The NHL trade deadline came and went. Here is the full analysis of the Stars' moves.
Acquisition 1: Veteran top-6 winger The Stars acquired a scoring winger with playoff experience, sending a first-round pick (lottery protected) and a B-level prospect to a rebuilding team. The winger is a pending UFA (unrestricted free agent) making $5.5M, so this is a rental.
Analysis: The Stars needed another top-6 scoring threat to complement their existing core. This player adds 20+ goal, 50+ point pace production and has 40+ career playoff games. The first-round pick cost is significant but the Stars are in win-now mode.
Acquisition 2: Depth defenseman A right-shot defenseman acquired for a fourth-round pick. Plays a physical, stay-at-home style. Will slot into the 5th-6th defenseman role.
Analysis: Cheap, low-risk addition that addresses a need. Right-shot defensemen are always in demand. The fourth-round pick cost is negligible.
What they did NOT do: The Stars did not add a goaltender. Given the backup's .901 save percentage, this was the one area where many fans expected a move. The front office apparently trusts the starter to carry the playoff workload.
Analysis: This is a gamble. If the starter stays healthy and maintains his form, it is fine. If he misses time, the backup's numbers suggest trouble.
Cap implications: The Stars used all of their remaining cap space ($4.5M) on these additions. They have essentially no flexibility for the remainder of the season.
Sources:
- The Athletic — trade deadline coverage
- PuckPedia — cap impact analysis
- TSN — trade details and analysis
Not adding a goaltender is the decision that will make or break this season. I trust the starter but if he goes down with an injury, we are relying on a .901 backup in the playoffs. That is terrifying.