O Canada: Grading the pre-trade deadline moves (so far)

Every Tuesday, theScore's hockey editors will examine the fortunes of the north's seven NHL franchises. Welcome to "O Canada."

Calgary Flames

Trade: Acquired defenseman Michael Stone from the Arizona Coyotes for a 2017 third-round pick and a 2018 conditional fifth-round pick. Arizona also retained 50 percent of Stone's salary.

Grade: B-

Stone has jumped onto the Flames second defense pairing alongside T.J. Brodie with solid results to date. In four games, he's recorded two assists, and seven shots, albeit with a five-on-five Corsi rating of 42.8. He's also helping in the plus/minus department, for those who still care about the stat.

Calgary also further shored up the blue line with the signing of Matt Bartkowski.

Edmonton Oilers

Trade: Nothing, yet

Grade: Incomplete.

General manager Peter Chiarelli hasn't made a trade since sending Nail Yakupov to St. Louis prior to the start of the regular season, preceded by the infamous Taylor Hall-Adam Larsson deal.

Barring a complete collapse, however, the Oilers appear to be a lock for a playoff spot, and could secure home ice in the first round with a second-place finish in the Pacific.

A clear need exists at the backup goalie position, as Cam Talbot continues to carry a heavy workload and could use some rest down the stretch.

Montreal Canadiens

Trades: Acquired Jordie Benn from the Dallas Stars for Greg Pateryn and a 2017 fourth-round pick.

Grade: C-

GM Marc Bergevin followed up the hiring of Claude Julien as head coach by adding some depth on the blue line, which is fine, except it doesn't address the team's biggest need.

That would be down the middle, where Martin Hanzal appeared to be a perfect fit. Instead, the center was sent to Minnesota by the Coyotes, leaving Montreal with the prospect of heading into the playoffs with Phillip Danault, Alex Galchenyuk, Tomas Plekanec, and David Desharnais rounding out the depth chart. No one foresaw Danault centering the first line, while Plekanec and Desharnais have been playing well below expectations.

Still time to get something done, though.

Ottawa Senators

Trade: Acquired Alex Burrows from the Vancouver Canucks for prospect Jonathan Dahlen.

Grade: D

Not only did Ottawa trade a promising draft pick for a player who will turn 36 by season's end, they're also reportedly set to sign Burrows to a two-year contract extension before he even dons the team's jersey.

The Senators appear headed for the playoffs and see Burrows as an effective depth forward who can mix things up, kill penalties, and score the odd goal. That's certainly how he used to be defined, but at this stage in his career, the return on investment hardly seems worth it, especially when Dahlen compares favorably to a player currently tearing up the NHL.

Toronto Maple Leafs

Trade: Acquired forward Brian Boyle from the Lightning for forward Byron Froese and a 2017 second-round pick.

Grade: B+

One year removed from finishing dead last in the NHL, the renaissance is on in Toronto, and the Maple Leafs are buyers with a view to their second playoff appearance since the lost season of 2004-05.

Boyle brings a wealth of playoff experience after making two trips to the Stanley Cup Final in recent years, and gives Toronto solid depth down the middle behind Auston Matthews, Nazem Kadri, and Tyler Bozak.

The trade value will rise even further if Boyle - who seems excited about the opportunity - can re-sign with the team in the offseason.

Vancouver Canucks

Trade: See aforementioned deal with Ottawa.

Grade: A

The best way to grade this trade is to check in on the social media reaction. Praise was heaped on GM Jim Benning while shade was thrown at Ottawa immediately after the deal was announced, and the hits just kept coming.

Winnipeg Jets

Trade: *crickets*

Grade: Incomplete

This may come as a shock, but GM Kevin Cheveldayoff has yet to tinker with a roster set to once again fall short of the postseason. In fact, the biggest move made recently was to recall exiled goaltender Ondrej Pavelec from the AHL, to zero positive effect.

The Jets are only five points out of a playoff spot, but should be looking to sell, as they did last year with Andrew Ladd. Soon-to-be unrestricted free agents Drew Stafford and Paul Postma are the obvious candidates to be moved, with Pavelec also a possibility in the unlikely chance there's any takers.

(Photos courtesy: USA Today)

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Watch: Granlund slashes through defense, sinks Kings with spectacular winner

One for the demo tape.

Minnesota Wild breakout star Mikael Granlund celebrated his 300th career game with a magnificent overtime winner scored 12 seconds into the extra frame versus the Los Angeles Kings on Monday night.

An exhilarating finish made even more impressive by the on-ice resistance. Granlund sliced through Jeff Carter and Anze Kopitar before beating Drew Doughty to the net and tucking it behind Jonathan Quick.

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Pacioretty joins Canadiens’ elite with 4th straight 30-goal season

Canadiens captain Max Pacioretty hit the 30-goal plateau with the first of his two goals on Monday, and joined an elite group of Montreal greats in the process.

