The Darnell Nurse trade chatter that surfaced on July 2 keeps looking less like rumor and more like a real swing that never got over the line.
What started with reports from Sportsnet’s Nick Kypreos and David Pagnotta has now been backed up by Boston insider Jimmy Murphy, who said this week that he heard in late June the Bruins were “listening on Zadorov” in trade talk. Murphy said he “was unable to confirm via agent or team sources but where there’s smoke there’s fire,” and the noise only grew from there.
Kypreos said on the Real Kyper & Bourne show, “The word is that Boston was prepared to send Edmonton Zadorov for Nurse and I don’t know what else was involved, and Zadorov said no. Didn’t want to go to Edmonton.”
Pagnotta, speaking on the Sheet podcast, laid out the same basic framework: “Boston’s been pretty active. So the Nurse thing was real.
They had a trade in place with the Oilers to acquire Nurse. The player going back wouldn’t wave their no trade protection.
So Edmonton obviously pivoted in San Jose’s direction.”
Murphy then poured gasoline on the discussion with a blunt reaction to Bruins fans pushing back on the idea of a Nurse-for-Zadorov swap. A day after the original reports, he wrote, “Why are Bruins fans acting like Zadorov is Chara?
Last I checked Chara wasn’t a human turnstile and didn’t take at least one bad penalty a game. This is comical.
Zadorov for Nurse would’ve been a steal (hockey wise) for the Bruins!”
This week, Murphy went even further and treated the rumor as fact, saying, “The amount of delusional Bruins fans that still think this never happened is hilarious! You act like Zadorov is the second coming of Chara.
Seriously, you act like a certain political cult that refuses to believe facts. Be better.”
The clearest takeaway from all of it is that there was plenty of smoke around the deal, and the most likely reason it never happened appears to be Zadorov’s 16-team no trade list. He has four years left on a contract that carries a $5 million annual cap hit.
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For Calgary, the appeal is tied to the bigger picture as much as the immediate roster. The Flames are still sorting through a defense group that needs structure while also making room for young talent, and Stanley could slot into that conversation as a low-risk addition who would add competition on the back end. If the fit works, it is the kind of move that could help Calgary keep its blue-line picture flexible while the rest of the rebuild continues to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
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Trade interest around Calgary has not exactly been hard to find, and that is part of why Craig Conroy can afford to stay patient. Morgan Frost and Zach Whitecloud are both drawing attention, giving the Flames two useful pieces to shop if the market gets aggressive, but neither situation is forcing the clubs hand. Frost is heading into a contract year after a strong season, while Whitecloud brings the kind of cost certainty and playoff background contenders always circle.
Conroy also has something many general managers would love to have this time of year: leverage. Calgary has piled up draft capital from earlier moves, which means it can listen, compare, and wait without feeling boxed in by urgency. For now, the Flames look more like a team setting the terms of the market than one scrambling to react to it. [Read more 🡒]
