The Pittsburgh Penguins are being tied to two headline-grabbing forwards this offseason, but the buzz around those names is not all on the same level. One path looks like a real negotiation. The other sounds more like a thought exercise.
The more concrete situation involves Dallas Stars forward Jason Robertson. He is a restricted free agent who recently filed for salary arbitration, and the trade chatter around him has picked up. Elliotte Friedman said the Penguins and Stars have had “pretty serious talks” about Robertson, and The Athletic’s Josh Yohe reported that Pittsburgh remains very interested.
“The Penguins are still very much open to acquiring Robertson, whom they believe could be a short- and long-term building block for president/GM Kyle Dubas’ vision. The Penguins, as previously reported, believe there is a real chance Robertson would agree to play in Pittsburgh. Trading for his brother, Nick Robertson, doesn’t figure to hurt the cause.”
If that kind of deal were to come together, the framework could be steep. Rickard Rakell and Bryan Rust might head to Dallas, along with multiple first-round picks.
Robertson is reportedly looking for a contract in the $14-$15 million annual range, and Dubas has reportedly been willing to go there. The presence of Nick Robertson in the mix adds a personal wrinkle that could matter.
The Elias Pettersson talk, by comparison, feels much softer. Friedman floated the idea rather than presenting it as something moving forward, saying, “I don’t know. I wonder if the Penguins with Crosby and Malkin might be good for him,”
Pettersson is still under contract with Vancouver for several more seasons at an $11.6 million cap hit, and there is no reported trade structure in place. Some reports have even suggested he already used his no-move clause to block a move to Pittsburgh before anything could develop.
So which name is actually more plausible? Robertson appears to be the stronger possibility if he is open to joining the Penguins, but there are still plenty of hurdles.
He would have to be willing to sign an extension, Pittsburgh would have to assemble a package Dallas wants, and the whole thing would still have to make sense on both sides. Pettersson, for now, remains more of an insider’s idea than a serious trade path.
Nothing is done yet. But the reporting makes one thing pretty clear: Robertson is the closer call, while Pettersson is the long shot.
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