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The Vegas Golden Knights are the 2023 Stanley Cup champions. As the offseason gets rolling in earnest with the start of free agency, all 32 NHL general managers will be looking to make the moves necessary for their players to be hoisting the sacred chalice next June.

One method is free agency, another is the draft, and another is by making trades with their fellow GMs.

We’re tracking that third avenue here with an updated tracker listing all the deals made since the start of the offseason, and links to grades for the most high-profile swaps.

Note that deals are listed with the most recent ones on top, and this page will continue to be updated all summer.


July 1

Devils get: D Colin Miller
Stars get: 2025 fifth-round pick

Capitals get: D Joel Edmundson
Canadiens get: 2024 third-round pick (MIN), 2024 seventh-round pick

June 29

Blackhawks get: F Corey Perry
Lightning get: 2024 seventh-round pick

Trade details

Red Wings get: F Kailer Yamamoto, F Klim Kostin
Oilers get: Future considerations

Trade details

Blackhawks get: F Josh Bailey, 2026 second-round pick
Islanders get: Future considerations

Trade details


June 28

Penguins get: F Reilly Smith
Golden Knights get: 2024 third-round pick

Trade details

Avalanche get: F Ross Colton
Lightning get: 2023 second-round pick

Trade details


June 27

Devils get: F Tyler Toffoli
Flames get: F Yegor Sharangovich, 2023 third-round pick

Trade details | Trade grades

Sharks get: G MacKenzie Blackwood
Devils get: 2023 sixth-round pick

Ducks get: F Andrew Agozzino
Sharks get: D Andrej Sustr

Kings get: F Pierre-Luc Dubois
Jets get: F Alex Iafallo, F Rasmus Kupari, F Gabriel Vilardi, 2024 second-round pick

Trade details | Trade grades

Canadiens get: F Alex Newhook
Avalanche get: 2023 first-round pick, 2023 second-round pick, F Gianni Fairbrother

Trade details

Blues get: F Kevin Hayes
Flyers get: 2024 sixth-round pick

Trade details


June 26

Blackhawks get: F Taylor Hall, F Nick Foligno
Bruins get: D Ian Mitchell, D Alec Regula

Trade details | Trade grades


June 24

Coyotes get: D Sean Durzi
Kings get: 2024 second-round pick

Avalanche get: F Ryan Johansen
Predators get: F Alex Galchenyuk

Trade details | Trade grades


June 15

Avalanche get: F Fredrik Olofsson
Stars get: Future considerations


June 9

Blue Jackets get: D Damon Severson
Devils get: 2023 third-round pick

Trade details


June 6

Blue Jackets get: D Ivan Provorov
Flyers get: D Helge Grans, G Cal Petersen, D Sean Walker, 2023 first-round pick, 2024 second-round pick, conditional 2024 second-round pick
Kings get: D Kevin Connauton, F Hayden Hodgson

Trade details

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‘Hit all our goals’: Yanks’ Cole throws 2 innings

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'Hit all our goals': Yanks' Cole throws 2 innings

TAMPA, Fla. — New York Yankees ace Gerrit Cole is pleased with his comeback progression from a right elbow injury after throwing two, 15-pitch innings in a simulated game on Saturday.

Cole faced minor league hitters on Derek Jeter Field in front of his family and a large gathering of rookie-level players at the Yankees’ player development complex in Tampa, Florida.

“We hit all our goals,” Cole said. “We did exactly what we wanted to do today. Threw a lot of strikes, so pretty good.”

Cole threw to hitters for the first time since spring training before Tuesday night’s game with Seattle at Yankee Stadium. The reigning AL Cy Young Award winner is looking to face hitters again in about five days.

“Get after the recovery and try to get back on the bump middle next week,” Cole said.

Cole, 33, made one spring training start, on March 1, and the Yankees announced 10 days later the right-hander’s elbow was ailing. He was diagnosed with nerve inflammation and edema and told to rest.

He didn’t throw off a mound again until May 5, the first of five bullpen sessions leading up to his initial session against hitters.

Cole likely would need four or five minor league starts before rejoining the Yankees, a timeline that makes a late June return possible. The right-hander said he didn’t know yet when he would start a minor league assignment.

JT Brubaker threw a pair of simulated innings in his rehab program following Tommy John surgery in April 2023. The Yankees acquired the right-hander from Pittsburgh in March. Brubaker was the Pirates’ Opening Day starter in 2022.

