The Buffalo Sabres are entering trade season with a clear need: offense. After losing winger Alex Tuch and defenseman Bowen Byram, the club is staring at 44 goals gone from the lineup, and GM Jarmo Kekalainen is expected to hunt for help to soften that blow.
One name that fits the conversation is Seattle Kraken winger Jared McCann. The 30-year-old is in the final season of the five-year, $25 million deal he signed with Seattle, and his name has started to surface in trade chatter.
For Buffalo, the appeal is obvious. McCann has been a steady scorer in the Pacific Northwest, and he would give the Sabres a proven option while easing some of the pressure on youngsters Konsta Helenius, Jiri Kulich, and Noah Ostlund.
McCann’s track record is built on consistency. Since arriving in Seattle, he has scored at least 20 goals in each of his five seasons there, including a career-best 40 in 2023. Last season was shortened by recurrent lower-body injuries, limiting him to 52 games, but he still finished with 40 points, including 20 goals and 20 assists.
There are hurdles, though. McCann carries a 10-team modified no-trade list, so any deal would require Buffalo to navigate that layer as well.
Even so, his $5 million cap hit gives the Sabres a clean number to work with, especially with limited cap space. And because he’d be a one-year rental, the price in trade talks could be more manageable.
A move would also raise questions in Seattle, where former Sabres GM Jason Botterill is part of the picture. If the Kraken were willing to deal McCann, it would suggest either he or the team is not interested in extending the partnership.
For Buffalo, the logic is straightforward. The Sabres need someone who can come close to replacing the 60-to-70 point production they lost with Tuch.
Relying on internal growth from young players is a gamble, because development doesn’t always move in a straight line. Adding McCann, or even Buffalo native Patrick Kane, wouldn’t solve everything the Sabres lost, but it would give them a real boost.
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Now Ellis is entering the final year of his contract, and Buffalo has to decide how aggressively it wants to manage his role while sorting through a crowded goalie picture. With a three-goalie rotation already in play and the possibility of adding Connor Hellebuyck hanging over the position, the Sabres have to keep Ellis on a path that protects their leverage for next summer without letting the season get away from them in the process. [Read more 🡒]
