The Anaheim Ducks may be headed for a split with Jacob Trouba, and the issue sounds pretty simple: the years aren’t lining up.
Anaheim already moved John Carlson in a rights trade to the Carolina Hurricanes, and that departure could ripple straight into Trouba’s situation. The Ducks’ blue line may be getting thinner, but the talks with Trouba have still not moved in a favorable direction.
Trouba has never reached unrestricted free agency, but that appears to be where this is trending unless something changes late in the process. The sticking point is term. Anaheim wants to keep the deal shorter, while Trouba is pushing for more years than the club is prepared to give.
“The Carlson situation directly affects Jacob Trouba,” The Athletic's Pierre LeBrun wrote in a new article this week. “Not that they’re similar players, but they’re both pending UFA, top-four, right-shot defensemen, and there are few of those to go around.
The door isn’t completely closed on Trouba returning to the Anaheim Ducks, but it’s very likely Trouba, 32, is headed to market. Term has been a major issue in talks with the Ducks.
The team wants to go shorter term. Trouba, who has never been a UFA, is looking for more term.”
That shortage of proven right-shot defensemen is what makes Trouba such an appealing option once he hits the market. He should have a strong lane to land somewhere else, especially with several teams also being linked to Carlson.
If one of those clubs misses out on Carlson, LeBrun suggests it could pivot quickly toward Trouba instead.
“It’ll be musical chairs for Trouba as he sees where Carlson ends up and then tries to grab one of the open seats,” LeBrun writes.
For Anaheim, the reality is blunt: the Ducks now have more defensive holes to fill, and Trouba may be one more name walking out the door.
In Other News...
Ducks Fans May Not Love How Close Verbeek Came To More
The Ducks did not just sit back on draft night and hope the board broke their way. In the build-up to the Mason McTavish discussion, Anaheim tried to get the Blues' No. 11 pick, a move that would have given Pat Verbeek a much cleaner shot at adding another top-tier prospect to the pipeline. Instead, the Ducks had to settle for the No. 15 pick, a small but meaningful difference when teams are trying to climb into a range where the talent pool can change quickly.
It is the sort of near miss that can linger with a front office, especially when the market keeps reminding teams how expensive certainty can be. With Jaden Schwartz and Eeli Tolvanen headed toward free agency and the Rangers reportedly putting a steep price on Vincent Trocheck, the league is full of reminders that upgrading a roster rarely comes cheap. Anaheim's push for that higher selection suggests Verbeek was probing for more than just a marginal move, and it leaves the obvious question hanging: how close was he to landing it? [Read more 🡒]
Ducks Suddenly Look Poised To Land The Veteran Help Fans Want
The market around veteran help is already starting to take shape, and Anaheim has found itself mentioned in the thick of it. The Ducks are among the teams linked to defenseman Radko Gudas, a rugged, experienced option who would fit the kind of more physical, established presence clubs often chase when they want to stabilize a blue line and add some bite to the roster.
There is also reason to think Anaheim is paying close attention on the forward side, where A.J. Greer is drawing interest and looking for term as free agency approaches. The Ducks have been trying to add maturity and depth to a young group, so the idea that they could come away with one of those veteran pieces is at least as interesting as the broader market chatter around players like Anders Lee and Claude Giroux, especially with several teams still jockeying for the same short list of proven names. [Read more 🡒]