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Diaz still ‘our closer’ after another blown save

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Diaz still 'our closer' after another blown save

NEW YORK — The trumpets sounded just after 4 p.m. Saturday at Citi Field as Edwin Diaz emerged from the bullpen. Fans cheered and danced to the walk-out song popularized during the closer’s dominant 2022 season. They cheered again when he was introduced as the New York Mets‘ pitcher in the ninth inning with a one-run lead over the San Francisco Giants.

Diaz, after a weeklong role demotion, was closing a game again in Queens like old times. But these aren’t like old times for Diaz.

His recent disastrous stretch as closer continued Saturday with another blown save, this time on LaMonte Wade Jr.’s one-out RBI single that ultimately pushed the game to extra innings. The Giants then erupted for five runs in the 10th inning for their second straight comeback victory to open the series, this one a 7-2 decision.

Diaz has now squandered a lead in four straight ninth-inning appearances. He hasn’t successfully saved a game since May 6. He has four blown saves in nine chances this season.

“He’s our closer,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said after his team fell to 21-30 with the loss. “In order for us to win games and get to where we want to get to, he’s got to pitch. And I felt like that was the right spot.”

The Mets have lost five straight games and 12 of their past 15. They’re 6-16 in May, and falling out of the postseason picture fast. Different departments have faltered over the stretch, but their $102-million closer’s struggles have been the most prominent.

“Yeah, I think so,” Diaz, 30, said when asked if he felt he was still the team’s closer. “I think I got to do my job better, obviously, but I feel like I’m the guy in the ninth inning like they always say. I feel like that. And I’m ready. When they give me the ball in the ninth, I will do my job.”

Saturday’s outing was Diaz’s first appearance in a ninth inning since he gave up four runs and recorded one out against the Miami Marlins last Saturday. After the game, Diaz, who had blown saves in his previous two outings, admitted his confidence was “low” and broke down in tears.

The stretch spurred the Mets to not have Diaz pitch in their three-game series against the Cleveland Guardians during the week. Instead, he threw bullpen sessions as the Mets got swept. He focused on commanding his glove-side fastball and slider, and pitching with conviction again.

Diaz returned to the mound Friday at Citi Field, tossed a scoreless seventh inning against the Giants in a lower-leverage situation designed to rebuild his confidence. Díaz emerged hopeful that he was back on track. Less than 24 hours later, he was on the mound again.

Wilmer Flores ambushed Díaz with a single through the right side on his first pitch. Moments later, pinch-runner Ryan McKenna stole second base. Then, with one out, Wade delivered the tying single to right field.

“The game is not lost in the last ninth inning,” Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor said. “It seems like every day we’re losing games in one inning, but we have to look at the whole entire game. It’s just a little bit unfair that it falls on him, the closer.”

The results were different from Friday, but Diaz insisted he felt and executed better.

“I’m fine. I’m good. I think I threw really good pitches,” Diaz said. “That’s what I want to do. The results didn’t go my way, but how I performed on the mound, how I looked, how I felt, was way better than last week.”

Diaz was dominant in 2022, his best season as a major leaguer. He posted a 1.31 ERA, 2.97 ERA, 0.90 FIP, and 0.839 WHIP in 61 appearances. He was an All-Star. He finished ninth in the Cy Young race and 16th in MVP voting. Then he suffered a season-ending patellar tendon tear in his right knee celebrating a win for Puerto Rico in the World Baseball Classic in March 2023. The freak injury marked the beginning of a disappointing 2023 season for the Mets.

The 2024 campaign is following a similar path but, this time, with Diaz healthy.

“He’s got to continue to pitch,” Mendoza said. “My job is to continue to find lanes for him and we’ve got to fight through it. You can’t hide him. He’s got to go, he’s got to pitch. He’s too good of a pitcher and we’re pretty confident that he’ll turn it around.”

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O’s acquire reliever Vieira in trade with Brewers

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O's acquire reliever Vieira in trade with Brewers

CHICAGO — The Baltimore Orioles acquired reliever Thyago Vieira in a trade with the Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday.

Baltimore got Vieira and minor league pitcher Aneuris Rodriguez from Milwaukee for minor league right-hander Garrett Stallings.

Vieira, 31, had no record and a 5.64 ERA in 16 appearances with Milwaukee this season before he was designated for assignment Monday. The right-hander is 2-2 with two saves and a 6.18 ERA in 41 career big league appearances, also playing for Seattle and the Chicago White Sox.

Stallings, 26, was a fifth-round pick by the Los Angeles Angels in the 2019 amateur draft. He went 0-1 with a 5.67 ERA in 11 games, four starts, for Triple-A Norfolk this season.

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