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The trade deadline for the 2024-25 NHL season is 3 p.m. ET on March 7. But the deals have been flying since the start of the season.

You’ll find information on every trade made since Oct. 6 here, including grades on all of the major ones. Follow along all the way through the deadline for the latest moves.

Trades are listed here, with the most recent ones first on the list.

More: Big Board
Contender flaws, solutions
Team-by-team guides
Grades for big trades

March 5

Lightning gets:
C Yanni Gourde, RW Oliver Bjorkstrand, D Kyle Aucoin, 2026 fifth-round pick, retain 50% of Gourde’s salary

Kraken get:
C Michael Eyssimont, 2025 second-round pick (TOR), 2026 first-round pick, 2027 first-round pick

Red Wings get:
Conditional 2025 fourth-round pick (TB or EDM), retain 25% of Gourde’s salary

Grades for the trade


Panthers get:
G Vitek Vanecek

Sharks get:
F Patrick Giles


March 4

Oilers get:
F Trent Frederic, F Max Jones, rights to prospect Petr Hauser

Bruins get:
D Max Wanner, 2025 second-round pick, 2026 fourth-round pick

Devils get:
Rights to prospect Shane Lachance

Grades for the trade


March 1

Panthers get:
D Seth Jones, 2026 fourth-round pick

Blackhawks get:
G Spencer Knight, conditional 2026 first-round pick

Grades for the trade


Wild gets:
RW Gustav Nyquist

Predators get:
2026 second-round pick

Grades for the trade


Avalanche gets:
D Ryan Lindgren, LW Jimmy Vesey, rights to prospect Hank Kempf

Rangers get:
D Calvin de Haan, C Juuso Parssinen, 2025 second-round pick, 2025 fourth-round pick

Grades for the trade


Feb. 27

Wild get:
C Tyler Madden

Kings get:
D Joseph Cecconi


Feb. 26

Predators get:
RW Jesse Ylonen

Lightning get:
C Anthony Angello


Feb. 25

Ducks get:
G Ville Husso

Red Wings get:
Future considerations


Feb. 18

Predators get:
LW Grigori Denisenko

Golden Knights get:
Future considerations


Feb. 13

Blues get:
RW Corey Andonovski

Penguins get:
RW Mathias Laferriere


Feb. 7

Predators get:
D Mark Friedman

Canucks get:
Future considerations


Feb. 3

Hockey Club gets:
C Sammy Walker

Wild gets:
Future considerations


Feb. 1

Stars get:
C Mikael Granlund, D Cody Ceci

Sharks get:
2025 first-round pick, conditional 2025 third-round pick

Grades for the trade


Jan. 31

Canucks get:
LW Drew O’Connor, D Marcus Pettersson

Penguins get:
D Vincent Desharnais, LW Danton Heinen, RW Melvin Fernstrom, 2025 first-round pick (NYR, top-13 protected)


Rangers get:
C J.T. Miller, D Erik Brannstrom, D Jackson Dorrington

Canucks get:
C Filip Chytil, D Victor Mancini, 2025 first-round pick (top-13 protected)

Grades for the trade


Flames get:
LW Joel Farabee, C Morgan Frost

Flyers get:
LW Andrei Kuzmenko, LW Jakob Pelletier, 2025 second-round pick, 2028 seventh-round pick

Grades for the trade


Jan. 27

Islanders get:
D Scott Perunovich

Blues get:
2026 fifth-round pick


Jan. 25

Hurricanes get:
RW Mikko Rantanen, LW Taylor Hall, RW Nils Juntorp

Avalanche gets:
C Martin Necas, C Jack Drury, 2025 second-round pick, 2026 fourth-round pick

Blackhawks get:
2025 third-round pick (CAR)

