Sabres Fans Will Hate Who Buffalo Was Asked To Give Up

As the Winnipeg Jets' ambitious trade demands for Connor Hellebuyck surface, the Buffalo Sabres weigh the risk of losing a beloved young star against potential roster upgrades.

A Zach Benson-for-Connor Hellebuyck swap was never going to be an easy sell, and now there’s a new wrinkle in the Buffalo-Winnipeg chatter that makes it sound even more extreme than first believed.

Nick Kypreos of Sportsnet reported Wednesday that when the Sabres and Jets first opened discussions, Winnipeg’s ask centered on Benson, not the No. 4 overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft that had been floated last week.

“The likely scenario here is Buffalo sending NHL netminder Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen and Jack Quinn, the eighth overall pick of the 2020 draft, to the Jets," Kypreos wrote. "The Jets' original ask was for Zach Benson, but the Sabres haven't been willing to go there."

That’s a massive ask for a 21-year-old winger who has already carved out a real NHL identity. Benson has three full seasons under his belt, and this year he put up a career-best 43 points, scoring 13 goals and adding 30 assists in 65 games. The finishing still has room to grow, but the package is already there: pace, two-way reliability and a relentless motor.

And Buffalo is not about to hand that player over for a goalie entering his mid-30s, especially one coming off the worst statistical season of his career. Benson also just signed a seven-year, $52.5 million extension with the Sabres, which only makes the idea of moving him even harder to justify.

Hellebuyck’s résumé is already strong enough to point toward Hockey Hall of Fame territory, and it’s fair to believe he could rebound toward near-elite form in 2026-27. But that doesn’t erase the reality of the price Buffalo would be taking on.

He posted an .895 save percentage this season, carries an $8.5 million cap hit through 2031, and will be 38 when that deal expires. Even for a goalie of his caliber, that’s a lot of money and a lot of years attached to a position that can swing wildly from season to season.

There’s also the playoff piece. In Winnipeg’s last three postseason trips, Hellebuyck has put up an .870 save percentage across 23 playoff appearances. That’s the kind of number that forces any team to pause before paying a premium.

Meanwhile, Benson has done just about everything Buffalo could have wanted from a young core piece. He was already trending toward fan-favorite status in Western New York because of the way he plays and the way he irritates opponents. Then he added nine points, with five goals and four assists, in 13 playoff games this spring.

Back in January, there was already a sense that his compete level and willingness to battle in the dirty areas would translate when the games tightened up. It did, and then some.

That’s why the idea of Benson being included in a trade feels so far-fetched. The Sabres have a few areas they still need to address this summer - a first-line center, some added defensive depth and, if the price is right, a battle-tested goalie - but they have other ways to attack those needs.

Josh Norris and Jack Quinn are among the NHL pieces Buffalo can move, while prospects like Radim Mrtka and future first-round picks are also part of the mix. Konsta Helenius is also off to a strong start in his push to join the organization’s next wave.

The key for Buffalo is obvious: don’t start ripping apart the foundation just to chase a quick fix. Rasmus Dahlin and Tage Thompson are already the headliners, and Benson, Josh Doan and Owen Power look like important long-term pieces. The Sabres are finally building something that resembles a real contention window, and a reckless deal would be the fastest way to knock it off course.

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