Maple Leafs May Finally Have A Shot At The Blue Line Fix

Toronto is exploring a high-stakes trade to bolster their defense with the potential acquisition of Stanley Cup champion Alexander Nikishin.

The Maple Leafs could end up in the mix for one of the most intriguing names to surface in trade chatter: Stanley Cup champion Alexander Nikishin.

Nikishin’s name has been circulating because the Hurricanes may not be able to meet the kind of money he wants, and that has opened the door to the possibility that one of the league’s brightest young defenders could be moved. After playing a key role in Carolina’s Cup win this past season, he would have no shortage of interest.

At 24, Nikishin has only 81 games and one season on his résumé, but he made that season count. He finished with 33 points, scoring 11 goals and adding 22 assists, while posting a plus-18 rating, 94 blocks and 132 hits. The plus/minus was helped by Jaccob Slavin on his side, but Nikishin still showed he can handle his own end.

For Toronto, the appeal is obvious. He would bring the kind of young, physical top-pairing defender the team has been missing, along with mobility, offensive upside and a much stronger defensive game than Morgan Rielly on the left side.

Chris Johnston said the Hurricanes are at least listening on the young blueliner, and that the situation could move quickly.

"It's a good name to throw out there, he wants a big next contract. I don't know the path, if a trade isn't found, they could play hardball we have to see but certainly the Hurricanes have listened on him and considered opportunities."

"And the way they [Hurricanes] do business; wouldn't surprise me at all by the time we come back to the show, that he's dealt away."

If Nikishin really is available, Toronto would have to be aggressive. He’d step right into the top four and could land beside Oliver Ekman-Larsson, with Ekman-Larsson shifting to the right, or possibly alongside Darren Raddysh. That would allow Jake McCabe and Chris Tanev to form the second pair, with Ekman-Larsson and either Emil Andrae or Troy Stecher behind them.

The money is part of the equation, too. Nikishin is expected to cost roughly the same as Rielly, but he is eight years younger and still well short of his prime. That makes the fit tempting for Toronto, though it also means Rielly would need to go the other way in the deal, along with other pieces.

From Carolina’s side, Rielly would bring veteran experience and familiarity with head coach Sheldon Keefe, and he has had some of his better seasons under him, including a 68-point year in 2021-22. The Hurricanes would also want serious draft capital, with Colorado’s first-round pick in 2027 mentioned as part of the framework, plus additional prospects.

William Villeneuve is one name that fits, given his NHL readiness, offensive touch and youth. Vinny Borgesi and Hayes Hundley were also mentioned as possible additions, with both NCAA signings offering upside as young defenders who could develop into second-pairing NHL players.

It would be a steep price, and if Nikishin is pushing for a massive contract, Toronto would be taking on real risk. But the payoff is clear: a young, aggressive, winning defenseman who could reshape the blue line while allowing the Leafs to move out money and other commitments.

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