
Rumor finally became reality Monday with the Anaheim Ducks trading forward Trevor Zegras to the Philadelphia Flyers.
The Ducks moved Zegras, who has long been discussed as a potential trade target, to the Flyers in exchange for forward Ryan Poehling, a 2025 second-round pick (originally belonging to the Columbus Blue Jackets), and a 2026 fourth-round pick.
What does it all mean and how did both front offices fare in this deal?
Philadelphia Flyers
Grade: B+
Potential is the word that's going to be used the most to describe this trade.
It starts with the fact that Zegras gives the Flyers another top-nine center in addition to what they already have with Sean Couturier and Noah Cates, with the idea that Zegras has the potential to be their top-line center.
Zegras is a two-time 20-goal scorer who has also authored a pair of consecutive 60-point seasons. That potentially gives the Flyers, who finished 24th in goals per game, another player who can score while creating opportunities for those around him.
At 24, he also potentially fits within the Flyers' long-term plans. The Flyers were the NHL's youngest team in 2024-25, with an average age of 26.09 years, according to Elite Prospects.
Again, the key word here is: Potentially.
Injuries and inconsistencies over the last two seasons created questions as to whether Zegras could return to becoming the player who had those consecutive 60-point seasons back in 2021-22 and 2022-23. Furthermore, it led to inquiries about whether he'd return or surpass those totals while remaining the Ducks.
Surrounding Zegras with wingers such as Tyson Foerster, Travis Konecny, Matvei Michkov and/or Owen Tippett could get him back on track. After all, at one point he was one of the league's breakout stars who looked like he was going to be one of the future faces of the NHL -- he was chosen as the cover athlete for NHL 23, after all.
Then there's the added incentive that Zegras is in the final season of a three-year contract worth $5.75 million annually. He will remain under team control as a restricted free agent for the next two seasons, before becoming an unrestricted free agent at the end of the 2027-28 season.
Even with taking on Zegras' salary, it still leaves the Flyers with $15.141 million in cap space, per PuckPedia.
Anaheim Ducks
Grade: A-
For all the questions the Ducks faced about holding on to Zegras, there appeared to be one rather large looming question:
Is it prudent to pay a third-line center more than $5 million annually, when there are cheaper options available there, and other roster holes to fill?
Leo Carlsson -- the No. 2 overall pick from 2023 -- showed he could handle the demands of being a full-time, top-line center. He scored 20 goals and 45 points last season, giving the Ducks a two-way center packaged inside a 6-3 and 205-pound frame.
Follow that with Mason McTavish, who was the No. 3 overall pick in 2021, scoring 22 goals and a career-high 52 points in a second-line center role.
McTavish led the Ducks in goals last season, and finished second in points; Carlsson was third on the team in points. Getting that sort of production out of their top two centers made Zegras expendable for Anaheim.
Then there are the financial ramifications. Anaheim is projected to have a little more than $36 million in cap space this season, which appears to be quite a bit -- and it is -- until one looks at the future, and how GM Pat Verbreek must tread carefully. Lukas Dostal, Drew Helleson and McTavish are RFAs in need of new contracts this offseason. Those deals will likely shape what necessary funds the Ducks possess to be active in unrestricted free agency on July 1.
Looking at what they could do next offseason, however, is what made the trade more enticing. Zegras was slated to be part of a six-player RFA class that includes Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, Pavel Mintyukov, Jackson LaCombe and Olen Zellweger, while Jacob Trouba will be a UFA then.
That five-player RFA class and Trouba remain in place, so those decisions will have to be made. But instead of having to worry about what to pay Zegras, they'll potentially have a much lower price point to deal with by comparison with Poehling, a 26-year-old who scored 12 goals and 31 points in 2024-25. He has one year remaining on his contract worth $1.9 million before he becomes a UFA next summer.