Nashville didn’t bring in Jack Drury to chase headlines or pile up points. It brought him in because Chris MacFarland believes the 26-year-old center can tilt the whole room.
That’s been the pattern for more than a year now. MacFarland has traded for Drury twice - first to the Colorado Avalanche in January 2025, then to the Predators last month - and then locked him into a five-year, $22.5 million deal in Nashville. That kind of commitment says plenty on its own.
Drury heard it loud and clear.
“He’s shown a lot of faith in my ability, and I certainly want to deliver for him,” Drury said. “I’m incredibly excited that he’s brought me over with him again. I want to prove that it was a good decision and that I was worth it.”
The appeal is easy to trace. Last season in Colorado, the 5-foot-11, 186-pound center posted 27 points with 10 goals and 17 assists, finished with a career-best plus-15, won 58.1% of his faceoffs and blocked 56 shots. That’s the profile of a dependable two-way forward, the kind of player who doesn’t need the spotlight to make a game easier for everyone else.
MacFarland didn’t hide how highly he values that package.
“If he’s not one of the best defensive guys in the league, I don’t know who is,” MacFarland said. “But I think the important thing for me with Jack is he’s a culture-changer. He’s a competitive guy on and off the ice that does the right things day in and day out that help teams win hockey games.”
That’s the lane Drury seems headed for in Nashville: a third- or fourth-line center who can be trusted against top opponents and leaned on by Andrew Brunette in the hard minutes. But MacFarland’s view goes beyond matchups and faceoff dots. He wants Drury to be part of the example-setting group for the Predators’ young centers, including Brady Martin, Egor Surin, David Edstrom and Felix Nilsson.
“I think his impact on the organization goes beyond the ice,” MacFarland said. “It’s in the locker room, impacting young future Preds, whether it’s Brady Martin or (Egor) Surin or (David) Edstrom or Felix Nilsson. … Having been around (Drury) and seeing what he does live and in color, there are things that he will impact that you just can’t put a value on.”
Drury’s own background helps explain why that trust comes so naturally. He grew up around winning athletes: his father Ted played 414 NHL games with six teams, his mother Liz was an All-American lacrosse player at Harvard, and his uncle Chris - now the New York Rangers president and general manager - played nearly 900 NHL games and won the Stanley Cup with the Avalanche in 2001.
That pedigree shaped the way Drury sees himself, even if the scoring upside eventually had to be recalibrated. A 2018 second-round pick, he came to understand he probably wasn’t going to be a regular 20-goal producer. What he could be, though, is exactly the kind of player coaches and front offices keep coming back for.
MacFarland clearly never lost sight of that. He wanted Drury as part of the massive three-team trade last year involving the Avalanche, Carolina Hurricanes and Chicago Blackhawks, the one that included Mikko Rantenen, Martin Necas and Taylor Hall. Then, on June 24, he brought Drury to Nashville by sending Zachary L’Heureux and Fedor Svechkov to Colorado.
Now Drury is settling into the role that made him valuable in the first place, and he isn’t looking to reinvent himself.
“Hopefully I can take on a bit more responsibility in general,” he said. “Be good defensively, help offensively when I can, be good on the penalty kill and just play a solid, 200-foot game.
I think that’s been who I am since I’ve joined the league, and I know I can take my game to another level. But at the same time, (I want to) stick with what makes me good and do what I can within my role.”
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