Matthew Knies has gone from promising Maple Leafs youngster to a name being floated in a Canucks trade pitch, and the reason has less to do with his scoring touch than his contract situation.
Knies has put together back-to-back seasons of 23 and 29 goals alongside Auston Matthews, which is part of why he stands out as a potential target. But in Rick Dhaliwal’s view, the bigger draw is that Knies does not have the kind of trade protection that could stop a move to Vancouver.
On his podcast, Dhaliwal urged the Canucks to go after young players who are under 25 and don’t have no-move clauses. He specifically named Knies, Columbus forward Kent Johnson and Seattle’s Shane Wright.
“Get those guys under 25 that have no moves. They don’t have no moves, so they can’t block a trade for Vancouver,” Dhaliwal said.
“Go get Kent Johnson, Shane Wright, Matthew Knies. They’re all under 25 and they have no trade protection.
Those are the guys that they got to go get.”
That idea sounds clean on paper, but it comes with obvious problems.
A player not being able to veto a deal does not mean he wants to be there. Trade protection gives players leverage in the modern NHL, but more and more, the real power can still sit with the player even when the paperwork says otherwise.
If Knies, Wright or Johnson don’t want Vancouver, then what exactly is the point of targeting them just because they can’t block a deal? That’s the question hanging over Dhaliwal’s approach. It doesn’t mean any of those players are opposed to the Canucks, but chasing players mainly because they lack control over where they go sends a pretty clear message.
Knies, in particular, fits the profile of a player who would draw interest: young, productive and cost-controlled. The bigger question is whether Toronto would even consider moving him. Dhaliwal’s comments, though, suggest the Canucks may be in a spot where they have to look for talent with limited leverage.
Wright’s situation is even more complicated. He’ll be an RFA at the end of next season, and if he simply says he won’t sign an extension, Vancouver would be left empty-handed.
Johnston presents the same issue. Knies is locked in, but he would also walk into Vancouver as one of the team’s top players.
That leaves the Canucks with a blunt question: do you really want to force one of your best players to come play for you?
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Matthew Knies has become one of the more interesting names in the Maple Leafs orbit because his combination of age, role and contract control gives Toronto something every team wants and few are eager to move. Even with reports that the Leafs have at least listened on him, the asks they have been weighing have been substantial enough to show just how much value he carries, especially for a club that is always trying to balance present urgency with future flexibility.
That is why the speculative trade chatter keeps circling back to big names, from Dylan Larkin to Zach Werenski to Connor Hellebuyck, even if none of those possibilities is close to real. The Werenski idea, in particular, comes with its own obvious hurdle because Toronto would need more than just a willing trade partner, and the price would not be light. For now, Knies remains in Toronto, but the fact that he is still being discussed at all says plenty about how aggressively the Leafs are at least exploring their options. [Read more 🡒]
