This NHL Wrinkle Could Change How The Leafs Chase A Top Defender

The Maple Leafs may need to rethink their strategy as they confront a new offer-sheet loophole that could reshape the landscape of player trades in the NHL.

The Maple Leafs may not be staring down many offer sheets of their own, but the bigger issue is what other teams could do with the rule.

A new wrinkle has started to draw attention around the NHL: clubs may be able to use offer sheets as a backdoor trade tool. Under the CBA, if a team matches an offer sheet, it cannot trade that player for 12 months. The team that signs the player to the offer sheet, though, is free to move him wherever it wants.

That detail has turned a little-used part of free agency into something much more strategic. Elliotte Friedman has already reported that one team was looking to use that path. Cam Robinson of Elite Prospects added that clubs could start using offer sheets to land a player, flip him to a preferred destination, and then collect a major return - all while avoiding the cost of a traditional trade.

For Toronto, the immediate offer-sheet danger is limited. Signing Emil Andrae likely shut down the one realistic case they had to worry about. But the larger trend still matters, because it could give the Maple Leafs another way to chase the kind of player they want.

Toronto can’t exactly go wild with offer-sheet money, given what they can realistically afford, but the idea is there: target a player, sign him, and then use him as part of a larger move for a top-pairing defender.

The article used Adam Fantilli as a hypothetical example. In that scenario, the Maple Leafs could offer him a deal at their maximum of $4.775-million, then move him elsewhere - even to New York - and potentially turn that into a future star and a shot at Adam Fox.

That was the kind of creative maneuver Robinson and Friedman were pointing toward. It would be easier for Toronto if it had more draft capital to work with, but the concept still opens the door.

There are other younger players who could fit that mold too, including Braden Schneider and Jamie Drysdale, if they fall within Toronto’s threshold of availability.

And if the Leafs want to get even more aggressive, the idea doesn’t stop at young talent. They could use the same kind of move to chase a more established player instead. Never count John Chayka out of anything, and if there’s a creative path to getting something done, he’ll be willing to explore it.

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