Kapanen trade sets Maple Leafs up for more moves this off-season

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Kapanen trade sets Maple Leafs up for more moves this off-season

TORONTO – The Pittsburgh Penguins land the best player, yet the Toronto Maple Leafs may well have won the trade.

The hockey world knew Kyle Dubas would be trading from his middle-class forwards, and Kasperi Kapanen brings a youthful injection of speed that could benefit the Penguins’ mission to contend again as soon as possible.

From the Maple Leafs’ perspective, the key to this ice-breaking transaction between two high-expectation, underachieving franchises is twofold: a first-round pick, and the freedom to dive into further trades and explore an unprecedented free agency landscape.

This is Dubas’s move to make a move. The shed before the add.

How the executive, now taking direct heat for the first time in his tenure, uses that pick and that cap space to build around his core will be even more intriguing.

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In Kapanen, the Leafs deal from a source of depth and the Penguins reacquire the 2014 first-rounder they let go as the prime prospect in the Phil Kessel blockbuster of 2015 — and Jim Rutherford’s first draftee as Pittsburgh GM.

Next to Toronto, no organization knows the player as well and Kapanen will be given a chance to thrive as a role player under a sturdy leadership group.

“Kasperi is a good, young player that brings speed to our lineup and plays the way we want to play,” Rutherford said in a statement. “We know him as a player and feel he can improve our top six.”

The speedy 24-year-old struggled to find his niche or score a playoff goal under new coach Sheldon Keefe. He registered just two assists in the qualification round versus Columbus and the Blue Jackets’ third line so overmatched Toronto’s that Dubas is wasting little time to rejig the mix.

During pandemic roster planning, cost certainty is more critical than ever.

Kapanen’s contract carries two more seasons at a $3.2-million cap hit, but the good news for Rutherford is that Toronto already paid a disproportionate amount of Kapanen’s salary by front-loading the player’s three-year extension last summer.

That pact was inked after Kapanen’s breakout 20-goal, 44-point campaign in which he also proved to be a useful penalty killer.

But little momentum and goodwill from 2018-19 transferred to 2019-20.

Kapanen, a natural right winger, struggled when injuries forced him to skate the left flank and he failed his opportunity to seize a top-six role. Aggravating the situation was his public wrist-slapping and one-game, team-issued suspension for what Kapanen described as an isolated incident of sleeping in and missing practice.

“I think we’re a pretty forgiving place when things happen,” Keefe said of the benching at the time. “Things happen all the time. When there’s a pattern of things that haven’t corrected themselves, then you have to do something a little bit outside of what you normally would do.”

Although Kapanen did enjoy an uptick in impact later in the season, finishing with 13 goals and 36 points in 69 games, he was ultimately deemed an expendable asset in Dubas’s quest to crawl back into a well-regarded draft, upgrade a thin blue line and shift some payroll to an under-equipped back end.

Jeff Marek and Elliotte Friedman talk to a lot of people around the hockey world, and then they tell listeners all about what they’ve heard and what they think about it.

Under a flattened $81.5-million cap ceiling, Dubas has given his organization an extra $3.2 million and regained a valuable 2020 first-round pick (15th overall) to manoeuvre through a hectic off-season. (Remember, Dubas traded away his original 2020 first-rounder, now 13th overall, to Carolina in order to rid the club of Patrick Marleau’s contract.)

To do so, the Leafs also waved goodbye to journeyman winger Pontus Aberg and 23-year-old right-shot defence prospect Jesper Lindgren. The 2015 fourth-rounder is still on the come-up, posting nine points and a plus-five rating as a rookie for an underwhelming Toronto Marlies squad in 2019-20.

While the cap space and first-round pick — Dubas’s starting point in the shopping of Kapanen — are the major wins here, the additional pieces moving from Pittsburgh to Toronto are intriguing.

Forward Evan Rodrigues, 27, is an impending restricted free agent with arbitration rights and would need to be qualified at a $2 million salary. With Dubas trying to clear space, that feels doubtful.

Centre Filip Hallander is a 20-year-old prospect being groomed in his native Sweden. And defenceman David Warsofsky, 30, is a stay-at-home depth type who hasn’t played in the NHL since he appeared in 16 games for the 2017-18 Colorado Avalanche.

Dubas will discuss the trade with reporters at 5 p.m. ET.

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