Seems a bit crazy to not have the Patrick Roy trade for the Habs as the worst in franchise history. They probably could’ve won another cup without making that trade
Agree 100%. The two preeminent goalies from that era were Roy and Hasek. They alone could keep a team halfway competitive. That’s value you can’t even quantify.
That's what I was thinking. Hockey is my major weak point in the four sports but even I know about the mess they made for themselves with Roy. Not to mention the immediate impact it had for the Avs
The habs didnt have a choice patrick himself said im leaving straight on bench during the last played game wich made tv, because of his absolutly toxic relations with the coach mario tremblay it was all over the place in quebec.heck in 2021 uber eats managed to get them to forgive and forget and launch a series of food commercial ta set the quebec hockey on fire for finaly putting it behind them. Wasnt a trade it was a player slamming the door and leaving.
Completely disagree about the Capitals -- 2004 was a fire sale year once they fired Bruce Cassidy. It yielded Alex Ovechkin. The worst trade the Capitals made was in 2013 with the Nashville Predators: Martin Erat for Filip Forsberg.
The mistake was the Coach not the Trade. Roy was left in for an 8 Goal Shellacking. That made Roy demand a Trade. Montreal got lucky they made a Trade so quickly.
@@andrewheffelbower9807 The smart move would have been to IMMEDIATELY fire Mario Tremblay. (And I was an avid Montreal hater, so I basically jumped for joy when the drama was unfolding, hahah)
Honestly the Fleury trade wasn't that bad in hindsight and made a lot of sense. We traded him for cap space not for nothing. Vegas won't have their Cup without that trade. Their worst trade imo, is trading a 1st, 2nd, and 3rd for Tomas Tatar
@@jameskillbot2867 most knew lehner was a headcase by then. Talented but mental. Fluery was a result of a series of moves trying to “go for it” eventually it worked out but no one would’ve predicted quite like this
the thornton trade actually helped the bruins, it allowed bergeron to become the 1st center and krejci to become the 2nd center, allowed them to sign chara and then they won the cup after that.
this channel is one of the worst on youtube they spread alot of lies they dont do their research ..... this channel did a video on the eric lindros trade but didnt even mention they got peteer forsberg in the trade they dont do any resaerch their not even real hockey history fans otherwise theyd know about the lindros trade .. they have horrible opinions. they basically just recycle information without fact checking or knowing what their doing their is no point in watching this channel
The Thornton trade looks good in the long run, because the B's won the Cup and Thornton did not. They also let go of Kessel and Seguin before they were household names. A lot of talent just thrown out the window on a whim. By all rights, moves like that shouldn't have won the B's anything....And yet, Tim Thomas came out of nowhere, stood on his head in all directions, up down and sideways, and willed that team to a Cup. I can only imagine how truly great those B's teams would've been if they had kept everyone.
If you're going put the Gretzky deal as a trade and not a sale, then for Pittsburgh their worst would have to be the Jagr deal to the Caps for prospects and a little cash, which was made to keep the team from going bankrupt, being sold, and possibly moved out of Pittsburgh. It was both a franchise saving move and the worst trade in their history.
It's also worth noting that the Penguins *ALLEGEDLY* had a deal with the Rangers that would've netted them guys who were actually decent, but Patrick shot it down due to a grudge with Sather. That said, the Jagr trade was lose-lose because the Caps went nowhere with Jagr
Yeah, The Caps were a defensive team - why in the world Jagr and his agent made that choice is still a wonder, but it was clearly a mistake. LOL: Then the Caps brought in Lang from the Pens to give Jags someone to work with - that worked even worse. At least the Caps finally started to show willingness to spend $$ to get a ring - of course it took them 18 more years and they should have won more - they were never "big on bright" - even to this day, but that's another story :-)
The Jagr trade was a win for Pittsburgh, it KEPT THE TEAM IN PITTSBURGH! Why the hell does someone have to point that out? The Caps went nowhere and the Penguins stayed in Pittsburgh, Mario bought the team and then drafted Crosby and won 3 Cups! How the hell is that lose-lose!? Commenting on social media needs to be tied to ones IQ@@valpix7007
There is a far worse Blackhawks trade. Phil Esposito to the Bruins for Pit Martin and a.couple other pieces. Pretty much the Chicago version of trading away Joe Thornton, with the added pain of Boston getting a couple of cups out of it.
i read somewhere that Blackhawks wanted Gilles Marotte unfortunately his career was derailed by injuries. Martin was good but not Phil Esposito good. the oddball was there was a goalie involved who played maybe 2 games for Chicago and then basically disappeared from the NHL. why they included him i have no idea.
However Garland (who I suspect is who you mean) doesn't cover the fact that the Canucks now have a massive cap hit that will be hanging around until 2030. And they could have had a ton of money come off their payroll if they'd just waited one year longer. @@Crosby4ever
Especially because it allowed the Yotes to get back into the first round and draft Dylan Guenther and had them take on a lot of expiring contracts so they weren't in cap hell for much longer.
Exactly. Any discussion of 'worst' trades has to consider the fact that we're in a hard cap environment now, and the cap has as much, if not more, of an impact than the quality of the players. @@ITDBruins
The Blues to me made a lot of the worst trades ever. Having Mike Keenan as coach who his own players despised, turned a franchise that made the playoffs EVERY YEAR and could have won many stanley cups, into a unmotivated underperforming team that would always lose by round 2. They should have had it all, I mean they had Pronger AND Macinnis who won back to back Norris, and barely made the conference finals 1 time in a decade.... the Shanahan Janney thing hurt them a lot too but, Hull wanting to leave hurt them more. Adam Oates and Rod Brind'Amour being there long term, man. That franchise reeeeaaallllyyy should have many stanley cups.... 25 years in the playoffs in a row and I believe ONLY 2 conference finals, that's it.
