The Buffalo Sabres have the kind of forward depth that can make a major swing feel possible, and that’s why Connor Hellebuyck trade talk has a real foothold. Buffalo has young talent to dangle, but one name may sit in a more workable middle ground than the usual headline-grabbers.
Konsta Helenius, Zach Benson and Josh Doan are the types of players most often mentioned when the conversation turns to what Winnipeg might want back for its superstar goalie. But Ryan McLeod could be the piece that makes the discussion more realistic.
“Ryan McLeod would be a more reasonable target and has already dominated alongside Jets forward Cole Perfetti,” The Athletic's Murat Ates wrote in a new article on Wednesday. “The 26-year-old playmaking center played with Perfetti on the Saginaw Spirit’s top line during their OHL playoff run in 2019.
Jack Quinn and Peyton Krebs may each have appeal, too, but wouldn’t represent the same kind of home run swing. A return of McLeod and a substantial secondary piece could be viewed as a success.”
McLeod is set to turn 27 in September, which puts him right at the point where a player can start settling into his prime. He also just turned in a strong 2025-26 season, appearing in 81 regular-season games and posting 14 goals and 40 assists.
At 6-foot-3, McLeod brings size, but not the kind that shows up in hits or blocked shots. His value has to come from what he creates offensively, and that’s where he’s made his biggest mark.
Since leaving the Oilers after four seasons, McLeod has put together the two best years of his career in Buffalo. Whether that growth turns into part of a Hellebuyck deal is the question hanging over this whole conversation. For now, it’s just that - a question.
In Other News...
The Jack Eichel Decision That Could Haunt Sabres Fans Again
The Sabres old Jack Eichel dilemma still has a way of resurfacing, especially when the conversation turns from what Buffalo lost to what might have happened if the franchise had taken a different path in 2021. In this version of events, Eichel gets back on the ice in time to matter right away, and the team spends the 2021-22 season with its franchise center back in the lineup instead of watching from afar.
Jack Eichels presence would have changed the shape of the roster and likely the direction of the rebuild, but it also would not have guaranteed a clean escape from the same long-running problems that followed Buffalo for years. The more interesting question is whether keeping him would have bought the Sabres a little more time without actually changing the end result, or whether the organization would still have found itself headed toward another reset down the road. [Read more 🡒]
Why Sabres Fans Are Suddenly Talking Themselves Into Louis Crevier
Louis Crevier is the kind of name that can sneak up on a fan base, but the Sabres have reason to pay attention after landing the defenseman in a deal involving Bowen Byram. Creviers 2025-26 season with Chicago gave him a real case for intrigue, with career-best production across the board and the sort of all-around impact that suggests there may be more here than just a depth addition.
At 25, and with a 6-foot-8 frame that already stands out on any blue line, Crevier brings a physical profile Buffalo has been able to use in the past and could use again. The question now is whether that breakout was the start of something bigger, because there is at least a path where he grows into a key piece among the Sabres top four defensemen. [Read more 🡒]
Sabres First Round Pick Embodies The Identity Buffalo Keeps Chasing
Ilia Morozov arrived at Miami (Ohio) as a 17-year-old and spent his freshman season showing why Buffalo was willing to take a swing on him in the first round. The Russian center put up 20 points in 36 NCAA games, a solid start for a player still early in his development, and the Sabres made him the 20th overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft. For a team still trying to define a harder, more reliable identity, Morozov fits the kind of profile Buffalo keeps talking about.
Jarmo Kekalainens draft-night praise only sharpened that impression, pointing to Morozovs work ethic and physical tools as reasons the Sabres believe theres more coming. The plan is for him to go back to college for at least one more season before any possible move to Rochester, which means Buffalo will have to wait a bit longer to see how far his game can climb. For now, the appeal is obvious: a young center with size, production and the sort of foundation the Sabres have been chasing. [Read more 🡒]
