Hintz extended his stick toward Henrique, whose wrist shot sent the puck under Hintz’s visor during his club’s 5-4 loss to the Oilers. He was on the ice, with his face in a towel, as the team’s medical staff assessed him and helped him skate toward the dressing room.
After the loss, Dallas coach Peter DeBoer said Hintz was at a local hospital, receiving tests. The coach added that the initial report was fairly optimistic for Hintz, 28, who has 25 goals and 52 points.
“Everyone’s optimistic that it’s not ‘serious, serious,'” DeBoer said. “But we won’t know until we get testing.”
The short-handed Stars rallied from a 5-1 deficit before eventually losing. Trade deadline acquisition Mikko Rantanen had a goal and an assist in his debut for Dallas, which had its four-game winning streak stopped. Wyatt Johnston, Jamie Benn and Matt Dumba also scored for the Stars.
The days leading up to the 2025 NHL trade deadline were a furious final sprint as contenders looked to stock up for a postseason run while rebuilding clubs added prospects and draft capital.
After the overnight Brock Nelson blockbuster Thursday, Friday lived up to expectations, with Mikko Rantanen, Brad Marchand and other high-profile players finishing the day on different teams than they started with. All told, NHL teams made 24 trades on deadline day involving 47 players.
Which teams and players won the day? Who might not feel as well about the situation after trade season? Reporters Ryan S. Clark, Kristen Shilton and Greg Wyshynski identify the biggest winners and losers of the 2025 NHL trade deadline:
There are some who saw what the Carolina Hurricanes did at the trade deadline — or perhaps failed to do after they traded Mikko Rantanen — and believe they’re cooked when it comes to the Stanley Cup playoffs. However, based on the projections from Stathletes, the Canes remain the team with the highest chances of winning the Cup, at 16.7%.
Standing before them on Sunday are the Winnipeg Jets (5 p.m. ET, ESPN+). The Jets had a relatively quiet deadline, adding Luke Schenn and Brandon Tanev, though sometimes these additions are the types of small tweaks that can push a contender over the edge. As it stands, the Jets enter their showdown against the Canes with the sixth-highest Cup chances, at 8.7%.
Carolina has made two trips to the Cup Final: a loss to the Detroit Red Wings in 2002 and a win over the Edmonton Oilers in 2006. The Canes have reached the conference finals three times since (2009, 2019, 2023). Winnipeg has yet to make the Cup Final, and was defeated 4-1 in the 2018 Western Conference finals by the Vegas Golden Knights in the club’s lone trip to the penultimate stage.
Both clubs are due. Will this be their year?
There is a lot of runway left until the final day of the season on April 17, and we’ll help you keep track of it all here on the NHL playoff watch. As we traverse the final stretch, we’ll provide detail on all the playoff races — along with the teams jockeying for position in the 2025 NHL draft lottery.
Points: 43 Regulation wins: 12 Playoff position: N/A Games left: 17 Points pace: 54.3 Next game: vs. NSH (Tuesday) Playoff chances: ~0% Tragic number: 8
Race for the No. 1 pick
The NHL uses a draft lottery to determine the order of the first round, so the team that finishes in last place is not guaranteed the No. 1 selection. As of 2021, a team can move up a maximum of 10 spots if it wins the lottery, so only 11 teams are eligible for the draw for the No. 1 pick. Full details on the process can be found here. Sitting No. 1 on the draft board for this summer is Matthew Schaefer, a defenseman for the OHL’s Erie Otters.
SUNRISE, Fla. — Vitek Vanecek was traded to the Florida Panthers on Wednesday. By Saturday night, Panthers fans were already chanting his name.
Fans at Amerant Bank Arena screamed “Van-ny! Van-ny!” during a strong debut by the 29-year-old goaltender, who stopped all 21 shots he faced to help the Panthers beat the Buffalo Sabres 4-0 and extend their win streak to six straight games.
“I heard it, probably twice,” Vanecek said of the chants. “That’s really beautiful. The fans are great here. I mean, it’s my first game, but I played a couple times [here] on different teams. I know they’ve always been great.”
The former San Jose Sharks goalie recorded his first shutout of the season and the ninth of his career on Saturday in a dominant Panthers effort. Vanecek became just the third Florida goaltender to have a shutout in his debut, joining Chris Driedger (vs. Nashville on Nov. 30, 2019) and Jose Theodore (vs. the New York Islanders on Oct. 8, 2011).
“He had to make saves tonight,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said, “and tough saves. That team, they’ve got some offense, and they’re dangerous. And he earned that shutout.”
Vanecek was one of several acquisitions Florida made ahead of Friday’s NHL trade deadline, as the defending Stanley Cup champions gear up for a run at another Cup title.
Veteran stars Brad Marchand and Seth Jones were among Florida’s splashy new additions. But Vanecek — added for depth after Florida sent away goalie Spencer Knight in the trade for Jones — showed Saturday how he can be a boost behind two-time Vezina Trophy-winning starter Sergei Bobrovsky.
“He’s very efficient, very square like Sergei,” Maurice said. “I always found them to be fairly similar … efficient, square and calm, and then fight. Fight for pucks and in the scrums and battle, so there’s good compete in the net.”
Vanecek denied Buffalo’s Peyton Krebs on a breakaway in the first, then made a huge sliding save against the Sabres’ Ryan McLeod in the second. That’s when Panthers fans gave him an ovation and rowdy applause.
“Confidence builder right away for him,” said Vanecek’s former Sharks teammate Nico Sturm, who joined the Panthers in a separate trade this week. “You get your first win, your first game under your belt. And then it’s just all routine from here on out.”
The Sharks (17-38-9) are eighth in the Pacific Division and in a completely different situation than Florida (40-21-3), which is first in the Atlantic.
Sturm, who also made his debut on Saturday and got some action on special teams, said it felt nice to play meaningful hockey for the first time in a while.
“I haven’t won a lot of games in the last couple of years, unfortunately,” Sturm said. “And so I think for the role that I play, it means something — like it has an impact on the game. If you kill penalties and you still give up five goals in the game, it feels like your role’s a little bit irrelevant.
“But today, even though I’m not on the score sheet, we kill big penalties, get a big block, the team wins. That’s your reward. It feels good.”
Florida has recorded three shutouts in its past four games. The Panthers have allowed only one goal during that stretch — the first team to do that since the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2020-21 en route to their second consecutive Stanley Cup title.
And they’ve done it without one of their best players, star forward Matthew Tkachuk, who hasn’t played since the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament last month because of a lower-body injury and isn’t expected to be back for at least a few weeks.
Maurice credited this impressive stretch to the Panthers’ top-end veterans who have put in a lot of work with the team, but he noted those key acquisitions at the trade deadline made a big impact.
“All of the teams that are in that top three in their divisions, they all just got better,” Maurice said. “And we did, too. For us it was specific to our needs. So we got very, very good players that came in, in the holes that we needed filled. It makes a big difference.”