Ducks May Be Headed For Another Costly Frank Vatrano Dilemma

Shane Wright's search for a new team and Anaheim's attempts to offload Frank Vatrano highlight the complexities facing NHL trades amidst financial constraints and team rebuilds.

The Anaheim Ducks are trying to move Frank Vatrano’s contract, and the Vancouver Canucks at least checked in. But for Vancouver, the math still comes back to the same place: money in, money out.

Rick Dhaliwal said on the Oilers Now show that the Ducks may need to attach sweeteners to get a deal done.

“Ducks are going to have to add sweeteners to get rid of players. Someone told me today Ducks called Canucks to see if they would take Vatrano off their hands…But again Vancouver is money in, money out. Budget is tight.”

Dhaliwal also made clear the Canucks’ spending picture hasn’t changed.

“Money is tight right now. They aren’t going to overspend…Anything in Vancouver is money out, money in. Owner is going into a rebuild, so he’s saying money is tight.”

There’s another wrinkle here, too. Vatrano has deferred money attached to the contract, and that’s not the kind of structure Vancouver ownership is eager to take on. As Taj noted, there is no way the Canucks ownership are going to want to pay it.

From PuckPedia: “3 million per year is deferred salary to be paid out at 900K per year for 10 years beginning in 2035.”

Elsewhere in the rumor mill, Shane Wright’s situation in Seattle is drawing plenty of attention. Mike Gould of Daily Faceoff reported that the Kraken and Wright’s agent are looking for a new home for the 22-year-old center, who dropped from 44 points two years ago to 27 last year. Seattle is said to be seeking fair market value for him, and Gould laid out five possible landing spots.

Calgary Flames could be in the mix if they’re hunting for a center that fits their trajectory. If Seattle wants an NHL roster player back, Connor Zary or Morgan Frost could make sense.

Chicago Blackhawks have the draft capital to work with, including three 2027 first-round picks, though they may not want to part with major assets.

New Jersey Devils already made a run at a young center in Barrett Hayton, with the Mammoth matching the offer sheet, and they picked up future first-rounders in the Simon Nemec trade. Wright would give them added depth.

Pittsburgh Penguins, with Kyle Dubas looking to buy low on young, skilled players, may not have a roster player to send back, but they do have seven second-round picks over the next three drafts.

Toronto Maple Leafs added plenty of depth in free agency, but they still don’t have many young centers in the organization. Their only first-round pick in the next two drafts is the Colorado Avalanche’s 2027 first-rounder.

In Other News...

Shane Wright Rumors Signal A Brutal Turning Point For The Kraken

Shane Wrights time in Seattle has become one of the franchises most complicated storylines, with a player once viewed as a cornerstone now at the center of trade chatter. The Kraken have spent years trying to unlock the high-end prospect they believed they were getting, but the fit has never quite settled into what either side hoped, and the latest reports suggest the situation has reached a point where a change may be best for everyone involved.

For Seattle, the challenge is no longer just about patience or projection. It is about deciding how much value remains in Wrights name, pedigree and upside, and whether another organization can offer the kind of reset the Kraken can no longer provide. The market around him is still taking shape, and with interest beginning to surface, the next move could say as much about Seattles direction as it does about Wrights future. [Read more 🡒]

Bruins May Have A Risky Answer To Their Top Six Center Problem

Shane Wright keeps surfacing in the kind of trade chatter that follows a young center with pedigree but unfinished business, and Boston is the latest club looking at him through that lens. The Bruins have a clear need down the middle, and Wright, still just a former fourth-overall pick trying to turn promise into reliable top-six production, fits the profile of a player who could change that conversation if the price and the fit line up.

For Seattle, though, this is not the sort of move to make lightly. The Kraken are expected to hold out for fair value, which means any serious discussion would have to start with real assets coming back, not just a hopeful swap of needs. Boston has pieces it could dangle, but the question is whether the Bruins are willing to pay enough to get the kind of center they believe can help them now without emptying too much of the cupboard in the process. [Read more 🡒]