The New York Rangers already made one notable move last week by bringing in Pavel Dorofeyev from the Vegas Golden Knights, but that may not be the end of their July 1 business. With NHL free agency set to open tomorrow, the roster still has some clear gaps, and the Rangers are positioned to be active as they try to patch them.
One name to watch is a familiar one: Mats Zuccarello. The Rangers are still short on another top-six forward after adding Dorofeyev, and the market doesn’t offer many obvious answers.
Zuccarello, who spent the first nine seasons of his NHL career in New York before being traded during the 2019 rebuild, could make sense as a short-term reunion. He later had a brief stop with the Dallas Stars before signing with the Minnesota Wild, where he has spent the last seven seasons.
Even at 38, Zuccarello is still producing. He has finished with 50 or more points in each of the last five seasons, and he also knows the current Rangers core well, with Mika Zibanejad and J.T.
Miller still on the roster. For a team looking for another top-six fit, the idea of bringing him back is obvious.
If it happens, there’s even a clean ending to the story: Zuccarello could finish his career where it started.
Up front, Vincent Trocheck also looks like a name headed out the door. His departure has been building for months, and once the calendar turns to July, his time with the Rangers is expected to end.
General manager Chris Drury has set a high asking price, and so far no team has met it. That makes Trocheck the club’s most valuable trade chip, especially with the center market looking thin in both free agency and trade talks.
There’s also a small but meaningful wrinkle starting July 1: Trocheck’s no-trade list drops from 12 teams to 10. That gives the Rangers a little more room to maneuver.
Buffalo and Toronto have been the teams most often tied to him, and if Buffalo is in the mix, Jack Quinn stands out as the kind of return New York could use. The Sabres winger has not fully broken out yet, and a deal built around Quinn, a 2027 first-round pick, and another pick or prospect would at least fit the Rangers’ need for a top-six winger.
The blue line is another area that needs help, especially on the left side. Beyond Vladislav Gavrikov, the Rangers don’t have another clear top-four left-shot defenseman, and while Alberts Šmits was drafted, he shouldn’t be expected to jump straight into that role. That’s why Mario Ferraro is an intriguing possibility.
Ferraro has spent all seven of his NHL seasons with the San Jose Sharks, where he has been forced to handle the toughest minutes on a team that has struggled. He’s also been linked to the Rangers before, including as a trade target when they were Stanley Cup contenders. Now he could be a fit on the second pair, perhaps alongside Braden Schneider if he remains with the club, or Will Borgen.
Ferraro isn’t known for offense, but he does move the puck and skate well, traits the Rangers could use more of on defense. His price could be steep, though the rising salary cap would soften that hit over time. With July 1 looming, the Rangers still have work to do, and these are the kinds of moves that could shape the rest of their summer.
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Rangers Finally Addressed One Center Problem But The Bigger Tension Remains
The Rangers have at least checked one box in their center search, adding a low-cost option who should help stabilize the bottom six and give the lineup a little more speed and defensive reliability. The move comes with some practical value, too, since the club needed a center who could fit into a checking role without forcing bigger pieces out of place.
Joe Velenos arrival may ease one immediate concern, but it does not settle the more important one. New York still has to sort out what happens at the top of the middle of the ice, and the possibility of a future change there is why this signing feels more like the first step than the answer. [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Still Have One Offseason Question Drury Has To Answer
The Rangers have spent the opening stretch of free agency reshaping the edges of their roster, and the work is not close to finished. With roughly $15.675 million in cap space to work with, Chris Drury has already added pieces through a mix of trades and contract business, including deals for William Trudeau and Massimo Rizzo, plus new contracts for restricted free agents Dylan Garand and Pavel Dorofeyev.
Even with those moves on the board, the bigger offseason question still hangs over the roster: what comes next to fill the remaining needs? New York is still looking for help through free agency and potential trades, and the market should keep the Rangers active as they try to plug holes without losing flexibility. Whether that answer comes from another depth addition or something more significant, Drury still has a choice to make before the roster feels complete. [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Make Major Blue Line Swing Fans Have Been Waiting For
The blue line shuffle Rangers fans have been circling for has finally arrived, and it comes with real long-term weight. New York landed Marcus Pettersson from Vancouver in a deal confirmed by multiple reputable sources and beat reporters, adding a veteran defenseman to a group that has been under the microscope for much of the season.
What makes the move especially notable is the commitment behind it, with Pettersson locked in for five more seasons at a $5.5 million cap hit. The kind of trade return New York sent out suggests this was not a short-term patch, but a sign the front office is trying to keep the club in the fight while addressing a need that has lingered on the back end. [Read more 🡒]
