Teams interested in Darnell Nurse may have a simple way to squeeze the Edmonton Oilers: wait.
Nearly three weeks after reports surfaced that Nurse asked for a trade, the market around the veteran defenseman is still taking shape. The 31-year-old carries four years left on his deal at a $9.25 million cap hit, and while his production is still there - seven goals, 17 assists and 24 points in 2025-26 while averaging 20:58 a night - the contract is the kind of number that forces suitors to think twice.
On Monday, The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta reported that the Oilers and San Jose Sharks had reopened trade talks involving Nurse, with the Anaheim Ducks and Philadelphia Flyers also showing interest.
That set the stage for Tuesday’s Daily Faceoff LIVE conversation between Tyler Yaremchuk and former NHL goalie Carter Hutton, who dug into whether interested teams should make Edmonton wait.
Yaremchuk argued that if the Sharks or Ducks really want Nurse, there’s no rush to help the Oilers clear cap space before July 3. Edmonton’s motivation is obvious: move the contract, create room, and go spend it somewhere else. That gives the other side leverage.
“Hey, we’ll talk to you on July 3 when the top-three free agents are off the board, then we’ll give you the cap space, then you’ll be stuck there with nothing to do with it, or you’ll have to go so far down your list that you have to sign guys that you wouldn’t have prioritized.”
He added that a deal around day two of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft once seemed possible because picks move quickly then, but now he believes this could stretch into the weekend, with teams perhaps unwilling to hand Edmonton that flexibility too early.
Hutton liked the strategy, even if he called it “kind of evil.” His point was that it makes sense, especially if San Jose is involved. He noted the Sharks wouldn’t want to help a division rival gain cap space, and said San Jose’s own cap structure and homegrown build put them in a position where they have to be careful about taking on Nurse’s contract.
Still, Hutton didn’t dismiss the fit entirely. He said Nurse wouldn’t be a total burden for San Jose, especially with the Sharks lacking strength on the back end, and suggested that if they did bring him in, the payoff could come later through added draft picks and long-term roster flexibility as players like Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith move deeper into their primes.
For now, though, the message from both sides of the conversation was clear: if a team wants Nurse, Edmonton may have to pay for the privilege of getting its cap space back.
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For Sharks fans, the name alone may bring back a familiar debate about whether a player with real skill can finally turn AHL success into a lasting NHL role. Barre-Boulet has already gotten a taste of the league with 68 NHL games on his resume, but the next step in San Jose will be proving he can hold that pace at the top level. The contract details have not yet been disclosed, leaving a little uncertainty around how the team plans to fit him in. [Read more 🡒]
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Barre-Boulet is the headliner among the group, bringing a two-year deal and a track record that suggests he can be more than just organizational depth. Leason also stands out as a forward with recent NHL experience, while Keyser adds another goaltending option behind the Barracudas projected starter. For a Sharks team still building out its pipeline, these are the kinds of under-the-radar additions that can matter when injuries hit or call-ups start to thin out the upper levels. [Read more 🡒]
