When the Calgary Flames moved Chris Tanev and Noah Hanifin at the 2024 NHL trade deadline, the returns looked like the kind of packages that would take time to sort out. Now that the opening wave of free agency has settled and the 2026 NHL Draft is in the books, the picture is clearer: Calgary walked away with three notable young pieces, even if the road to get there was messy.
The Tanev deal came first, on February 28, 2024, when the Flames sent the veteran defenceman to the Dallas Stars for Artem Grushnikov, a 2024 second-round pick, and a conditional 2026 third-round pick that Calgary never received because the condition was not met.
Grushnikov was the lone player to come back in that trade, and the Flames never got the NHL defender they were hoping for. Dallas had taken him 48th overall in 2021, and the idea was that he might develop into a stay-at-home blue-liner.
Instead, he still hasn’t played an NHL game. In 2025-26, he managed only two points in 55 AHL games, and Calgary ultimately chose not to issue him a qualifying offer.
He is now an unrestricted free agent.
The second-round pick turned into forward Jacob Battaglia, selected out of the OHL’s Kingston Frontenacs. Battaglia’s stock rose fast after the draft when he erupted for 40 goals and 90 points in his post-draft season, earning an entry-level contract from the Flames.
But by the 2026 trade deadline, his production had fallen off sharply in the OHL, and Calgary moved on. On March 6, 2026, Battaglia was sent to the New York Rangers for 23-year-old winger Brennan Othmann.
Othmann went straight to the AHL’s Calgary Wranglers, spent a few weeks getting used to the system, and then got his call to the Flames. He made his debut on March 28, 2026, and even though he was later sent back to finish the AHL season, he made a strong impression in limited NHL action with two points in two games.
Calgary liked enough of what it saw to extend him a qualifying offer, keeping his rights in the organization. He still isn’t signed, but a new deal is expected.
That leaves the Tanev return looking more like Tanev for Othmann, since Grushnikov is no longer part of the picture. It’s not a perfect outcome, especially considering Othmann struggled badly in the Rangers’ organization, but getting a live asset back for an aging, injury-prone defenceman is still better than losing him for nothing.
The Hanifin trade, made on March 6, 2024, brought back a different mix: Daniil Miromanov, a 2026 first-round pick, and a 2024 third-round pick from the Vegas Golden Knights.
Calgary immediately signed Miromanov to a two-year extension and hoped his offensive game would grow with more ice time. He flashed that upside early, putting up seven points in 20 NHL games with the Flames in 2023-24.
But the overall stint never really took off. He played 44 NHL games in 2024-25, then spent most of 2025-26 with the Wranglers, where he was productive in a veteran role with 38 points, including 11 goals and 27 assists, in 66 games.
Once his NHL contract expired, he left as an unrestricted free agent and signed with SKA St. Petersburg in the KHL.
The real prize in the Hanifin deal was the first-rounder. Because Vegas reached the Stanley Cup Final, the pick landed at 30th overall in 2026, and Calgary used it on centre Jack Hextall from the USHL’s Youngstown Phantoms.
Hextall is described as a highly intriguing playmaker with dependable two-way instincts down the middle. He is committed to Michigan State University, so he’ll spend the next year or two developing in the NCAA before any NHL push.
The third-round pick from Vegas became Russian goaltender Kirill Zarubin. His post-draft numbers have been eye-catching: a 2.17 GAA and .930 save percentage in 48 games in Russia’s junior league during 2025-26.
Calgary signed him to an entry-level contract on May 22, 2026, and he is expected to come to North America and play for the Wranglers in 2026-27. He also adds to what is already a strong goaltending pipeline.
With Miromanov gone to Russia, the Hanifin return now really looks like Hanifin for Hextall and Zarubin. That’s still a trade Calgary can live with, especially since Hanifin was a pending unrestricted free agent with no intention of re-signing.
The bottom line is simple: Grushnikov and Miromanov didn’t amount to much in Calgary, and some fans probably wanted more draft capital or prospects in both deals. But the Flames still turned two pending unrestricted free agents into Othmann, a former first-round winger; Hextall, a promising college-bound centre; and Zarubin, a rapidly rising goalie prospect. That’s a respectable haul.
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For the Flames, the interesting part is less the exact number than the path it suggests for Parekh if his development stays on course. The comparison is speculative, of course, but it underscores how quickly a promising blueliner can move from entry-level value to a major cap commitment, and why Calgary will be watching his progression so closely over the next few seasons. [Read more 🡒]
