Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Greasing The Wheels #1: Heward And Zednik For Edler

To help things along as we approach the trade deadline, The Rink will be playing matchmaker where it sees a match to be made. First up, Jamie Heward and Richard Zednik to Vancouver for Alex Edler (add in a pick either way, if necessary, to even things out).

What Vancouver needs: added depth on the blueline and up front. The Canucks don't have to go for a "homerun," but some tweaking is desperately needed as the team tries to hold on to the division lead and, with it, home-ice for the first round of the playoffs.

What Vancouver gets: a solid, versatile depth defenseman and a former 30-goal-scoring forward with more than a few goals still left in his stick.

Heward has more goals and points than all but three Canuck blueliners, and has shown that he can play in any situation, as he's one of only two regular Caps defensemen averaging more than a minute of ice time per game on both the power-play and the penalty kill.

Zednik, despite being buried on the fourth-line for the entire season, is averaging .59 points per game, which is better than all but four Canuck forwards (the Sedins, Markus Naslund and Brendan Morrison). Could he be a good fit on the Sedins' wing?

What Washington gets: Alex Edler, 20, is a former third-round pick, with a "wealth of offensive potential and a very projectable frame," who "could develop into an all-around defender." As an added bonus, Edler is Swedish. With Zednik and Heward out the door at the end of the year, it is a low-risk/potentially-high-reward move and at this point in the team's rebuild the focus has to shift from acquiring picks to acquiring players.

Recent trade history: Back in November of 2001, the Caps traded Trevor Linden and a 2nd round selection (previously acquired - Denis Grot) in 2002 to Vancouver for a 1st round selection (Boyd "Muffins" Gordon) in 2002 and a 3rd round selection in 2003 (Stephen Werner). In December of 2005, the Caps sent Maxime Ouellet to the Canucks for a 5th round selection in 2006 (Maxime Lacroix).

The Bottom Line: When you have Roberto Luongo in net, you have a chance every night, especially (one would think) come playoff time. Adding a little more depth is just what the doctor ordered for Vancouver, and the organization is deep with two-way defensemen, making the cost of Edler bearable.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

OUCH! Zednik is not an elite score but, well.... I guess Modin & Carter aren't too much better.

Still Modin is more likely to get 30 goals than the other two while Anson should have taken less money to stay in Vancouver in the first place.

Who is Alex Edler? I have heard that name....

JP said...

Of course Zednik isnt' an elite scorer, but he's cheaper than the other options and, like you said, isn't likely any worse.

Look at the guys you named (and consider that Z has played on the fourth line all year while Modin and Carter have gotten top-six minutes all year):

* Zednik 6 goals in 29 games
* Modin 14 goals in 57 games
* Carter 10 goals in 53 games

Anonymous said...

I think that Zed is going to Buffalo as a rental. They lost yet another player last night, they are hurtin'and he has the speed they need.

Faux Rumors2 said...

1) Hopefully with his 'hot streak' Sutherby will get some interest as well. ; )

JP said...

All of Buffalo's guys will be back (and rested) for the playoffs, and if they move for anything, I'd think it would be a higher-end forward (they have plenty of third- and fourth-line depth), so I'm not sure what they'd see in Zed. But it could happen, I guess.

Do you see anyone off their roster who would be a good fit for a trade coming this way?

Anonymous said...

Tomsi ajaco nehe mere mohabate dessana !!!

Abhinav said...

Uh...what ^ he said.

Unknown said...

Different VAN leadership than last time.

JP said...

Are you saying the Caps should try their bait in Anaheim?

JP said...

Today's Province reports (to the surprise of no one) that the Canucks are, indeed, looking for a D:

"Getting another D to give us some depth is a pretty safe bet there," Vigneault said when asked what he hopes the Canucks can get at the deadline. "If that's going to happen, we'll have to see."