Grades for the trade


Rangers get:
RW Lucas Edmonds

Lightning gets:
C Ryder Korczak


Jan. 22

Ducks get:
RW Justin Bailey

Sharks get:
LW Pavol Regenda


Jan. 15

Blackhawks get:
D Dmitry Kuzmin

Jets get:
D Isaak Phillips


Dec. 28

Avalanche gets:
C Juuso Parssinen, 2026 seventh-round pick

Predators get:
C Ondrej Pavel, 2027 third-round pick


Dec. 18

Canadiens get:
D Alexandre Carrier

Predators get:
D Justin Barron


Penguins get:
D Pierre-Olivier Joseph

Blues get:
Future considerations


Kraken get:
RW Kaapo Kakko

Rangers get:
D Will Borgen, 2025 third-round pick, 2025 sixth-round pick

Grades for the trade


Dec. 14

Blues get:
D Cam Fowler, 2027 fourth-round pick

Ducks get:
D Jeremie Biakabatuka, 2027 second-round pick

Grades for the trade


Dec. 9

Avalanche gets:
G Mackenzie Blackwood, RW Givani Smith, 2027 fifth-round pick

Sharks get:
G Alexandar Georgiev, RW Nikolai Kovalenko, 2025 fifth-round pick, 2026 second-round pick

Grades for the trade


Dec. 6

Rangers get:
D Urho Vaakanainen, 2025 fourth-round pick

Ducks get:
D Jacob Trouba

Grades for the trade


Canadiens get:
D Noel Hoefenmayer

Oilers get:
RW Jacob Perreault


Nov. 30

Wild gets:
D David Jiricek, 2025 fifth-round pick

Blue Jackets get:
D Daemon Hunt, 2025 first-round pick, 2026 third-round pick, 2026 fourth-round pick, 2027 second-round pick

Grades for the trade


Predators get:
G Justus Annunen, 2025 sixth-round pick

Avalanche gets:
G Scott Wedgewood


Nov. 27

Predators get:
RW Ryder Rolston

Blackhawks get:
Future considerations


Nov. 25

Penguins get:
C Philip Tomasino

Predators get:
2027 fourth-round pick


Nov. 12

Capitals get:
C Lars Eller

Penguins get:
2025 fifth-round pick, 2027 third-round pick


Nov. 10

Kraken get:
RW Daniel Sprong

Canucks get:
Future considerations


Nov. 4

Oilers get:
D Ronnie Attard

Flyers get:
D Ben Gleason


Oct. 31

Hockey Club gets:
D Olli Maatta

Red Wings get:
2025 third-round pick


Oct. 30

Sharks get:
D Timothy Liljegren

Maple Leafs get:
2025 third-round pick, 2026 sixth-round pick


Oct. 6

Avalanche gets:
D Tucker Poolman, 2025 fourth-round pick

Canucks get:
D Erik Brannstrom

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Journalism opens as 8-5 favorite for Preakness

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Journalism opens as 8-5 favorite for Preakness

HALETHORPE, Md. — Journalism is the morning line favorite for the 150th running of the Preakness Stakes.

The Kentucky Derby runner-up to Sovereignty opened at odds of 8-5 on Monday night when post positions were drawn for the middle leg of horse racing’s Triple Crown. Journalism is again set to be ridden by jockey Umberto Rispoli and leave the starting gate from the No. 2 post.

Post time is set for 7:01 p.m. EDT on Saturday.

No. 7 Sandman is the 4-1 second choice in the field of nine, which does not include Sovereignty after his owners and trainer decided not to run the Derby winner two weeks after his triumph at Churchill Downs. The Preakness goes on without a true shot at a Triple Crown winner for a fifth time in seven years since Justify swept all three races in 2018.

Bob Baffert, who trained Justify and 2015 Triple Crown champion American Pharoah, is entering Goal Oriented looking for a record-extending ninth victory in the race. Fellow Hall of Famer D. Wayne Lukas can tie Baffert if he wins the Preakness back-to-back, this time with American Promise a year after Seize the Grey ended Mystik Dan’s Triple Crown bid.

