you have a problem.

Sure, Heatley told his agent J.P. Barry, the “he wanted to sleep on it,” and that’s fine, but only a tremendously selfish prick with no consideration for three other hockey players, two franchises, the league and the game would pull a stunt like that.

Here’s the deal: Heatley was going to get what he wanted. He asked for a trade out of Ottawa and even though he went public with his demands and put the Senators in a bind, forcing them to go begging to teams to take the alleged superstar off their hands, Bryan Murray did the best he could to get the trade arranged.

For the Senators, the best deal was with Edmonton. The Oilers were going to send 22-year-old forward Andrew Cogliano, 26-year-old forward Dustin Penner and 23-year-old defenceman Ladislav Smid to Ottawa in exchange for the disgruntled 28-year-old Heatley. It was a good deal all around. The Oilers would get the sniper they need while the Sens would get three young players with plenty of upside.

But then Heatley decided NOT to waive his no-trade clause. He could still change his mind and some believe he will, right after the Senators (not the Oilers) pay him his $4 million bonus. But that’s even more selfish, more greedy and more childish.

If Heatley doesn’t come to his senses and go to Edmonton, the league has to take action. This was a trade  made in good faith and the players involved all knew they were moving. We’re dealing with people’s lives here, but then again rich, selfish jock pricks don’t care about other people. The League, in order to save the credibility of its franchises, has to tell Heatley’s people that he’s going to Edmonton and then if he doesn’t like it, he can go ahead and ask for a trade there.

Heatley, who should know better, has just told the world that Edmonton is a dump. “I’m not going to play there.” It’s wrong. It’s wrong because you don’t ask for a trade and then not accept the trade after it’s done.

In order to save its own credibility — that is, if Heatley insists he’s not going — the league must force this trade.

In the meantime:

1) Great news for old friend Colton Orr. Four years, $4 million from the Leafs. Orr’s rise to the NHL is a great story and this is a great opportunity for a hardworking 27-year-old player.

2) Mattias Ohlund, 32, gets seven years in Tampa. Seven? Wow.

3) The Sedin Twins go back to Vancouver and Ohlund heads south. That’s a debatable decision by the Canucks. Wouldn’t you rather have Ohlund and, say, Marian Gaborik, than the Sedins?

4) Three goalie moves: Dwayne Roloson goes from Edmonton to the Islanders, Ty Conklin goes from Detroit to St. Louis and Craig Anderson goes from Florida to Colorado. Zzzzzzzzzz.

5) Marian Hossa, 30, goes to Chicago for 12 years, $62 million. He was awful in the Stanley Cup final. He’ll be just a peach when he’s 42.