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Screen Shots: Deadline Day winners and losers

Wojtek Wolski's 47 points this season is tied with Shane Doan at the top of Phoenix's scoring. (Getty Images)

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Wojtek Wolski's 47 points this season is tied with Shane Doan at the top of Phoenix's scoring. (Getty Images)

Beware, sensitive souls and touchy nitpickers – you’re about to read a column adjudging the winners and losers of the NHL’s annual trade deadline.

Before you flash your fangs and begin to type out an expletive-laden email suggesting the victors and vanquished of deadline day can’t truly be determined for years, understand that I am in full agreement with you. Trouble is, history is forever evolving, always being re-written, eternally relative to the perspective of those who pen it.

So kindly bear that in mind when you scan your eyes below this paragraph and get a load of one sod’s views on the trade deadline’s annual rite of multiple passages. If it makes you feel better, we’ll go the politically correct route and separate the teams into The Winners and The Win-Challenged.

THE WINNERS
Phoenix: For a man who needs league approval every time he makes a financial transaction, Coyotes GM Don Maloney went buck-wild Wednesday and made it rain trades like a Wall St. financier.

Maloney came away with (a) the hit-and-miss scoring skills of Wojtek Wolski; (b) veteran knowhow in Derek Morris and Mathieu Schneider; (c) some scoring depth in Lee Stempniak; and (d) some extra defensive help at forward in Petteri Nokelainen.

Even better – the only player of consequence deleted off Phoenix’s roster was Peter Mueller. That’s a hell of a vote of confidence in the current group that already has rewarded Maloney with an unexpectedly magical season.

Washington: Much more was and is expected of the Capitals than the Yotes, but Caps GM George McPhee almost was as active as Maloney. McPhee also paid mostly in draft picks, bringing solid citizens Scott Walker, Eric Belanger, Milan Jurcina and Joe Corvo into the fold while only sending Brian Pothier off his NHL roster in return.

I’m still not completely convinced Washington should be pinning their hopes on goalies Semyon Varlamov and Jose Theodore. But if they fail in this post-season, it won’t be because of character flaws.

Carolina: We all suspected Jim Rutherford would be an active GM on Deadline Day. But few believed he’d ship out five NHLers – and Ray Whitney wouldn’t be one of them.

To be sure, dealing away Walker, Corvo, Aaron Ward and Stephane Yelle will take some wind out of the Hurricanes’ sails the rest of the year. The good news is that this team still has a late-season playoff push (however improbable) in it, as well as a handful of draft picks and prospects with which to surround an already-solid core.

Anaheim: It was only earlier this season that the Ducks looked like foul fowl and were far closer to securing the No. 1 draft pick this summer than a playoff berth.

However, after the moves GM Bob Murray made Wednesday, it is wholly apparent that management believes this group can make another post-season run.

Adding Aaron Ward is a nice depth deal for the rest of this season. And bringing in Joey MacDonald and Curtis McEhlinney won’t be their downfall. Of course, acquiring the overpaid Lubomir Visnovsky is not without its risks. But if Scott Niedermayer retires in the off-season, at least they now have the dependable offensive defenseman that Ryan Whitney was not.

Pittsburgh: If it wasn’t before, Ray Shero’s blueprint for success has been made clear with the Alexei Ponikarovsky trade: hold onto your star three centers (Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Jordan Staal) and keep feeding them a steady diet of wingers on short-term or expiring contracts.

Ponikarovsky has trouble avoiding bad penalties and is a streaky scorer, but he’ll likely post the best points-per-game average of his nine-year NHL career over the next 20 games. Acquiring him for a mid-tier prospect (Luca Caputi) – and dumping an onerous salary (belonging to blueliner Martin Skoula) in the process – represents a job very well done.

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THE WIN-CHALLENGED
Florida: Anybody remember that wonderful letter sent out by Panthers management at the beginning of February? The one apologizing profusely for yet another lousy season from the Panthers? The one promising that the organization would “move quickly and efficiently to overcome (its) shortcomings and reshape (the) franchise on a much more solid foundation”?

Yeah, that one. Well, Florida acquired Craig Weller, Byron Bitz and a second-round pick on Deadline Day. If this is what they’re calling this “quick and efficient”, I am officially suspecting Toyota has bought majority ownership in the team and nobody told us.

Calgary: First, Darryl Sutter trades for another former Maple Leaf in Vesa Toskala. Then, he waves the white flag on 23-year-old Dustin Boyd, sending him to Nashville for a fourth-round pick. Then he deals for Steve Staios to help eat up some of the cap space he created in the Dion Phaneuf swap.

