Hurricanes May Be Weighing A Risky Blue Line Gamble

The Carolina Hurricanes are reportedly eyeing Detroit's Simon Edvinsson amid strategic offseason maneuvers, signaling a potential major defensive acquisition.

The Carolina Hurricanes have spent much of their 2026 offseason in the rumor mill, and the latest name attached to them is a big one: Detroit Red Wings defenseman Simon Edvinsson.

That possibility surfaced during a recent episode of 32 Thoughts the Podcast, when Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman said the Hurricanes could be looking to get creative with offer sheets. Friedman brought up Leo Carlsson of the Anaheim Ducks in that conversation, noting that a team matching an offer sheet cannot trade the player for a year, though there is no rule preventing the team that received the player on the offer sheet from trading him.

In the same discussion, Friedman also mentioned that Carolina may have interest in Edvinsson, who is now a restricted free agent after finishing his entry-level contract. The Red Wings’ qualifying offer for him sits at $874,125, after he earned $894,167 annually on his ELC. In 72 games during the 2025-26 season, the Swedish blueliner posted nine goals, 25 points and a plus-12 rating.

AFP Analytics projects two possible contract paths for Edvinsson. The short-term number comes in at three years and a $5.567 million AAV, while the long-term projection lands at seven years and $8.776 million.

Even so, the source of the speculation suggested Edvinsson could push closer to $10 million per season. If that’s the price, Detroit would have a decision to make.

Carolina, though, has the draft capital to make an offer sheet matter. Between the 2027 and 2029 NHL drafts, the Hurricanes own 23 picks, including two third-round selections in 2027 and two first-round picks in 2028.

The top two offer-sheet tiers relevant here are $9,551,333 to $11,939,166 and anything at $11,939,167 or above. At the lower of those levels, the compensation would be two first-round picks, a 2027 second-round pick and a 2027 third-round pick.

At the highest level, the price jumps to four first-round picks over the next five drafts.

The cap situation also gives Carolina room to maneuver. The Hurricanes have $11.105 million in remaining cap space, and teams can go 10% over the cap ceiling in the offseason.

With the cap set at $104 million, that means Carolina can go as high as $114 million before needing to be compliant by opening night. In practical terms, that leaves room for a five- or six-year deal for Edvinsson at $12 million per year if the Hurricanes wanted to go that far, or something closer to $10 million annually.

If they did, the Red Wings would have to match or take the draft-pick compensation.

None of that means it will happen, but Carolina has been in this lane before. The Hurricanes were previously linked to a possible offer sheet for Edmonton Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard before he was extended, so this is not an unfamiliar path for them.

The bigger question is what all of this means for Alexander Nikishin, another RFA already in the Hurricanes’ system. On June 26, John Buccigross said on Frankly Hockey that Nikishin and his camp could be seeking a number that “sounds like $8-ish (million).” That would be a hefty price for a player with only one season of NHL sample size.

Friedman and other insiders have also said Nikishin’s camp turned down a “Jackson Blake type deal”. Blake is set to make $5.117 million annually over the next eight years, beginning this season.

A bridge contract could still be a path toward a bigger payday later, but the reporting suggests Nikishin’s side has not wanted to go that route. If that doesn’t change before opening night, Edvinsson could emerge as the kind of fit Carolina would consider instead.

On the ice, Edvinsson checks a lot of boxes. He’s a strong skater, a capable puck mover and a 6-foot-6 presence with real physical edge.

The profile fits what the Hurricanes like on the blue line, especially in a top-four role. The comparison in the source material paints him as a player with Chris Pronger traits, plus the ability to move the puck and shut things down, with a little Jaccob Slavin mixed in.

For now, it’s all rumor and speculation. But Friedman is rarely tossing out names without a reason, and Carolina has a habit of staying active behind the scenes. Whether this turns into an offer sheet, a trade, or nothing at all, Edvinsson is now a name worth watching as the offseason keeps moving.

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