Pacioretty has now hit the milestone in four consecutive seasons, becoming just the fifth player in franchise history to do so, joining Steve Shutt, Guy Lafleur, Maurice Richard, and Yvan Cournoyer.

Pacioretty also scored his 31st of the year later in the game, putting him alone in second place league-wide in goals, just three behind Pittsburgh's Sidney Crosby.

Montreal would go on to defeat New Jersey 4-3 in overtime.

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Kevin Shattenkirk and his fantasy owners win big with move to Washington

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Here are the fantasy implications of the Washington Capitals acquiring D Kevin Shattenkirk from the St. Louis Blues:

Already one of the best offensive defensemen in hockey, Shattenkirk's move to the high-scoring Capitals seems like a trade made in hockey heaven.

Not only does the 28-year-old have a great shot at a deep playoff run in real life, his fantasy value should spike thanks to a likely role on a Capitals power play that features high-end forwards Alexander Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom.

Washington has a useful collection of contributors on the back end (Matt Niskanen, John Carlson and Dmitry Orlov each have between 27 and 32 points), but Shattenkirk represents an upper-echelon quarterback for the team's power play.

An impending free agent, Shattenkirk is tied for fourth in defenseman scoring with 11 goals and 31 assists in 61 games for the Blues. 2016-17 is his fourth straight campaign with at least 42 points, and his previous career high of 45 points looks should be surpassed in short order.

Shattenkirk does a fair amount of his damage with the man advantage; he's tallied at least 25 power-play points in each of the past three seasons, with 20 so far this season.

Washington's power play ranks fifth overall in terms of conversion rate, and the Capitals rank behind only the Penguins in goals per game (3.31).

As a bonus for his fantasy value, Washington's league-leading plus-70 goal differential should do wonders for Shattenkirk's plus/minus, which sits at minus-11.

Currently ranked 79th in theScore's top 200 fantasy hockey rankings, Shattenkirk's stock will trend upward if he can capitalize on the opportunity afforded to him in Washington.

(Photo courtesy: Action Images)

Back in St. Louis, Shattenkirk's departure frees up a more prominent role for second-year defenseman Colton Parayko, who has nevertheless produced four goals and 24 assists in 61 games. Parayko slots in at 143 in the above-mentioned rankings, and should ascend despite the presence of veteran Alex Pietrangelo (nine goals and 21 assists in 60 games).

The values of Carlson (position 118), Niskanen (134) and Orlov all take a hit thanks to Shattenkirk's arrival, though they should all remain useful by chipping in points and maintaining stellar plus/minus figures.

Sanford, a 22-year-old second-round pick of the Capitals in 2013, isn't likely to be fantasy-relevant with the Blues. A left winger, he's spent much of 2016-17 in the AHL, though did suit up for 26 games in Washington, recording three points.

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Kucherov posts natural hat trick with 3 identical goals

Talk about deja vu.

Tampa Bay Lightning forward Nikita Kucherov blasted three identical one-timers in quick succession in the second period to collect the natural hat trick against the Ottawa Senators Monday night.

Kucherov would further add an assist on Braydon Coburn's third period tally to cap off a four-point night and a 5-1 Lightning victory.

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Report: Blues trade Shattenkirk to Capitals

The Washington Capitals acquired the top rental asset on the open market Monday night, landing talented puck-moving defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk in a seismic trade with the St. Louis Blues, according to multiple reports.

In exchange, the Blues will receive Washington's first-round pick in this summer's draft, a conditional second-round selection in 2018, and forward Zach Sanford.

St. Louis will also retain a portion of the defenseman's salary to complete the transaction.

It's expected Shattenkirk will be in Washington's lineup Tuesday versus the New York Rangers.

The Capitals are already, in many ways, the NHL's most complete team, and their current configuration on defense has been the league's stingiest unit this season. But with the mobile Shattenkirk, they have added a completely new dimension to their back line.

The 28-year-old is one of the league's premier transition facilitators, and a power-play specialist. He owns the fourth-highest points rate among blue-liners in all situations, meaning just three defenders have been more productive with their minutes this season.

Shattenkirk is in the final year of an incredibly team-friendly deal that takes up just a $4.25-million share on the salary cap. He'll fetch a lucrative long-term agreement as the most sought after free agent this summer.

The acquisition also prevents the Pittsburgh Penguins and Rangers - two Metropolitan Division heavyweights with similar aspirations and interest in Shattenkirk - from bolstering their respective lineups with the ice-tiling rearguard.

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Watch: Turris scores Senators’ first 5-on-3 goal in nearly 2 years

They did it, they finally did it.

With his 22nd goal of the season, Kyle Turris tallied the Ottawa Senators' first goal at 5-on-3 since the 2014-15 season.

Prior to Monday night's marker against the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Senators had not scored a 5-on-3 goal since a 4-3 victory over the Washington Capitals on April 4, 2015, a stretch of 147 games.

(Video courtesy: NHL.com)

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