Perhaps you can discern method from madness in Sutter’s Deadline Day dealings. I cannot.

Philadelphia: (I’m very tempted to write this section using Kanye West’s patented all-caps communication tactics, but I’m going to retain my dignity and ask you to just imagine these next three paragraphs in block letters. )

Dear Paul Holmgren: You’ve been a Flyer for a long time. Longer than Madonna has paid producers to come up with music she claims as her own creation. So you must know the role and ramifications of bad goaltending in modern-day Flyers history.

Which makes me wonder – especially in light of Ray Emery’s season-ending injury – why in the name of Roman Cechmanek did you not make a deal for another goalie and leave Brian Boucher and Michael Leighton holding the team’s future in their well-traveled hands?

Are you intentionally flipping the bird to fate, or do you really just appreciate tradition no matter which form it takes? Please advise before thousands of Philadelphia-area stomach linings are completely eaten away by ulcers.

Los Angeles: If I were to tell you an NHL GM would trade a 24-year-old NCAA force and potential NHL power play menace in return for a 33-year-old center who missed 30 games after knee surgery last year, you’d think former Lions GM Matt Millen switched sports, right?

Wrong. Dean Lombardi did it Wednesday when he brought in Jeff Halpern from the Lightning for Teddy Purcell and a third-round draft pick. You have to like what Lombardi has done since taking over as Kings GM, but I can’t help but wonder if he could’ve had Alexei Ponikarovsky at the same price.

The bottom line: The Kings were in the mix for Ray Whitney and Ponikarovsky. They wound up with Halpern and Fredrik Modin.

Perhaps they didn’t overpay, but nobody can guarantee that’s a good thing.

Adam Proteau, co-author of the book The Top 60 Since 1967, is writer and columnist for The Hockey News and a regular contributor to THN.com. His blog appears Mondays, his Ask Adam feature appears Fridays and his column, Screen Shots, appears Thursdays.

For more great profiles, news and views from the world of hockey, subscribe to The Hockey News magazine.

COMMENTS (17)

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iginlaizthashizzz Posted
(2010-03-09 18:46:44)



Kobracomm- the GM running the canucks is a sissy...two years in a row he's scared to pull a deal that would help them win now. I would rather see a GM try for a home run, and sometimes it works sometimes it don't, but at least he has the balls to try!! ..What makes you think the canucks will get anywhere near as far in the playoffs this year as they did last year with a defence core that looks like an emergency ward in Afghanastan.
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brian_kemp Posted
(2010-03-07 07:23:41)

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I completely agree about Calgary. If anyone knows what Sutter is doing, including Sutter himself, I'd be amazed. It looks he has some kind of random trade generator program on his computer or something. Florida didn't really do anything, so I don't know if that franchise is any more loser-y than they were before the deadline. If Emery comes back and recovers completely, Philly did fine. If some of the "career ending" speculation is right, then they'll need a starting goalie, again. Nothing new in the City of Brotherly Love, then. As for LA, I don't think they needed much to begin with, so not picking up a whole lot or giving up a whole lot to get what they got doesn't look winning-challenged to me.
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irvine Posted
(2010-03-05 23:00:56)

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I can't say that the Avs did terrible in acquiring Mueller + Porter. Mueller is can be a gifted offensive player. A change of scenery, and where young players are flourishing (Colorado), it's hard to judge so soon. Mueller may quickly develop to more of an offensive threat than Wolski. Or, close atleast. Throw Porter in the mix, might be a great deal.
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leigh9 Posted
(2010-03-05 17:20:44)

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Can't see anyone being better than Washington going into the playoffs
    -2



madsprite18 Posted
(2010-03-05 15:27:33)



kobracom77 - If you had said that at the beginning of the season, I would have said your dead wrong, especially after October and November. Sutter has messed with what little chemistry the Flames did have, but not for the better. If by some fluke they do make the playoffs, I see an 0-4 first round exit at the hands of Chicago or Vancouver or a 1-4 first round exit at the hands of San Jose. They've been inconsistent at best since 12/09. The first two months showed so much promise - they had an awesome road record and their pwer play was rocking. Not quite sure what happened at the beginning of December to bring it all to a grinding halt, but their lack of desire to play smart and their eagerness to take ridiculous penalties is becoming very tedious. They really need to work on their shot accuracy (that was a huge problem for Jokinen and probably a large part of why he was dealt to the Rangers).
    0



kobracom77 Posted
(2010-03-05 13:26:53)



