The Edmonton Oilers find themselves at a crossroads this offseason, with a tantalizing opportunity potentially on the horizon involving veteran defenseman Drew Doughty. While no one's advocating for the Oilers to overhaul their plans for a 36-year-old in the twilight of his contract, the situation does warrant a closer look.
Recent reports from Elliotte Friedman highlight that LA Kings GM Ken Holland won't be extending Doughty's contract this summer. The Kings want Doughty to retire with them, but that conversation is postponed until after the 2026-27 season, leaving Doughty in a bit of a limbo.
This is a proud player, and the lack of immediate commitment might leave him feeling sidelined. With a seven-team trade list, Doughty is indeed movable, and if the Kings are signaling a future without him, he might just be open to a new chapter.
Now, let's examine Edmonton's scenario. Darnell Nurse has agreed to waive his no-movement clause, paving the way for a potential trade.
With his hefty $9.25M cap hit potentially off the books, the Oilers could find themselves with a significant $24.7M in cap space this summer. This newfound financial flexibility could allow them to absorb Doughty's $11M hit while addressing other roster needs, especially if Nurse heads to LA as part of the deal.
The critical question is whether the Oilers are moving Nurse purely to free up cap space. If that's the case, bringing in Doughty might not align with their goals. However, if the strategy is to replace Nurse with a different style of defenseman, Doughty could be a viable option.
On paper, a Nurse-for-Doughty swap is more straightforward than it seems. Both players carry substantial cap hits that might not fully reflect their current on-ice value.
Both are seasoned defensemen whose peak years might be behind them. For the Kings, Nurse offers term and physicality, while for the Oilers, Doughty brings leadership and playoff experience.
Plus, Doughty's contract ends three years sooner than Nurse's, which could be a crucial factor in Edmonton's cap strategy.
Doughty, a two-time Stanley Cup champion and Olympic medalist, still holds significant value. Advanced metrics suggest he was arguably LA's best defenseman last season.
Though he's not the Doughty of old, he remains a formidable presence on the ice. His potential addition to the Oilers would introduce a different defensive dynamic, and with something to prove, he could be a game-changer alongside stars like Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl.
While Nurse doesn't currently have the Kings on his trade list, there's chatter he might be open to the idea, especially with his connection to Ken Holland. The real question is whether the Kings and Oilers would entertain a trade of this magnitude within their division. Stranger things have happened in the NHL, but this would indeed be a bold move.
If there's even a hint of discord between Doughty and the Kings, it might be worth Edmonton's while to explore the possibilities. A conversation between Stan Bowman and Ken Holland could uncover whether there's a path forward for such a blockbuster trade. As the offseason unfolds, the Oilers have a unique opportunity to potentially reshape their defense with a player of Doughty's caliber.
In Other News...
Kings Fans Can Feel This Familiar Roster Problem Reaching A Breaking Point
The Kings offseason has circled back to a familiar pressure point, and it is hard to miss the shape of it. Management wants to improve the roster, and the need down the middle has been clear enough that it has become part of the teams public shorthand for what still has to get done. Around the league, clubs are already shifting from trade-mode into free agency, and once that market opens, the Kings will be in the same race for center help as everyone else.
Ken Holland has been direct about the need to add at that position, and that matters because it reflects how much the roster still leans on a hole that has not gone away. The challenge is not just identifying the right fit, but finding one before the market thins and prices climb. For a team trying to make real progress in the West, this is the kind of summer problem that can linger until it becomes impossible to ignore. [Read more 🡒]
Cody Cecis First Kings Season Already Has Fans Reconsidering Everything
Cody Cecis first season in Los Angeles was built on reliability. He never missed a game, settled into a bottom-pair role beside Brian Dumoulin and logged steady minutes while helping the Kings defend at a level that kept him in the lineup every night. The offensive numbers were modest, but for much of the regular season he was exactly the kind of low-maintenance, stay-put defenseman the team had in mind when it brought him in.
The postseason, though, reminded everyone why his addition was always going to come with scrutiny. Against Colorado, Ceci was unable to chip in on the score sheet and finished the series with a minus-2 rating, a rough ending to a year that already closed with a minus-10 mark in the regular season. Even with the defensive value he provided, the deal is starting to look like the kind of swing that left skeptics with plenty to point to, especially once the contract structure enters the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
