The Seattle Kraken may be sitting on one of the more interesting trade chips in the league: Jared McCann, the former Toronto Maple Leaf who turned into a 40-goal scorer after leaving town.
According to NHL insider David Pagnotta, Seattle is on the trade board and is gauging the market for McCann, who is one year away from free agency. That puts the Kraken in a spot where they have to decide whether to cash in now or risk losing him later for nothing.
McCann’s breakout came in Seattle’s best season. In 2022-23, he piled up 40 goals and 30 assists for 70 points, a huge jump after the Kraken gave him more ice time and a bigger role.
Last season, he followed that with 20 goals and 20 assists, finishing tied for fifth on the team with 40 points. The problem for Seattle was bigger than McCann’s production: the club’s top scorer had just 55 points, and the Kraken finished with one of the NHL’s worst offenses.
For Toronto, McCann’s story still has a sting to it. The Maple Leafs traded for him on July 17, 2021, sending a seventh-round pick and Filip Hallander to the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Four days later, he was taken by Seattle in the expansion draft. A year after that, he was scoring 40 goals.
Kyle Dubas had acquired McCann in a move designed to protect Toronto from losing other players the club wanted to keep. It was clever at the time. In hindsight, it handed Seattle a forward who became exactly the kind of middle-six scorer every team wants.
Now the Leafs could be a fit again, at least on paper. Toronto has been reshaping the roster aggressively under new general manager John Chayka, even without touching the core. The club has plenty of left-handed forwards and not many right-handed ones, and McCann’s left shot would help balance that out.
He also fills a need in more than one spot. Plugging McCann into the top six would push someone else down the lineup and strengthen the bottom six too. The idea of putting him on John Tavares’ wing is especially appealing, since that kind of role could send his production climbing again while giving Toronto a deeper forward group.
The Leafs are trying to contend next season, with Auston Matthews having two years left on his contract. They have not been linked to McCann in Pagnotta’s report, but that does not mean they would stay quiet if the opportunity made sense.
Seattle’s side of the equation is straightforward. McCann has a 10-team no-move clause, but he is also only a year from free agency.
He carries a $5 million cap hit next season, which is a bargain for a player with his track record. The Kraken also have plenty of cap room, and they could retain salary if it meant bringing back extra assets.
Toronto, meanwhile, would have to make the money work. McCann’s $5 million hit fits only if Morgan Rielly’s $7.5 million cap hit comes off the books, or if Seattle keeps part of the salary and the Leafs clear space another way.
Even so, McCann is the kind of player Toronto has been willing to chase: a first- or second-line winger who can also fill in at center, with enough versatility to give the roster more options. If the Leafs want to keep pushing, he’s exactly the sort of name that would make sense to watch.
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