As a Nucks fan, I am super happy with the job Sutter has done running Calgary. Like I said before, I hope they keep him for a GM for years to come. But unfourtinatly if Calgary does even make it to the playoffs (which does not look good for them right now) There is no way in h.e. double hockey sticks, they will make it out of the first round with his NEW team. What a dumbass.
    -1



meman99 Posted
(2010-03-04 13:21:59)

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Another person from the East that does not watch the Kings games and only looks at the Stats when they wake up in the morning. The Kings gave Purcell every opportunity to prove himself and he couldn't. He is not the first player that did excellent in the NCAA and could not make it in the NHL. Good Trade for the Kings IMO. They need a 4th line grind player that will help them in the playoffs. I better not see Ivanans take a shift in the playoffs. Try watching the Kings, it's pretty good hockey.
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madsprite18 Posted
(2010-03-04 13:02:35)



Long time Flames fan, but Darryl Sutter should have his head examined for the trades he's made this year. Stajan is good, but not top line quality. Hagman showed a lot of promise in the Olympics. Toskala is lucky he's not in the AHL at this point, he's played that poorly. DS should have bundled Phaneuf, Boyd, McGratten (who is a cement head and who hasn't done much of anything all year, but wasn't traded), Syjostrom, and McElleny all together and traded them for a top center, a solid backup goalie, and a 1st or 2nd round draft pick. Since he's been GM, most of his draft choices have focused on hard-nosed defencemen who, incidentally, have been much help to the Flames farmclub in Abbottsford. I'm sad to say it, but I doubt the Flames will make the playoffs this year. Top to bottom, they've looked shaky since the end of November. It might just be time to gut this fish and move on.
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mykey14 Posted
(2010-03-04 12:59:39)

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The Kings have three third round picks. Teddy Purcell has not worked out. All the other Kings with potential are actually starting to hit their potential. Teddy was given the same opportunity to succeed. He may work out in Tampa but he did not work out in LA. I wish him luck. The Kings got grit and experience, two things they needed. They will not have to have a complete team makeover like WA or Pho. The Kings will be able to keep doing what they are doing and simply going to slowly work in the two new guys. They will be up to speed when the playoffs come around. Oh yeah and if they don't work their salary goes away at years end. The Kings still didn't give up any prospects to do this. This is a Win/win/win. The Kings did just fine. One last thing, I have heard in the past the Kings and Leafs are not good trading partners for some sort of political bs reasons. If thats true lets stop talking about how they should have gotten Ponikarovsky. Burke is a man that seems to know what he wants. If the option was there I'm sure it would have happend.
    4



fieldmarshal Posted
(2010-03-04 11:49:54)

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Good article, agree with most of it. This deadline was definitely one of the slowest and not very exciting, but there were clear winners and losers. I like Shero picking up Ponikarovsky. He's not bad in his own end, and as far as the penalty-trouble goes, I'd bet that under Bylsma in a more structured and competitive environment like PIT, Ponikarovsky will learn quickly that undisciplined play isn't tolerated. With Crosby and Malkin, the Pens don't need an elite goal-scorer to flank them since Crosby has shown his goal-scoring prowess this season and even a secondary-scorer like Ponikarovsky should be able to do well. Washington picking up veteran experience with a Stanley Cup was expected, but a good move too. Not sold on Anaheim's moves. Probly the best thing for them the way I see it was trading Toskala and his brutal salary. Don't necessarily think it was a great move trading Pogge. The kid got a raw deal with a junk Leafs team and wasn't utilized properly. Hopefully the Canes are able to get some solid play out of him. I bet Maurice gives him some legitimate play. Florida sits still on a deadline day - nothing new. This team is going nowhere fast. Flyers and Flames were clear losers yesterday. Holmgren STILL doesn't have a true #1 backstopper. I figured they'd go get Roloson or Vokoun, guys that might not have tons of playoff experience, but are at least dependable to get PHI into the post-season and play solidly. Does Holmgren shy away from trading a lot in order to acquire a proven goalie? Or are Carter/Briere's contracts too pricey? CGY looked absolutely terrible. D. Sutter is truly rolling the dice, relying on Stajan as his #1 centreman long-term alongside Iginla. Trading for Toskala and his $4 mil cap hit was bad, so was picking up Staios and his $2.7 mil cap hit for next season and the remainder of the current season. Flames don't make the playoffs based on these moves and the cupboard is bare regarding their prospect pool.
    -2




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