What move comes next for the Canucks ahead of Friday’s deadline

Dan and Sat continue to break down the Canucks acquisition of defenceman Filip Hronek from the Detroit Red Wings. The guys discuss how the Canucks still have pokers in the fire and want to get more done before the Friday deadline. They are joined by Sportsnet's John Garrett to discuss the trades so far and where the team stands now. 

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.

Report: Blackhawks trade Domi to Stars

The Chicago Blackhawks are sending Max Domi and goaltender Dylan Wells to the Dallas Stars for a second-round pick and netminder Anton Khudobin, reports Daily Faceoff's Frank Seravalli.

Domi is a pending unrestricted free agent. The forward, who turned 28 on Thursday, will be joining his sixth NHL club. He's in his eighth season and was in his first with the Blackhawks. Chicago is reportedly not retaining any of his $3-million cap hit.

Domi has 18 goals and 31 assists in 60 games this season. He can play at center or on the wing and has a career-best success rate of 53.7% on faceoffs in 2022-23.

Wells played his lone NHL game in November and has spent the rest of the campaign with the AHL's Rockford IceHogs. The 25-year-old went 9-6-1 with a .905 save percentage in 17 contests with the farm club this season.

Khudobin hasn't played at all this season and only played nine games in 2021-22 due to hip issues. The Stars buried his contract in the minors and were on the hook for approximately $2.2 million of his $3.3-million cap hit as a result, according to CapFriendly. The veteran puck-stopper, who's a pending UFA, will turn 37 in May.

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Senators’ Watson ejected for hit on Rangers’ Motte

Ottawa Senators enforcer Austin Watson was handed a five-minute major and a game misconduct for his hit on New York Rangers forward Tyler Motte on Thursday.

Watson was issued a charging major, but he also appeared to catch Motte's head with his elbow.

Motte, who was traded from the Senators to the Rangers in February, was ruled out for the rest of the game with an upper-body injury. He's dealt with head injuries in the past.

Watson has two prior suspensions for on-ice incidents in his nine-year career. He was banned for two games for an illegal check to the head in 2021-22 and two contests for boarding in 2017-18 while with the Nashville Predators.

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Oilers land Bjugstad from Coyotes

The Edmonton Oilers acquired veteran center Nick Bjugstad and defenseman Cam Dineen from the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for a 2023 third-round pick and defense prospect Michael Kesselring, the Oilers announced Thursday.

Arizona is retaining 50% of Bjugstad's $900,000 salary. The Coyotes have now used the maximum three retention slots and are ineligible to add another until July 1, according to CapFriendly. Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Patrick Kane are the other partial contracts on Arizona's ledger.

Bjugstad registered 23 points in 59 games this season and provides Edmonton with reliable depth down the middle. The 30-year-old was a first-round draft pick of the Florida Panthers in 2010. He also spent time with the Pittsburgh Penguins and Minnesota Wild throughout his 11-year career.

Edmonton had $450,000 in deadline cap space before acquiring Bjugstad, meaning it's right up against the salary limit pending any further moves.

The Oilers also made a big splash earlier this week, bringing in Mattias Ekholm for a package of picks, Tyson Barrie, and prospect Reid Schaefer.

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Blue Jackets flip Quick to Golden Knights

The Columbus Blue Jackets traded veteran goaltender Jonathan Quick to the Vegas Golden Knights, the teams announced Thursday.

The Blue Jackets received goaltender Michael Hutchinson and a seventh-round draft pick in 2025 in return. Columbus acquired Quick and two picks on Wednesday from the Los Angeles Kings for Vladislav Gavrikov and Joonas Korpisalo.

Sources told Daily Faceoff's Frank Seravalli that Quick was unhappy with the initial trade to Columbus.

Quick spent 16 years with the Kings, winning two Stanley Cups and a Conn Smythe Trophy while setting franchise records in games played for a goalie, wins, shutouts, and save percentage.

He signed a 10-year, $58-million contract in 2012 that expires this year.

