Predators Are Already Framing This Ex-Stars Move One Way

With a roster enriched by strategic trades and a promising prospect pool, Chris MacFarland's leadership is already fostering optimistic expectations for the Nashville Predators' future in the NHL.

Chris MacFarland has barely settled into the job, and Nashville already looks different.

The Predators’ new general manager came over from Colorado after a Stanley Cup-winning run as an assistant in 2022, and in just a month he has started reshaping the roster with a clear pattern: add value, stay flexible, and keep the future intact. That approach has given Nashville a new look without forcing the kind of teardown that leaves a team empty-handed.

His first move was a familiar one for anyone watching the Avalanche connection. Nashville brought in 29-year-old forward Ross Colton and American Hockey League netminder Isak Posch from Colorado, sending Magnus Chrona and two third-round picks the other way.

MacFarland followed that by adding Jack Drury, AHL depth forward Chase Bradley, and a 2029 third-round pick, while moving out 23-year-old NHL depth forwards Zachary L’Heureux and Fyodor Svechkov. Nashville then flipped that third-rounder to Vancouver for winger Nils Höglander. Drury also landed a five-year extension worth $4.5 million annually.

The biggest splash may have come on the first day of free agency, when Nashville acquired Dallas Stars center Mavrik Bourque and cap-dump defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin for a second-rounder and a third-rounder. Bourque still needs a new deal, but that should get done soon.

The common thread through these moves is obvious. Nashville has targeted affordable upgrades in the middle six, and in several cases the upside is real.

Drury posted elite defensive results in Colorado and logged second-line minutes at even strength, according to Evolving-Hockey. At 26, there may still be another level to his game, especially on offense.

Höglander brings a different kind of bet. His 2023-24 season, while played in limited minutes, was analytically excellent. He hasn’t quite repeated that form, but he’s still young enough that a fresh opportunity could unlock more.

Colton looks like the kind of addition that can help now and still carry value later. He’s 29 and has one year left on his contract, but Nashville got him cheaply and he has already shown he can be a strong contributor. If the Predators decide to sell at some point, he could become a real trade chip and might even bring back a first-rounder.

Bourque might be the most intriguing piece of the bunch. The safest projection is a solid middle-six center, but there were stretches in Dallas when he played on the first line and looked excellent. That gives Nashville a swing worth taking, and it’s hard to imagine the Stars came out ahead in the deal.

Just as important as the trades is what Nashville has not done. By mostly staying quiet in free agency, the Predators have kept their options open.

If the 2026-27 season goes sideways, they can move veterans without tearing the roster down to the studs. If they decide to lean into the future, they have enough young talent in place to make that route worthwhile.

That’s the real contrast with the Chicago Blackhawks. Chicago stripped everything down to land Connor Bedard in 2023, but he’s been left without much help.

Under pressure, the Blackhawks then traded a huge package for Bowen Byram and made him the highest-paid defenseman in the league. Nashville’s path is different: a functioning NHL team, good prospects, and room to choose its direction.

And the prospect pool is a big reason the long view looks so bright.

Brady Martin, the fifth overall pick last June, sits at the center of it. The 19-year-old center posted 34 points in 34 games for the Ontario Hockey League’s Soo Greyhounds, and the production doesn’t jump off the page.

The style does. He projects as a do-everything, top-six pest for Nashville.

Wyatt Cullen, taken 10th overall, gives the organization another possible top-six forward. The 17-year-old’s puck-heavy game gives him a different shape than Martin, which could make them a useful pair if things break right.

Yegor Surin has also taken a strong step forward since turning pro full-time in the Kontinental Hockey League. He put up 37 points in 57 regular-season games as a 19-year-old and could grow into a top-six role.

There’s more behind them. Ryker Lee turned in a solid freshman year at Michigan State with 30 points in 35 games, while Teddy Stiga had 21 points in 31 games for Boston College and could still become an important piece down the road.

The blue line has its own appeal. Nashville traded up for 5-foot-11 defender Tommy Bleyl in this year’s draft, betting on his skating, puck-moving ability, and offensive ceiling.

Cameron Reid, picked 21st overall last year, brings a similar undersized-but-mobile profile, though with a stronger defensive game at the same age. Both have the look of future second-pairing defenders.

In goal, Jack Ivankovic turned heads with a freshman season at Michigan that included 25 wins, a .921 save percentage, and a 2.15 goals-against average in 35 games. That earned him B1G Second-Team All-Star honors.

Add that group to young NHL players already in the picture, including Matthew Wood, and Nashville’s future gets even more interesting. The Predators still have work ahead, but the talent base is deep.

MacFarland didn’t build every part of it, but in a short stretch he has handled the job with the kind of confidence that changes a franchise’s trajectory. Nashville may have found exactly what it hoped for when it reached into Colorado.

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