The Bruins have a familiar offseason problem: they need more high-end talent, but the kind of player who can actually move the needle usually costs real assets to land. That’s why a trade swing on Shane Wright could make sense if Boston wants to attack one of its biggest holes - a top-six center to skate with David Pastrnak - without taking the usual blockbuster route.
Wright is not some unknown commodity. He went fourth overall in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft and came into the league with serious hype, after becoming one of just nine players ever granted exceptional status in the CHL.
But his NHL path hasn’t matched the early buzz. After a 19-goal, 44-point rookie season in 2024-25, he slipped to 12 goals and 27 points in 74 games last season.
That drop is part of what makes him interesting now. Boston could be looking at a former blue-chip prospect whose stock is lower than it once was, which is exactly the kind of buy-low opportunity teams kick around when they’re trying to add upside without gutting the roster.
Still, the Kraken don’t sound eager to hand him over cheaply. Elliotte Friedman said Seattle general manager Jason Botterill “made it extremely clear they expect a fair price and won’t be pressured into anything they don’t want to do.”
So no, this doesn’t sound like a giveaway. Wright is only 22, and teams around the league can still see the appeal of a two-way center with plenty of room left to grow. There’s been no shortage of interest, either, especially with clubs knowing Seattle may not be operating from the strongest leverage after Wright requested a trade and then took a step back last season.
But interest and a massive offer are two different things. A player can draw calls without forcing teams to empty the cupboard, and that’s the tension here. Wright still has real upside, but if clubs are circling because they think he can be acquired at a discount, that doesn’t automatically mean the Kraken are sitting on a gold mine of leverage.
For Boston, the fit is easy to see. Wright would likely walk into a better situation than the one he’s had in Seattle, and a line with Pastrnak and JJ Peterka would give him a much stronger chance to produce. That kind of opportunity matters, especially for a young center trying to find his footing.
He’d also join a Bruins center group that’s loaded with questions and possibilities. James Hagens and Fraser Minten are already on the NHL roster, while Dean Letourneau is in the pipeline.
All of them could end up as top-six centers down the road. Wright would give Boston another swing at finding that answer, another lottery ticket in a search that still isn’t finished.
What would it cost? That part is still fuzzy, but the Kraken would almost certainly want young players and assets back.
Mason Lohrei could be in play. Matt Poitras is another name with NHL-level promise.
Draft picks would likely be part of the conversation too, or some combination of those pieces.
The Bruins don’t need to blow up their future to chase Wright. But if the price lands in the right range, he’s the kind of move that could be worth the gamble.
In Other News...
Kraken Prospect Casey Mutryn Just Landed A Spotlight Seattle Fans Will Love
A familiar family connection is about to get a bigger stage for one of Seattles top prospects. Casey Mutryn, a 2026 Kraken draft pick, has been named to Team USA for the World Junior Summer Showcase in Windsor, Ontario, where hell line up alongside his older brother Teddy. Its the kind of development that gives fans an easy rooting interest, especially with both brothers set to spend the fall at Boston College.
Theres also a little more Kraken-related movement closer to home. Mitchell Stephens has signed a new two-year deal to stay with the Coachella Valley Firebirds, keeping a veteran presence in the organizations AHL pipeline, while radio broadcasters Everett Fitzhugh and Mike Benton are set to take part in a charity softball game in Tacoma. For a team that likes to keep its reach broad, its a reminder that the Kraken footprint keeps popping up in a lot of different places this summer. [Read more 🡒]
Kraken Staff Shuffle Lands In Middle Of A Much Bigger NHL Upheaval
The NHLs offseason personnel churn has a way of spilling well beyond the bench, and Seattles latest internal media move landed against a backdrop of it across the league. Toronto overhauled part of its hockey operations and coaching staff, while Rogers Sportsnet closed its Vancouver and Calgary sports talk stations, a reminder that the business side of the sport is shifting almost as fast as the rosters and staffs.
For the Kraken, the change was more contained but still notable, with a familiar face moving into a different role and a new hire stepping in to lead digital and social media. It is the kind of behind-the-scenes adjustment that rarely draws the same attention as a coaching shakeup, but in a league where presentation, communication and hockey operations all overlap, these moves can matter more than they first appear. [Read more 🡒]
