Post-Game: Elias Pettersson and Brock Boeser shine against a familiar foe

Sat and Bik break down the game as the Canucks come back to beat the Islanders 6-5 in New York. Hear from Randip Janda following the game, Head Coach Rick Tocchet and players post-game, plus Sportsnet's Iain MacIntyre!

This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

Golden Knights’ Thompson leaves game with apparent leg injury

Vegas Golden Knights netminder Logan Thompson departed Thursday's game against the Minnesota Wild after suffering an apparent injury.

Thompson appeared to hurt himself on a non-contact play. He didn't put any weight on his left leg as he exited the ice.

Backup goalie Adin Hill replaced Thompson in the contest.

Thompson has been stellar for Vegas this season. The 25-year-old rookie entered Thursday's game sporting a .913 save percentage with a 19-13-3 record and was the Golden Knights' representative at the All-Star Game.

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Report: Devils, Hurricanes among teams interested in Sharks’ Meier

The New Jersey Devils and the Carolina Hurricanes are among several teams interested in San Jose Sharks winger Timo Meier, reports TSN's Pierre LeBrun.

Meier was previously reported to be the top deadline target of the New York Rangers, but with the Blueshirts landing Vladimir Tarasenko on Thursday, they're likely out of the running for Meier.

The 26-year-old power forward has recorded 30 goals, 21 assists, 232 shots, and 109 hits in 52 games with the Sharks this season. He carries a $6-million cap hit this year and is a pending restricted free agent. His qualifying offer will be $10 million this summer, and he could walk to unrestricted free agency in 2024. With San Jose well out of the playoff picture, the team is expected to move Meier.

The Canes and Devils rank first and second, respectively, in the Metropolitan Division.

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Overrated/Underrated – Demko trade talks, Hughes’ season, and the NBA Deadline

Dan and Sat debate whether topics such as Thatcher Demko trade talks, Quinn Hughes' performance this season, and much more are overrated or underrated.

This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

Harman Dayal on trade scenarios and maximizing return potential

Dan and Sat are joined by The Athletic's Harman Dayal to discuss trade options ahead of the deadline for the Canucks. Also, Sportsnet's John Garrett stops by to talk about Bo Horvat playing his former team in New York and more.

This podcast was produced by Josh Elliott-Wolfe.

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. 

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.

Trade grades: Rangers land Tarasenko, Blues wave white flag

Vladi's off to the Big Apple.

On Thursday afternoon, the New York Rangers acquired pending unrestricted free-agent forward Vladimir Tarasenko and defenseman Niko Mikkola from the St. Louis Blues in exchange for a conditional 2023 first-round pick, a conditional 2024 fourth-rounder, forward Sammy Blais, and defenseman Hunter Skinner.

The conditions: The first-rounder will be the later pick of New York's two 2023 firsts (their own and Dallas'), while the fourth-rounder becomes a third if the Rangers make the playoffs. Also of note: the Blues are retaining 50% of Tarasenko's remaining salary and cap hit. The Russian makes $7.5 million.

Let's dig into the two perspectives of the deal and some league-wide takeaways.

Rangers' side of the deal

Steph Chambers / Getty Images

New York just landed its missing puzzle piece up front.

Before the trade, the Rangers' top six featured a world-class playmaker in Artemi Panarin, a proven sniper in Mika Zibanejad, two net-front menaces with scoring touch in Vincent Trocheck and Chris Kreider, and a reliable puck hound in Barclay Goodrow. The sixth guy? The replaceable Jimmy Vesey.

After the trade, the top six now includes a second high-end finisher in Tarasenko. His arrival takes the pressure off the so-called Kid Line - Filip Chytil between Alexis Lafreniere and Kaapo Kakko - and opens the door for improvement both at five-on-five, where the Rangers rank 15th in the NHL in goals for per 60 minutes, and on the power play, where they rank 24th.

More specifically, the Rangers' top players hammer the slot area with passes. (Panarin is fourth among NHLers in passes to the slot per game, while defenseman Adam Fox ranks 15th.) And guess who loves to tee off on slot passes? Tarasenko, who's scored 30 goals six times and has a lightning-quick release.

Scott Rovak / Getty Images

Tarasenko scored 182 times in 395 games from 2014-15 through the 2018-19 season. Over that stretch, only Alex Ovechkin and John Tavares racked up more goals. Having undergone multiple shoulder surgeries over the past few years, Tarasenko, 31, is no longer that caliber of game-breaker. Yet the left-shooting right winger did establish a new career high in points last season (82 in 75 games) and pitched in 29 points in 38 contests this season for the Blues.

Mikkola, meanwhile, is a 6-foot-4 depth defenseman who'll join Braden Schneider on the Rangers' bottom pairing, bumping Ben Harpur to the press box. Teams tend to need eight or nine capable defensemen over long playoff runs, so Mikkola essentially kills two birds with one stone for New York.

The package going to St. Louis is fine. It sucks to depart with a 2023 first, but the Rangers had two. General manager Chris Drury certainly didn't overpay for Tarasenko, a Stanley Cup winner, and Mikkola. And acting this early helped Drury avoid an escalating bidding war in the final days before the deadline.

Grade: A-

Blues' side of the deal

Scott Rovak / Getty Images

As a seller, you want to hang your hat on something in the return package.

