The San Jose Sharks have suddenly become a team to watch in the Connor Hellebuyck chase.
For weeks, the Buffalo Sabres have been treated as the favorite in the trade talk around the Winnipeg Jets’ star goalie. But a new report has San Jose pushing into the conversation, and the latest move by the Sharks may have made their case even stronger.
The key piece is Eric Comrie. San Jose recently added Hellebuyck’s longtime backup in Winnipeg, and Mike McIntyre of the Winnipeg Free Press sees that as more than a coincidence.
McIntyre called Comrie Hellebuyck’s “personal security blanket” and wrote that the reunion could make the Sharks’ pitch much more attractive. “I still believe Buffalo is the most logical landing spot, but I also keep coming back to San Jose as a suitable destination - and that was before they went and inked Comrie, which no doubt would make the sales pitch to Hellebuyck even easier,” McIntyre wrote.
McIntyre was even more direct about where he thinks this is headed. “I firmly believe Connor Hellebuyck is going to be traded.
In fact, I’d put the odds somewhere north of 95 per cent. I just don’t know exactly when, or to whom.”
San Jose already has a starter lined up in Alex Nedeljkovic, who played 40 games last season and finished with an .896 save percentage and a 2.87 goals-against average. The Sharks also have Yaroslav Askarov and Comrie in the mix, and with an improved defense, that group is expected to give them a chance to compete for a playoff spot. But Hellebuyck is in a different class.
If the Sharks do land him, they would likely have to move Nedeljkovic, who has a three-team no-trade clause, to clear the crease. That would set up a projected tandem of Hellebuyck and Comrie, with 24-year-old Askarov still developing behind them.
The Sharks have already had a busy summer. They added Jacob Trouba and Mason Marchment in free agency, then traded for Darnell Nurse and acquired Michael Kesselring. If GM Mike Grier is still looking for a major splash, Hellebuyck would be the kind of move that changes the entire picture.
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