The Predators spent the future for the present with their moves, sending a 2012 first-round draft pick and to the Buffalo Sabres for Gaustad and a 2013 fourth-round selection. BY JOSEPH WHITE | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ADVERTISING The Nashville Predators
BY JOSEPH WHITE | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Nashville Predators and Vancouver Canucks added some reinforcements for a playoff run, while Rick Nash’s wish for a deal didn’t come to fruition Monday as the NHL trade deadline passed without any blockbuster moves.
Having won a playoff series for the first time in franchise history a year ago, the Predators are looking to take the next step — and beyond — by beefing up the offense with left wing Andrei Kostitsyn and two-way forward Paul Gaustad. Nashville also acquired defenseman Hal Gill earlier this month and sits in fifth place in the Western Conference.
“I think with these trades we’ve certainly given us a chance to play with the big boys this year when we get in the playoffs,” Predators general manager David Poile said.
The Canucks, sitting atop the NHL standings with 19 games left in the regular season, fine-tuned their roster with three deals that added four players: checking-line center Samuel Pahlsson, rookie forward Zack Kassian, defenseman Marc-Andre Gragnani and forward Andrew Gordon.
But the player expected to be the big catch of the day went nowhere. Nash, captain of the league-worst Columbus Blue Jackets, requested a trade last month, according to general manager Scott Howson. Howson said there were “significant discussions,” but no deal was struck.
“The price was high,” Howson said. “And I don’t apologize for that.”
Nash’s non-trade was emblematic of a relative tranquil deadline day. There were 16 deals, but nothing that came close to altering the fabric of the NHL universe. The fact that the postseason remains within reach for so many teams — all but five were within six points of a playoff spot when the 3 p.m. deadline passed — created a one-sided market.
“The theme of this year’s deadline was that everybody wanted to add, and there was no one selling,” said Washington Capitals general manager George McPhee, who stood pat even though his team is underperforming and in need of a center because of Nicklas Backstrom’s concussion.
The Predators spent the future for the present with their moves, sending a 2012 first-round draft pick and to the Buffalo Sabres for Gaustad and a 2013 fourth-round selection.