Getting Two of The Top-3 Picks At The Draft

Go big or go home, they say. That’s what Brian Burke, then GM of the Vancouver Canucks, did at the 1999 NHL Draft. He had his sights on Henrik and Daniel Sedin and he had some work to do in order to get them. What did he do? He put his work boots and hard hat on and went to work.

To set the table, the 1999 Draft was not top heavy, very much like this year’s Draft. The Canucks already owned the third overall pick that year. So this is how he pulled it off:

  1. Burke traded defenseman Bryan McCabe and the Canucks’ first round pick in 2000 (the following year) to the Chicago Blackhawks for the fourth overall pick.
  2. He then paired the fourth overall pick and two third-round picks to the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for the 1st overall selection.
  3. A deal was then made by Burke to trade the 1st overall pick to the Atlanta Thrashers in a deal for the 2nd overall pick with the assurance they would not take a Sedin. Atlanta took Patrik Stefan first overall.

This year

Now let’s set the table for this year’s NHL Draft. Much like 1999, there is no generational talent available this year. While Shane Wright is first on most people’s lists, the gap between him and Juraj Slafkovsky and Logan Cooley is quite minimal. You do have three fairly evenly matched players, all three predicted to become very good players but no star quality. All three come with question marks.

With that in mind, what if the Montreal Canadiens, who currently own the first overall pick, were to try to acquire two of the three picks at this year’s Draft? The New Jersey Devils are willing to trade the second overall pick, according to GM Tom Fitzgerald. So we know that at least one pick is available. However, contrarily to what some Habs’ fans and media seem to think, you don’t get the second overall for a Josh Anderson and a pick or prospect. And quantity never equals quality. You have to give something the team wants.

Obviously, there are many options and it can get quite convoluted. However, in both scenarios presented, I’m involving the Dallas Stars.

TO DALLASTO MONTREAL
Jeff Petry
33rd overall pick 2022
18th overall pick

Option A

The first one goes something like this:

TO ARIZONATO MONTREAL
Shea Weber
Jonathan Drouin or Mike Hoffman
18th overall (DAL)
Jayden Struble or Mattias Norlinder
3rd overall
27th overall (CAR)

The Canadiens then select first and third overall. It gives them flexibility as they can get Wright and Slafkovsky, or Wright and Cooley, or Slafkovsky and Cooley… or they go off the board and pick a center and a defenseman.

Option B

Or a second option could go along those lines:

TO ARIZONATO MONTREAL
1st overall
Shea Weber
Jonathan Drouin or Mike Hoffman
Jayden Struble or Mattias Norlinder
3rd overall
27th overall (CAR)
Cam Dineen
TO NEW JERSEYTO MONTREAL
Cam Dineen
Jan Mysak or Brett Stapley
18th overall (DAL)
2nd overall

Montreal then gets to pick second and third overall. Assuming that Arizona picks Shane Wright, the Habs then get Slafkovsky and Cooley, so they have their goals’ scoring power forward AND a top two lines center. They also still own two first round picks, number 26 (CGY) and 27 (CAR), which they could package to move up if they want as based on a recent article, it could be worth a 12-16 overall pick. And if the Wright fanatics think for a second that he’s worth more than both those guys, let them think that as they’re hopeless.

Or you think of other ways to get two early picks, as there are plenty of possibilities. Or you can have the vanilla Draft: the Canadiens pick Wright… or Slafkovsky… or Cooley. Nothing wrong with vanilla. It’s good. It’s safe. It’s easy. But it still leaves a lot of work to do for shedding salary and might not jump start or accelerate the reset as much as getting two of the top three picks would do.

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Brunet: Weber And Drouin Heading To Arizona?

According to Darren Dreger and other NHL Insiders, it is very likely that the Montreal Canadiens will be shipping Shea Weber’s contract to the Arizona Coyotes. Weber has four more years to his contract with a cap hit of $7.857 million. However, he is “only” owed a grand total of $6 million dollars over those four seasons in actual salary, making it very appealing for a team wanting to reach the cap floor. Kent Hughes was on record stating that he came close to trading Weber’s contract by trade deadline but it’s been reported that they couldn’t finalize the insurance details on time. It is believed that the deal was with the Coyotes.

Jonathan Drouin too?

In a recent article, La Presse reporter Mathias Brunet added fuel to that fire… and more! One of the most respected and reputable reporters in Quebec, Brunet warned Habs’ fans not to be surprised if Jonathan Drouin went to the Coyotes in the same trade. Far from a completed trade, he said, but he told his readers that they will have heard it from him first, if it was to happens.

If that were to be the case, the Canadiens would free up $13.357 million on the cap, not including what could be coming back in that trade, of course. If picks are to be included in such a trade, it’s important to note that the NHL Draft is about a month away, starting on July 7th. Stay tuned…

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