The Anaheim Ducks keep circling Zach Whitecloud, but the Calgary Flames are in no rush to move him.
That’s the tension hanging over this one. Anaheim has already had a messy offseason, and the cap picture is getting tight fast.
PuckPedia projects the Ducks with $9.07M in remaining space, which doesn’t look like enough to get 22-year-old Cutter Gauthier signed after his 41-goal season. The Ducks have already taken hits this summer, including the $18M offer sheet for Leo Carlsson that Anaheim matched and the bigger-than-expected deal they had to give Pavel Mintyukov after the threat of another offer sheet.
AJ Greer also landed a four-year, $4.25M contract in free agency, and now the Ducks may need to clear money somewhere before they can finish the job with Gauthier.
That’s where Whitecloud comes back into the picture. A source told The Win Column that Anaheim continues to call on him, and the fit is obvious on paper.
The Ducks’ right side of defence has been thinned out by the departures of John Carlson, Jacob Trouba, and Radko Gudas, while their only free agent addition there was 35-year-old Nick Jensen. They can hope Tristan Luneau or Noah Warren takes a step, and that Drew Helleson turns into something real, but that’s a lot to bank on.
Whitecloud would give them a cost-controlled, dependable top-four defender who could slot next to Jackson Lacombe or Mintyukov.
The problem for Anaheim is that the alternatives don’t exactly inspire the same confidence. The free agent market offers John Klingberg and Nick Blankenburg, and neither comes close to the security Whitecloud brings at $2.75M. That’s why the Flames have the upper hand here: they know Whitecloud is the kind of player the Ducks would love to land, and they also know Calgary doesn’t need to move him.
Since the Rasmus Andersson deal last season, teams have kept calling about Whitecloud. He fit the hard minutes right away and made an impression inside the organization with his work off the ice, too.
To plenty of fans, he looked like a stopgap right-shot defenseman who helped make the money work in the Andersson deal. Instead, he showed almost immediately that he was much more than that.
From Calgary’s side, the message is simple: Whitecloud stays unless someone overwhelms them. He matters to the team and to the local community, and he’s signed through the 2027-28 season at a $2.75M AAV.
With Zayne Parekh, Simon Nemec, and Hunter Brzustewicz all under 22 on the right side, Whitecloud is exactly the kind of stabilizing piece a team can lean on while the younger names develop. He can move up or down the lineup, handle the tough defensive assignments, and give the Flames a reliable bridge on that side of the ice.
What would actually pry him loose is still unclear. The Ducks do have their high picks intact in future drafts, including three 2027 second-rounders, along with a solid prospect pool.
Calgary is in a position where it can keep listening on Whitecloud and Morgan Frost, among others, without feeling pressure to make a move unless the return makes long-term sense. The one thing that could tilt the Flames toward action is simple enough: they have a lot of bodies on defence, and if the price is right, that could make Whitecloud available.
In Other News...
Craig Conroy Just Made His Biggest Simon Nemec Bet Yet
Calgarys bet on Simon Nemec has already come with a hefty price tag, and the latest move only underscores how much the organization is banking on the young defenseman finding his footing. The Flames paid a premium to get him, sending two conditional first-round picks, a second-round pick and prospect Etienne Morin in the deal, then moved quickly to give him a contract that reflects both the upside and the uncertainty still attached to his game.
The structure of the agreement says plenty about where Calgary sees the risk. It is not a short bridge meant to kick the decision down the road, and it is not the kind of long-term commitment teams make when they are fully convinced a player is already a cornerstone. For Nemec, the path forward is clear enough: he does not have to become a star to make this work, but he does need to settle in as a reliable NHL defender, because anything less would turn this into an expensive swing with very little return. [Read more 🡒]
Flames Suddenly Have The Ammo For Hockeys Wildest Trade Swing
Calgarys rebuild has taken a turn few around the league would have expected this soon. With nearly $15 million in projected cap space and a stockpile of 30 draft picks through 2030, the Flames suddenly have the kind of financial flexibility and long-view draft capital that can change the conversation from patient accumulation to something far more aggressive.
That matters because teams do not usually arrive at this point by accident. The Flames have built a young foundation while keeping their books clean, and that combination gives them room to chase a major roster swing if the right opportunity ever presents itself. Whether they actually step into that market is another question entirely, but the assets are there now in a way that makes the idea impossible to ignore. [Read more 🡒]
