The Avalanche have work left to do, and Joe Sakic said it plainly on June 26: Colorado is shopping for two forwards and a defenseman.
That fits the shape of the roster after the recent trades. Ross Colton, Jack Drury, and Valeri Nichushkin are gone, which leaves obvious openings up front even after the arrivals of Zachary L'Heureux and Fyodor Svechkov.
On the blue line, the top six is set, but the depth behind it still needs attention. In practical terms, Colorado is looking for a middle-six forward, a bottom-six forward, and a seventh defenseman.
One obvious fit in the middle of the lineup is Vladimir Tarasenko. The Avalanche have been missing a true goal scorer since trading Mikko Rantanen, and Tarasenko brings exactly that kind of finishing touch.
Colorado’s top six has plenty of playmaking, but not the same kind of pure scorer. Tarasenko won a Stanley Cup with Florida two seasons ago, is only four seasons removed from a 30-goal season, and scored 23 goals with Minnesota last season.
Even on a short deal, he would give the Avalanche a real scoring jolt in their top nine.
Patrik Laine is the bigger swing. He’s the kind of player who can tilt a game with his shot, and his 44-goal season is still on his résumé.
But the risk is obvious too: injuries have been a problem, and there have also been rumors that question his work ethic. Laine scored 20 goals in 52 games for the Canadiens in 2024-25 before core muscle injuries wiped out almost all of last season.
He’s coming off an $8.7 million AAV, but he won’t come close to that on his next deal. AFP Analytics projects him at the league minimum, $850,000, which makes a one-year, $1 million show-me contract a low-risk, high-reward idea for Colorado.
For the bottom six, Colton Sissons stands out as a clean fit. He’s the type of player who seems to bring his best against the Avalanche, and he checks a lot of the same boxes Jack Drury did.
Sissons is strong on faceoffs, reliable on the penalty kill, and brings plenty of energy. Pairing him with Parker Kelly and Logan O'Connor would keep Colorado’s fourth line among the league’s best.
He’s likely looking at something in the $1 million range for one or two seasons.
Tanner Pearson is another safe option. He doesn’t bring flash, but he does bring size, a veteran presence, and a heavier style of play.
He could slide into the lineup when needed and sit in the press box when one of the younger players pushes for a job. For a player at this stage of his career, his price tag should be manageable for Sakic.
On defense, Mike Reilly looks like the most straightforward seventh-man target. He’s a veteran defensive defenseman with strong numbers in his career, and he already just handled that exact role for the Carolina Hurricanes.
Reilly appeared in two games during their run to becoming Stanley Cup champions, so the job description wouldn’t be new to him. If Carolina doesn’t bring him back, another contender should be appealing.
Dylan Coghlan is more of a flyer, but the market on defense is thin enough that he belongs in the conversation. He fits the seventh defenseman mold perfectly, likely seeing the ice only when injuries open the door. He hasn’t been able to break through consistently with previous teams, but Colorado could offer him valuable development time inside its system.
Free agency is close, and the Avalanche still have pieces to add. Sakic made it clear they’re not done yet.
In Other News...
Joe Sakic Just Sent Another Jolt Through The Avalanche Roster
The Avalanche kept the offseason moving in a big way around the 2026 NHL Draft, adding nine players while Joe Sakic continued to reshape the roster through a string of moves. Colorado also dealt Ivan Ivan to the Boston Bruins for Fabian Lysell, another sign the front office is still trying to balance short-term roster stability with longer-term upside.
Brent Burns coming back for another season added a familiar veteran layer to the mix, but the larger picture is still very much in motion. With Sakic active in the market and the Avalanche making multiple deals, the roster looks far from finished, and the next move could say a lot about how Colorado sees its window right now. [Read more 🡒]
Avalanche Just Made A Makar Move Fans Will Want To See
The Avalanche kept a familiar name in the fold by signing forward Taylor Makar to a two-year contract that runs through the 2027-28 season. It is the latest step in a first full professional year that saw him move between Colorado and the Colorado Eagles, with the 2025-26 season giving him a taste of both NHL and AHL duty as he worked his way into the organizations plans.
Makars background already gives the deal extra interest around the team. The younger brother of defenseman Cale Makar came to pro hockey after college stops at the University of Maine and UMass-Amherst, and his development has been watched closely ever since he entered the Avalanche system. His first year also carried him into a meaningful spring run with the Eagles, which only adds to the sense that Colorado sees a player worth keeping close as his next chapter begins. [Read more 🡒]
Another Avalanche Linked Pick Just Took An Unexpected New Turn
A pick tied to Colorados draft future has already taken on a different look after a fresh move in Vancouver. Nashville added winger Nils Hglander from the Canucks for a third-round pick in 2029, giving the Predators another young piece to sort into their lineup while Vancouver picked up draft capital and some cap relief.
For Avalanche fans, the wrinkle is less about where Hglander landed than how a previously connected asset keeps changing hands. Hglander is under contract through the 2027-28 season, and the move gives Nashville a player whose recent season was shaped by an ankle injury and a steep dip in production after a more productive year before that, making this one of those deals that could still look very different down the road. [Read more 🡒]