In this instance, assuming nothing weird happens down the stretch and both the Rangers and Stars make the playoffs, Blues GM Doug Armstrong's crown jewel will be a mid-to-late first-rounder. That's a nice asset to hang your hat on if the rest of the package is juicy. That's unfortunately not the case here.

In other words, the Blues didn't hit a home run with this deal. It's at best a sliding double, and a single at worst.

I get that the market might not have been robust for Tarasenko, given the veteran's injury history and the no-trade protection baked into his contract. But a mid-to-late first, a mid-rounder, a fringe NHL forward (Blais), and a mediocre defense prospect (Skinner) for Tarasenko and the useful Mikkola doesn't deserve heaps of praise. And St. Louis lent a hand by retaining salary.

From afar, there are a few reasons why this move, at this time, makes sense for Armstrong. Tarasenko, who wasn't re-signing with the Blues this coming offseason, was exposed in the Seattle expansion draft in 2021 and had seemingly been in the rumor mill for years. Everybody knew he was available; few wanted him. So, it was time to rip the Band-Aid off and wave the white flag for this dreadful season - St. Louis is nine points out of the playoffs - and the 2019 Cup-winning core. Ryan O'Reilly and Ivan Barbashev could be next.

Armstrong knows Blais, a former Blue. Familiarity helps. I'm sure the scouting staff sees something in Skinner. Overall, though, the return was nothing special.

Grade: C+

League-wide takeaways

Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

The deadline is three weeks away, and already Tarasenko and center Bo Horvat have changed addresses. The premium forward market is thinning.

There's no guarantee Patrick Kane or Jonathan Toews waive their no-trade clauses, but they very well could hit the trade block at some point before March 3. The Rangers had been linked to Kane, in particular, and opted to pounce on Tarasenko instead. They got ahead of it. How do their rivals react?

Do GMs panic and overpay for one of the Chicago Blackhawk forwards? Chase after O'Reilly on the Blues? End up with a second-tier rental forward?

Another trickle-down from the Tarasenko deal (and, to a lesser extent, the Horvat move) is that it provides a roadmap for a Timo Meier trade. It's not quite apples to apples: The San Jose Sharks star winger is a pending restricted free agent, not a UFA; he's also five years younger and more productive than Tarasenko. Still, there are enough similarities to compare the two transactions.

The Sharks should be able to reel in an equivalent package to what the Blues received for Tarasenko and Mikkola, plus another significant asset, whether it be a second first-rounder or blue-chip prospect. Yep, Meier won't be cheap.

Buckle up.

John Matisz is theScore's senior NHL writer. Follow John on Twitter (@MatiszJohn) or contact him via email (john.matisz@thescore.com).

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Leafs’ Dubas hesitant to trade top draft picks, prospects for rental

Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Kyle Dubas is in the final year of his contract but isn't prepared to move significant future pieces for short-term help at the upcoming trade deadline.

"There are some players and some draft pick capital that we have that are extremely valuable that we'd be hard-pressed to move on from," Dubas said Thursday.

"I think in regards to rentals, I can't see that happening," Dubas added. "But with regards to other options, I don't think you say no off the hop to anything, but those are very important pieces to us for now and in the future."

Dubas said he's interested in upgrading forward and defense ahead of the March 3 deadline.

"Up front and on D, if there's a way that we can improve the team and give ourselves a chance to make a run at it, then we'll do that," Dubas said.

However, the GM tempered expectations for who Toronto could acquire, with stars like Patrick Kane, Ryan O'Reilly, and Timo Meier rumored to be available.

"The larger focus is always on the bigger names, but we have to look at the people who may improve us overall and not just the big names, per se," Dubas said.

The Maple Leafs return from their All-Star break Friday against the Columbus Blue Jackets. Toronto ranks second in the Atlantic Division with a 31-13-8 record.

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Tortorella: Flyers ‘need to work’ on DeAngelo’s defensive game

Flyers head coach John Tortorella didn't anticipate how much work defensively the team would need to put in with blue-liner Tony DeAngelo when Philadelphia acquired him from the Carolina Hurricanes this past offseason.

"Last team he played for - Carolina - I think they could absorb some of that with their roster as far as maybe some of his deficiencies defensively," Tortorella said Thursday, according to The Athletic's Charlie O'Connor. "It kind of sticks out more with us."

The Flyers acquired DeAngelo and a seventh-rounder from the Hurricanes in exchange for a second-, third-, and fourth-round pick. Philadelphia then signed DeAngelo to a two-year, $10-million contract.

DeAngelo's most frequent partner last season was Jaccob Slavin, who's among the league's best shutdown defenders. This season, DeAngelo has played primarily with Ivan Provorov and Travis Sanheim.

"I think he's done some great things for us here," Tortorella said. "It's just ... we want to try to help him and we feel he needs to get better defensively without taking away any of that great offensive ability he has.

"We know what Tony is. I'm a little bit - not disappointed - but the defensive liability is something we need to work at. I didn't think the amount of work that we need to do with him ... I didn't think that at the point in time that we got him. But it is what it is."

DeAngelo has recorded a respectable 31 points in 47 games this season. However, his minus-12.3 defensive goals above replacement is the worst among all NHL skaters, according to Evolving-Hockey. The next worst is John Klingberg at minus-8.9.

Last season, DeAngelo's defensive goals above replacement was a much more tolerable minus-2.6. The 27-year-old has never posted a positive defensive goals above replacement in a single season during his seven-year career.

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