The Rangers didn’t waste a minute on July 1.
By the time the first day of NHL free agency had settled, New York had already reshaped a big chunk of its roster with six moves - a mix of trades and signings that changed the look of the team right away and could keep changing it in the days ahead. The headline work came on both fronts: adding pieces up front, overhauling the blue line, and finally moving on from Vincent Trocheck.
The day opened with a surprise in net. New York landed Joonas Korpisalo from the Boston Bruins for Kalle Väisänen and a 2028 fourth-round pick.
It was a move that caught plenty of fans off guard, especially with Dylan Garand already seen by many as the backup option. Korpisalo still has two years left on his contract at $3 million per season, and the recent results haven’t been pretty.
That price tag makes this a notable bet for a goalie expected to fill a backup role. If he gets the job, the Rangers are hoping for a rebound - and they’ve shown before they can help a goalie rediscover his game, most recently with Jonathan Quick.
New York then turned to the forward group. Joe Veleno was signed to a one-year deal to fill the need for a fourth-line center.
Drafted 30th overall in 2018 by the Detroit Red Wings, Veleno still hasn’t turned that pedigree into the kind of production many expected. Last season, he played 61 games for the Montreal Canadiens and finished with two goals and five points.
The offense may be limited, but the Rangers are clearly banking on his speed and defensive ability to strengthen a bottom six that has lacked both.
Oliver Bjorkstrand was the next addition, also on a one-year contract. He spent last season with the Tampa Bay Lightning after arriving there via trade the year before, and the fit never quite clicked.
In 80 regular-season games, he scored 12 goals and totaled 32 points, then went scoreless in four playoff games. If the Rangers don’t add another forward, Bjorkstrand could open the season in the top six.
He has hit the 20-goal mark five times in his career, and the short-term deal suggests New York is betting on a bounce-back.
Then came the biggest swing of the day: Trocheck is gone.
After months of rumors, the Rangers finally moved Vincent Trocheck, sending him to the Utah Mammoth for Sean Durzi, center prospect Cole Beaudoin, and a 2027 third-round pick. Trocheck had been the team’s most valuable trade chip, and Utah emerged as the team willing to meet the price. Trocheck had reportedly preferred to stay in the East, but it was the Mammoth who landed him, adding a center to a young roster that needed help down the middle.
For New York, the return fits both the present and the future. Durzi gives them a puck-moving defenseman who can slot behind Adam Fox and run the second power-play unit.
Beaudoin, a 20-year-old center, immediately becomes the organization’s best center prospect and could see NHL minutes this season. The Rangers may not have gotten the exact kind of haul they were chasing earlier in the process, but they did come away with a deal that helps the defense and adds youth up front.
That wasn’t the only defense-first move.
New York also acquired Marcus Pettersson from the Vancouver Canucks for a 2030 first-round pick that is top-10 protected. It was the kind of trade nobody really saw coming, but it addressed a glaring need. Pettersson brings a left-handed presence who can play on the second pair, and he also comes with a familiar connection to Mike Sullivan, who coached him with the Pittsburgh Penguins for parts of seven seasons.
There was one more important wrinkle: Pettersson had to waive his No-Move Clause for the trade to happen. That says plenty about how he views the Rangers’ direction.
With Durzi and Pettersson added, New York suddenly has a new-look second defense pair, and it’s a major upgrade from where the blue line finished last season. The risk is obvious - another future first-round pick is out the door - but the message from Chris Drury is even clearer.
He’s trying to win now.
Once those two defensemen were in place, the Rangers had to clear space, and Will Borgen was the odd man out. He ended up with the Boston Bruins in exchange for a 2027 second-round pick and a 2028 third-round pick that could become a second under certain conditions. Borgen wasn’t a liability, but with the blue line suddenly crowded, he became expendable, and New York turned that into more draft capital.
One day into free agency, the Rangers have already done more than most teams do in a week. They still have more business to handle, including their own free agents, but the direction is unmistakable.
Drury is not interested in running back last season’s group. He’s trying to build a roster that can get back into the playoffs now, and the early returns suggest a team that could be competitive in a weak Metropolitan Division.
The rest of the summer will tell us how far he plans to push the overhaul.
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