What the Canucks is going on in Vancouver?
WTC, indeed. We talked about it for the last month, and everyone figured things would die down after both Elias Pettersson and J.T. Miller poured water on their rift speculation – albeit after Vancouver captain Quinn Hughes and Head Coach Rick Tocchet acknowledged and addressed it. Then, Canucks GM Patrik Allvin gave a very candid interview about his team’s performance and the spotlight promptly brightened on the team’s situation.
What we know, as we and others have reported, is the Canucks are taking calls on Miller and Pettersson. We also know their conversations with other clubs are not exclusive to those two players – they are exploring additional ways to improve their hockey team, like trading for a top-four defenceman and adding an offensive mid-six winger.
There is clearly frustration in the dressing room over the Miller/Pettersson ordeal. They managed to keep things in check last season, but it’s boiled over again this campaign, and here we are.
As Allvin and Canucks President Jim Rutherford evaluate their options, there are no guarantees one of these star centres (let alone both) is traded during the season. Or at all.
Teams like the Buffalo Sabres, Detroit Red Wings, Minnesota Wild and New York Rangers will continue to be linked to either/both players – and there are other teams poking around, obviously – but the Canucks feel they have the base of a team capable of competing for a championship and nobody wants to derail that. Vancouver will almost certainly give up the best current player in any trade, but the return will have to align with their objective of chasing a Stanley Cup, even in package form.
The Rangers covet Miller. Great, but does New York have an appetite to include Alexis Lafreniere, not Mike Zibanejad, as the centrepiece of a large return?
The Sabres want Pettersson. Okay, but would they package Owen Power, not Bowen Byram, with Dylan Cozens to make it happen?
The Wild like both players, and while the belief around the NHL is they are still willing to move young centre Marco Rossi, who’s having a great season and was just named the NHL’s first star of the past week, in a major move for one of them that would include additional pieces, how can they make this work, this season, cap wise?
And (maybe I’m wrong) I’m not overly convinced the Red Wings have the desire to move any of their top young studs for either guy.
There are many hurdles when dealing a player of Miller and Pettersson’s stature and the Canucks cannot afford to mishandle this. They’re both locked into long-term deals and are controllable. Neither player has asked for a trade. If any move happens, Allvin & Co. must be confident it makes their team better, overall – and some may argue eliminating any unnecessary stress inside their room will be an added bonus.
The Canucks’ management brass prefers to make their moves well in advance of the trade deadline, which is two months and one day away, but a blockbuster of this nature won’t be rushed, even with discussions ongoing.
And as they juggle these conversations, they have other negotiations to deal with in an attempt to improve their roster.
It’s never a dull moment in Vancouver, and these next two months should remain entertaining.