The 37-year-old is far removed from his prime, having posted sub-.900 save percentages in three of the past five seasons. This campaign, he's 11-13-4 with a .876 clip and a 3.50 goals-against average.

The Golden Knights have dealt with injuries in the crease all season. Robin Lehner hasn't suited up at all and promising rookie Logan Thompson is out as well, leaving a duo of Adin Hill and Michael Hutchinson.

Vegas has been busy leading up to Friday's deadline, acquiring forwards Ivan Barbashev and Teddy Blueger in separate deals before nabbing Quick.

Quick will have to wait until the end of the regular season to potentially face his former team, as the Golden Knights and Kings aren't scheduled to meet until April 6. However, there is a decent possibility that the Pacific Division rivals will clash in the playoffs as they jockey for top spot down the stretch.

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NHL Thursday best bets: Release the Kraken

Wednesday night was a tough one for our best bets. The Capitals dominated the Ducks from start to finish but were unable to win the game inside regulation. We also fell a puck short of the over in Vegas, with the Golden Knights failing to put one in the empty net to bring us home.

We'll look to rebound with a pair of sides for Thursday night's monster slate.

Kraken (-115) @ Red Wings (-105)

The Kraken are not playing their best hockey. In fact, they're playing some of their worst. They have won just four of the past 10 games and controlled only 45% of the expected goals share at five-on-five.

Thursday presents a nice opportunity to buy low against a Red Wings team in a really bad spot. Detroit has dropped three games in a row - essentially ending any hope of claiming a playoff spot - and just moved two of its better players (Tyler Bertuzzi and Filip Hronek) for draft picks. That takes a big bite out of a team that wasn't very good to begin with.

As concerning as the Kraken's play has been of late, the Red Wings look even worse; their high-danger chance share sits at 42% over the past 10 games.

Seattle has an abundance of depth that should be able to gain real traction against this shallow Detroit side.

With Philipp Grubauer - rather than Martin Jones - expected to be between the pipes, those edges have a much better chance of holding up. Believe it or not, Grubauer ranks 13th among 39 eligible netminders in five-on-five save percentage since the calendar flipped.

Beyond Seattle's deeper roster and better underlying profile, this price is also way off from what the market previously told us.

The Kraken closed -180 last time they faced the Red Wings, implying a 64.3% win probability. The current price suggests the Kraken will win 53.5% of the time.

Call me crazy, but I don't think home ice is worth more than a 10% swing in probability, and that's before noting that multiple quality pieces have been plucked from this version of the Red Wings.

Back the Kraken to get right against a Detroit team trending downward in a hurry.

Bet: Kraken (-115)

Penguins (+140) @ Lightning (-165)

The Lightning are quietly in a rut. They've been blown out in back-to-back games, dropped three of four overall, and were outshot by nearly 30 in the lone game they won.

Although the regular season doesn't hold a ton of meaning for a team like the Bolts, I expect they'll be looking to right the ship and put this poor run of play behind them as soon as possible.

A home date with the Penguins seems like an opportune time for that. The Pens have played better recently but, by and large, they've struggled defensively all season.

The Lightning should be chomping at the bit for a chance to play them. They're 22-5-3 on home ice this season and have scored more goals - at five-on-five and overall - than every team in the league in their own building.

That is anything but a coincidence. The Lightning are the NHL's most efficient team when it comes to generating high-danger chances at home. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to predict a team with that kind of talent will score a lot when generating such impressive chance volume.

Look for the Lightning's lethal home attack to lead them to a victory inside 60 minutes.

Bet: Lightning in regulation (-110)

Todd Cordell is a sports betting writer at theScore. Be sure to follow him on Twitter @ToddCordell.

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Bruins sign Pastrnak to 8-year, $90M extension

The Boston Bruins have signed superstar winger David Pastrnak to an eight-year contract extension worth $11.25 million per season, the team announced Thursday.

Pastrnak was due for unrestricted free agency this summer. His new deal will make him the league's sixth-highest paid player when it kicks in next season.

More to come.

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