September 20, 2024

To Assist The Nashville Predators In Their Penalty Kill and Other Aims, Trade Targets.

The Nashville Predators continue to struggle with killing penalties. At 76.5%, they currently hold the 25th position in the league. It’s not where the typical playoff team is sleeping, and it’s bad.

Striking a deal for one of these players might help the team secure a playoff spot, especially with the most crucial part of the season approaching and deals still to be made.

There isn’t much competition for the forward spot in the Predators lineup. They do have some strong guys, but who is the real flirtatious one? Yes, Michael McCarron, but there’s a limit to how often he can skate.

Now enter Jordan Greenway, a passable offensive player who also kills penalties. Greenway is an unmissable physical presence on the ice at 6’6″ and 230 pounds. Despite having only played in 38 games this season, his 60 hits would rank him among the Predators’ top-10 players. His shooting and surprisingly quick skating also help him drive play.

With a few expiring contracts on the table for the Predators, he’s not a bad contract to have on the books for next year at $3 million either. Determining what Buffalo requires in return will be the tricky part.

This year, Nic Dowd is a popular name for the deadline because he is the perfect bottom six, postseason-ready center. He has size, blocks shots, wins faceoffs (51% of his career), steals more pucks than he gives up, and can score about 25 points a year, possibly 30 if he stays injury-free.

The fact that Down might require a first-round pick due to the high forward market is likely the only thing preventing a team from acquiring him already.

Why is it so expensive? He’s playing some of his best hockey of the season and isn’t a rental. In addition, he is inexpensive—just $1.3 million. Dowd is probably underpaid for what he delivers and will continue to be so next year.

While there are undoubtedly better players out there, he fits in seamlessly with almost any lineup and could be worth a draft pick in a league where cap space is an issue.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News