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2026 NHL Trade Deadline Winners and Losers, including New York Rangers

2026 NHL Trade Deadline Winners and Losers, including New York Rangers
Peter Carr/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The 2026 NHL Trade Deadline has come and gone, which means it’s time for history to determine how it all plays out.

We may not know for years who the true winners and losers are of this year’s deadline. But we can make snap judgments in the meantime. There was a dearth of deals Friday, perhaps due to more teams still in the playoff hunt than not. And the biggest trade of the season took place in December when the Quinn Hughes-to-Minnesota blockbuster went down.

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But for now, here are the winners and losers of the deadline based on the past week.

2026 NHL Trade Deadline Winners

Bill Guerin and Minnesota Wild

NHL: Ottawa Senators at Minnesota Wild
Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

Between the Hughes trade, his roster assembly of the gold-medal American Olympics team and the haul he brought in last week for the Wild, the 2025-26 season may be Guerin’s breakout as an impactful executive.

Minnesota is a playoff lock but now has the possibility of passing the Dallas Stars for second place and home-ice advantage in the Central Division. Guerin acquired depth center Michael McCarron from the Nashville Predators , scoring wing Bobby Brink from the Philadelphia Flyers , and playoff experience/grit in Nick Foligno from the Chicago Blackhawks . He also didn’t give in to the hefty asking price from the New York Rangers and passed on Vincent Trocheck . Time will tell if that was a wise decision or not.

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The Wild haven’t won a playoff series in more than a decade, and they still undoubtedly have to go through the Colorado Avalanche — who are the odds-on favorites to win the Stanley Cup. But Minnesota has elite young talent in Kirill Kaprizov , Matt Boldy , and Hughes , and Guerin put his best foot forward to try and get the Wild over the hump in the Western Conference.

Colorado Avalanche

The Avalanche finally found the replacement for Nazem Kadri they have been searching for since the gritty center left in free agency to the Calgary Flames after winning the Cup in 2022. Only in a wild twist, that center was Kadri, who was acquired from Calgary for forward Victor Olofsson , the rights to Max Curran and two picks, including a 2028 first-rounder.

It’s a high price to pay for a 35-year-old with three more years on his contract, albeit one who has put up 0.67 points per game.

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But the Avalanche have been the League’s best team all season, and this deal, coupled with the trade with the Toronto Maple Leafs for center Niclas Roy, absolutely makes them loaded down the middle and gives them elite depth.

The Avalanche also benefitted by the fact that none of the other top contenders — like the Carolina Hurricanes or Stars, for example — made a blockbuster to close the gap on Colorado.

New York Islanders

NHL: New York Islanders at New York Rangers
Dennis Schneidler-Imagn Images

The Islanders’ playoff spot is suddenly in peril, since they lead the ninth-seeded Columbus Blue Jackets by just four points for third place in the Metropolitan Division . The Blue Jackets have two games in hand, so if they pass the Islanders, the Elmonters are in danger of missing the postseason, since there are a slew of teams with similar point totals in the wild-card mix in the Eastern Conference.

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But the Rangers’ biggest rivals loaded up for a run in the wide-open Eastern Conference with their acquisition of Brayden Schenn from the St. Louis Blues . Schenn has 12 goals and 28 points this season but more importantly is about a 0.5 point-per-game player in the playoffs, including his 2019 Stanley Cup win with the Blues.

Sure, Isles GM Mathieu Darche parted with a lot — a first- and third-round pick in this year’s draft and goalie prospect Marcus Gidlof — but he also convinced Schenn to waive his no-move clause and will have the veteran for two years more after this season.

After adding Schenn’s grit, leadership, and two-way skill set, they signed veteran center J.G. Pageau to a three-year contract, eliminating a potential headache this coming offseason.

With added offensive punch, and superstar goalie Ilya Sorokin in the midst of a Vezina Trophy-worthy season, the Islanders appear extra dangerous this spring.

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2026 NHL Trade Deadline Losers

Chris Drury

Syndication: Westchester County Journal News
Peter Carr/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Sure, Chris Drury got a solid prospect in Liam Greentree from the Los Angeles Kings in the Artemi Panarin trade . Landing Jacob Battagli a for disgruntled 2021 first-round pick Brennan Othmann isn’t so bad. And lower-level prospect Aidan Thompson , acquired in a minor-league swap with the Chicago Blackhawks, did impress in his debut with the Hartford Wolf Pack this past weekend.

But when he released the now-infamous Letter 2.0, it should have opened Drury and the Rangers up for business beyond simply moving the expiring contracts of Panarin and defenseman Carson Soucy , and taking fliers on some young players like Battaglia and Thompson.

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Instead, Drury offloaded just one NHL player this week — potential Steven McDonald Extra Effort Award favorite Sam Carrick — plus Othmann and Derrick Pouliot , in a deal that reminded Rangers fans that he was in the organization.

Time will tell if Dury made the right call by not dropping his asking price and keeping Trocheck , at least for right now. If not for Trocheck’s 12-team no-move list, it might have been him going to Colorado for a prospect and two high picks, and maybe even more, instead of Kadri. But Drury included that clause when he signed Trocheck as a free agent in 2022, and the players used it to his advantage ahead of this deadline.

But this retool just got a lot harder, since there are still veterans blocking spots that kids like could have filled the rest of this season. Plus, the Rangers didn’t acquire nearly enough of those NHL-ready prospects they said they wanted, and only added two third-round picks and a sixth-rounder in this year’s upcoming draft. HOwever, their bloated draft capital — they have 11 picks this year — may come in handy when Drury and the Rangers can swing more trades this offseason.

If nothing else, the optics stink here. But Drury can still reverse perception in teh offseason. Yet with his track record, it won’t be easy.

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Alex Ovechkin

NHL: Washington Capitals at New York Rangers
Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

This may be Alex Ovechkin ‘s last year in the NHL, but even if it is not, the Capitals superstar called Friday “the saddest day of his career,” after Washington traded defenseman John Carlson to the Anaheim Ducks in the wee hours of Friday morning.

The Capitals got a first-round pick for Carlson, but they are only four points out of a playoff spot, and this white-flag waving from general manager Chris Patrick could put render irrelevant what may be Ovechkin’s final month in the NHL.

Buffalo Sabres

NHL: Chicago Blackhawks at Winnipeg Jets
Terrence Lee-Imagn Images

Give Buffalo credit. It tried. The Sabres haven’t been to the playoffs in 15 years, and with that dubious streak poised to end, Jarmo Kekäläinen went all in to try and boost their chances of going from out of the playoffs to the Stanley Cup Final in Year 1.

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Yet, the deals for Logan Stanley and Luke Schenn don’t exactly do that, and both players will be eligible to become free agents July 1. What’s worse, Buffalo may have also set itself back by dealing two picks and two players, including minor-league scoring wing and 2021 first-round pick Isak Rosen .

Stanley is huge and already surpassed a career high for points in a season this year (21), and Carrick will add experience and leadership to that room. But the prices were high this year, and Kekäläinen’s willingness to pay could be long remembered if the Sabres are one-and-done in the postseason.

Speaking of optics, the Sabres are the hottest team in the NHL right now. But it didn’t look great that defenseman Colton Parayko didn’t waive his no-trade clause to come to Buffalo, and opted to remain with ST. Louis with the Blues, who were distinct sellers ahead of the deadline.

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