Was just wondering how the Avs would have made the cap work to pull of a Carlo trade.
For reference the Toronto trade was:
Carlo (15% retained, $4.1m down to $3,485,000 x 2 years left)
for
2026 1st (top 5 protected)
Fraser Minten (38th overall, 2022)
2025 4th
Considering what Toronto paid to outid the Avs, it's likely that the Avs were offering 2027 1st + Malinski as the base. Moving Malinski would have left them with $1.749 in capspace. That wouldn't have been enough capspace on its own even if Boston retained 50% (in that case Carlo's caphit would have been $2.05m).
They would have needed to move someone else to open up more space. Not trading for EJ, or sending Vesey to Boston would have opened another $800k, putting them at $2.549m in space. Boston would have had to retain $1.551m for this year and another two years after this one, which I doubt they would have had an appetite for without another 1st being offered. That simply wouldn't have been viable.
Including Miles Wood in the deal would have worked out perfectly capwise. Removing Malinski and Wood would have left the Avs with $4.249m in capspace, enough to fit Carlo's full $4.1m caphit with $149k to spare, leaving them with the roster below (with Landeskog on LTIR).
That said, an offer of 2027 1st + Malinski + Wood clearly wasn't appealing to Boston given that they took Toronto's offer instead. Toronto had a 2026 1st instead of a 2027 1st, and from Boston's perspective retaining 15% ($615k) for a little over 2 seasons (comes out to around $1.3m) was obviously preferable to taking on Wood as a $2.5m x 4 year cap dump. This was a bidding war CMac simply didn't have the assets or capspace to win.
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