I saw this posted on the Jackets forum. Its from Portzline who is a very reliable Jackets reporter:
- blue jackets arent close to giving up on him but the blue jackets think jiricek isn't close to where he needs to be but jiricek does think he's close to where he needs to be
- More forwards being pushed as the pieces rather than defensemen.
- "We aren't just going to take the best offer. We are going to wait for the right offer"
- if a prospect is not available theyd take a first round pick and a depth defenseman
- Doesn’t think the pens move a 1st round because they could be just as bad next season and don’t want to end up losing either pick in a good range
How did they reach this point? It’s pretty simple.
Jiricek, the No. 6 pick in 2022, believes he’s NHL-ready and deserves a prominent role, not just significant ice time but a spot on the power play. This is not a new level of confidence for Jiricek. He bristled last season when the Blue Jackets, then managed by Jarmo Kekäläinen, sent him to the AHL for the final months of the season.
The Blue Jackets, meanwhile, don’t think Jiricek is polished enough defensively — yet — to be an NHL regular. Coach Dean Evason is the third different Blue Jackets coach to reach this conclusion, as seen by Jiricek’s frequent healthy scratches (12) and his limited ice time (11:12 per game) in the six games he dressed.
For now, both sides are making it work. And, to be clear, Jiricek has not requested a trade. But it’s hard to imagine him accepting a long stay in Cleveland.
The Blue Jackets host the
Montreal Canadiens at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday in Nationwide Arena, while Jiricek and AHL Cleveland play in Rochester, N.Y. It will be Jiricek’s third game since being sent down by Columbus. He debuted last weekend.
Evason said he heard positive reports from AHL coach Trent Vogelhuber and the Cleveland staff. Evason and the coaching staff actually streamed the first two periods from the coaches’ offices in Nationwide Arena because Cleveland’s game on Saturday started two hours before the Jackets hosted
Carolina.
“Good. Really good,” Evason said. “He did a lot of really good things on both sides of the puck, which we want him to do on a consistent basis down there. He scored an overtime goal (on Sunday), which is fantastic. We know his offensive side.
“As we’ve talked about before, we need him to dial in when he doesn’t have the puck. It looked as if he’s committed to doing that. We’ve talked to Trent and the staff, and they’re committed to teaching the same way we’re teaching here. Everything is really positive.”
Jiricek’s overtime winner for Cleveland — set up by an Owen Sillinger pass off the rush — is the type of aggressive, up-the-ice play Jiricek seemed reluctant to make in the NHL.
Pittsburgh Penguins GM Kyle Dubas was in Cleveland to watch the game, ostensibly to scout Jiricek.
Waddell did not respond to messages from
The Athletic seeking comment on Tuesday, but he has made it clear that Jiricek — still considered by many to be a top NHL prospect — was not considered untouchable. Keep in mind, Waddell didn’t draft the 6-foot-4, 220-pound Czech.
“As a GM, I have to listen to every trade offer,” Waddell said. “It doesn’t matter what the player’s name is, if we could make our team better, we always have to look at those options.
“I’ve gotten calls. We’ll continue to talk to whoever is interested in whichever player, and if something makes sense for the organization — I’ve never made a personal decision in my career, it’s always what works best for the organization — we’ll look at it.”
According to a team source, the Blue Jackets told clubs last week that they wanted to make a top prospect-for-top prospect trade involving Jiricek. Those trades aren’t always easy to swing, but they can be done, as seen by two deals within the last year.
On Jan. 8, 2024, the
Philadelphia Flyers traded disgruntled prospect forward
Cutter Gauthier (No. 5 in 2022) to the
Anaheim Ducks for defenseman
Jamie Drysdale (No. 6 overall in 2020) and a second-round pick in 2025.
Then, this summer (Aug. 22), forward Rutger McGroarty (No. 14 in 2022), who refused to sign with the
Winnipeg Jets, was traded to the
Pittsburgh Penguins for forward Brayden Yager (No. 14 in 2023).
If Waddell can’t land a top prospect in return, he may be willing to expand his demands. A team source told
The Athletic on Tuesday that he was willing to consider a trade package that would start with a first-round draft pick but may also include a depth defenseman.
The Blue Jackets never wanted to be in this spot. It was hoped that a new GM (Waddell) and new coach (Evason) would not only be a fresh start for Jiricek but would allow both parties to repair a relationship that frayed early last season.
When training camp opened, Jiricek was aligned on the second pair with veteran
Ivan Provorov, and he remained there well into the preseason. But as his struggles continued and the coaching staff lost confidence in his play, he was bumped down the lineup, settling into an on-again, off-again role on the third pair.
In six games, he had no goals, one assist, four penalty minutes, and a minus-2 rating. His ice time dwindled over his last three games, landing at 8:14 on Nov. 18 in Boston.
That 5-1 win over the
Bruins may have been Jiricek’s last game in a Columbus sweater.