There are three Derby horses running in the $2 million Preakness at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore: Journalism, American Promise and Sandman, the latter of whom will be ridden by John Velazquez for trainer Mark Casse. American Promise drew the No. 3 post and opened at odds of 15-1.

New to the Triple Crown trail, along with No. 1 Goal Oriented (6-1), are No. 4 Heart of Honor (12-1), No. 5 Pay Billy (20-1), No. 6 River Thames (9-2), No. 8 Clever Again (5-1) and No. 9 Gosger (20-1).

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U.S. shut out by Switzerland at hockey worlds

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U.S. shut out by Switzerland at hockey worlds

HERNING, Denmark — Switzerland, last year’s runner-up, shut out the United States 3-0 and handed the Americans their first loss at the ice hockey world championship Monday.

Damien Riat, Jonas Siegenthaler and Dean Kukan scored in the Group B game in Herning. Netminder Leonardo Genoni stopped 23 shots for the shutout.

“Give credit to Switzerland,” U.S. coach Ryan Warsofsky said. “But I know our group has a lot more in them. We’ll regroup and get ready to play Norway.”

Riat put Switzerland ahead with 7:14 remaining in the first period, redirecting the puck into the goal from the air. It was the first goal the U.S. conceded at the tournament.

The second followed 3:13 later by Siegenthaler from the blue line. Kukan’s came halfway through the final period from the top of the left circle.

“After the first goal we did a better job,” Swiss forward Kevin Fiala said. “We got into it more and more, and shut them out.”

Fiala recorded an assist in his first game at the worlds. He joined the Swiss late after his Los Angeles Kings were eliminated from the NHL playoffs in the first round.

U.S. goalie Joey Daccord made 24 saves.

The U.S., which beat Denmark 5-0 and Hungary 6-0 in its first two games, will next face Norway on Wednesday.

In other games, Martin Necas had two goals and David Pastrnak had a goal and two assists as the defending champion Czech Republic used a four-goal middle period to ease past Denmark 7-2.

Nick Olesen also had a goal and an assist for Denmark.

In Stockholm, Sweden topped archrival Finland 2-1 on goals from Leo Carlsson and Jonas Brodin for a third victory in regulation from three games.

Austria defeated Slovakia 3-2 in a penalty shootout.

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Leafs’ Domi fined $5K for hit to Panthers’ Barkov

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Leafs' Domi fined K for hit to Panthers' Barkov

Toronto Maple Leafs forward Max Domi was fined $5,000 — the maximum amount allowed by the league’s collective bargaining agreement — for boarding Florida Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov as time expired in Game 4 of their second-round Eastern Conference playoff series Sunday.

Toronto was trailing 2-0 when the final buzzer sounded, and Domi hit Barkov from behind, sending him headfirst into the boards. Domi was given a minor penalty for boarding at the time while several other scrums broke out before officials moved players off the ice.

Florida’s victory evened the best-of-seven series at 2-all. Game 5 is set for Wednesday in Toronto.

Toronto coach Craig Berube didn’t comment on the Domi hit directly Monday, but he did say he thought Dmitry Kulikov‘s hit on Mitch Marner “was way worse”

On that play, the Panthers defenseman caught Marner up high with an elbow, leaving the Leafs forward momentarily dazed. No penalty was called on Kulikov.

It wasn’t the first elbowing incident to draw attention in the series.

In Game 1, Panthers forward Sam Bennett sent an elbow to the head of Leafs netminder Anthony Stolarz shortly before Stolarz left the game. He was later hospitalized for further evaluation and hasn’t been able to resume skating since. There is currently no timeline for his return.

The physical intensity of the series might continue to rise now that it’s down to being a best-of-three. Based on how Game 4 played out, the Leafs are prepared to push back when they host Florida on Wednesday.

“We expected [the physicality], and I think we’re fine with it,” Berube said. “We’re handling it. We’re physical. I thought we were the more physical team [in Game 4].”

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