Item No. 1: Trader Don
A month ago, it seemed as if Blue Jackets general manager Don Waddell was ready to consider the return of captain Boone Jenner later this month as the equivalent of a trade deadline acquisition, a big boost as the young club tries to grab a playoff spot down the stretch.
But then center Sean Monahan needed surgery for a sprained wrist. And then Kirill Marchenko needed surgery to reset a fractured jaw. Just like that, two-thirds of the top forward line was lost, and with it went the Blue Jackets’ ability to win games by outscoring opponents.
Waddell is now looking at the March 7 trade deadline through a much different lens. He was one of the NHL’s more aggressive GMs last week in his search for a top-six scoring forward who can restore the Blue Jackets’ margin for error in games.
“We had some irons in the fire,” Waddell told The Athletic. “But no action yet.”
Waddell said he’d be willing to trade one of the Blue Jackets’ two first-round picks this coming summer — they also own Minnesota’s after the David Jiricek trade — but only for a player who has remaining term on their contract, not a rental player.
But he also wouldn’t rule out trading one of the Blue Jackets’ mid-round picks — they have two fourth-round picks this year, plus two third-round and three fourth-round picks in 2026 — for a veteran player with an expiring contract after this season.
“I’d like to add somebody who can play in our top six, somebody who can score,” Waddell said. “We were getting through it without (Monahan) for a while, but then Marchy happens … you can’t expect to keep scoring goals when you take those guys out of your lineup.”
Meanwhile, Waddell said talks with the Blue Jackets’ most prominent pending unrestricted free agents — defenseman Ivan Provorov and forward Mathieu Olivier — have remained productive and amicable.
Both players figure to garner significant interest on the trade market — the Boston Bruins have taken runs at Olivier at the past two deadlines — but Waddell said he’s “100 percent” open to keeping them beyond March 7, even if contracts aren’t signed.
“We’ve exchanged ideas and numbers on both sides,” he said. “We’re not there yet, but there are deals to be made, for sure.
“Now that the (NHL salary cap) is going up, and we have the numbers, it’s a little bit clearer now. But the thing I want to be careful with is term.”
Waddell wants to keep defenseman Dante Fabbro, too, given the way Fabbro has meshed with No. 1 defenseman Zach Werenski since he was claimed off waivers from Nashville earlier this season. Numbers have not yet been exchanged with Fabbro’s camp, but there are plans to talk soon, Waddell said.