I personally think the Ottawa/Colorado/Nashville trade in 2017 was the worst for the Predators. It was clear (and had been for a while) that David Poile wanted to bring in Duchene who had also expressed wanting to play in Nashville, but the best Poile could do was acquire Kyle Turris who was immediately signed to a six year contract in the same day. By the second year into the deal Turris was noticeably struggling, and to make things even murkier, Poile signed Duchene in the 2019 offseason making Turris mostly redundant on a roster that by then included Ryan Johansen, Duchene, and Nick Bonino which effectively made Turris a $6M/year third liner at best or a 4th line center at worst. After just the third year into his contract the Preds bought Turris out. Meanwhile Colorado got a major injection of young talent and prospects into their promising rebuild including Sam Girard from Nashville who has continued to do well and won the cup with them. The Predators are still currently paying Turris $2M a year and will until 2028. I think this trade is worse than the Johansen/Jones trade because while Johansen did not become the true first line center as advertised/hoped, he was still a more-than-serviceable player who made a big impact during their cup window, and I don't think it's fair to factor in the 8x8M contract extension into the choice as that came to pass a year after the trade itself and following the Stanley Cup Final run. That extension could be up for debate as one of the worst contracts that the Predators ever signed though.
A little befuddled that any Canadiens trade would get the nod over Patrick Roy. That trade was so devastating, that no team residing in Canada has won a Stanley Cup since. Don't be surprised if they name a Cup-drought curse after him 30 years from now.
@@lilwoodiewood3457facts are facts man. His contract was sold in order to save the oilers because pocklington was mismanaging finances and if you listen to quotes from Gretzky now he will say the same thing: “First off I was not traded, I was sold to the kings” He’s been asked this a few times on wether the oilers owner will keep mcdavid. I’m just drawing a blank on his name right now I have no emotional ties to the Gretzky trade as I wasn’t even born yet Sounds like you might need a hug
@@codycassel8996do you really think a owner would be that dumb to trade the best player in the game? I don’t think so. Pocklington needed to sell Gretzky to the kings in order to keep the team in Edmonton. Read my above comment a little more closely
Well if you believe in conspiracies the oilers owner was strong armed by the league to trade Gretzky because they were trying to grow the game in the southern United States.
Pretty rough start to a video when you begin with Anaheim and state, outright, that their worst trade resulted in them acquiring a player who played in parts of 14 seasons for the team and scoring almost 400 goals and winning a Hart and a Richard trophy, in exchange for 4 seasons of a player, during which said player scored a total of 80 goals... sounds like a win for Anaheim.
I still say the Oilers sold Gretzky for $15M. And even though Pocklington didn't want to go through with trading Gretzky, his businesses were in desperate need of money. There is a documentary where McNall and Pocklington were interviewed and they discussed the process of the sale and accompanying trade. So Gretzky was not traded, but he asked for McSorley and Krush to join him in LA, which led to the trade for the package of players and prospects. Luongo would ultimately return to Florida for the final years of his playing career, bringing it full circle. Not only did Columbus acquiring Jeff Carter backfire on them, but so did their decision to trade him to LA and how the return didn't work out for them. The Sittler trade was the final step in Harold Ballard's master plan to finally get rid of him. Not only did the Islanders give up on Chara too soon, but so did Ottawa, as they sent him to Boston not long after acquiring him.
This has to rank as the worst trade in Detroit Red Wings history. Consider this pre-1970 trade between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings. February 10, 1960: Red Kelly was traded by the Detroit Red Wings to the Toronto Maple Leafs for Marc Reaume. Kelly won 4 Stanley Cups with Detroit between 1949 and 1955. He was first team all star 6 times and second team all star twice in the 8 years between 1949-57 as a defenseman. He was the first winner of the Norris Trophy. Montreal won five straight cups between 1956-60. Toronto's GM, Punch Imlach, knew he needed a great center to go against Montreal's Jean Beliveau if Toronto had any chance of winning a cup in the 1960s. Since Kelly was a great skater Imlach convinced Kelly to move from all-star defenseman to Center. Toronto won Stanley Cups in 1962, 63, 64 and 67 with Kelly at Center. Red Kelly won a total of 8 Stanley Cups in his career (tied with Maurice Richard, Serge Savard and Jacques Lemaire). Only Henri Richard (11) Jean Beliveau (10), Yvan Cournoyer (10) and Claude Provost (9) have won more as players.
I can think of a tree that was worse than the Darryl Sittler one…. How about training their 1991 first round pick for Tom Kurvers…. Tom Kurvers ended up being a bum, and that first round pick they traded away, turned into Scott Niedermayer. One of the greatest defencemen of all time.
@@AlbertTheM00SE rask never played a second in the playoffs when boston won a cup .. that trade didnt win boston a cup .. rask played like 25 games that year and wasnt that good at all didnt play a second in the playoffs thomas won that cup he still wouldve won it with any other backup goalie in the league .. the reason the bruins won that trade isnt because they won a cup ... its because rask was their starting goalie for a decade and was a star and went to the finals twice and lost which isnt a bad thing its better then not making it to the finals like pogge never did
lol Johansen trade was good for Nashville, ask any preds fan they will say the same. Preds don't make it to the finals in 2017 and don't win President Trophy in 2018 without Johansen. Look at his playoffs stats in his 3 first season in Nashville. Plus Weber/Subban and Ellis were always better than Seth Jones has ever been
Sure Jones developed into a very good D-man, but it’s not like the Blue Jackets made a deep run in the playoffs with him. He’s not even with that organization anymore, he’s an alternate captain for a rebuilding Blackhawks team.
@@DarkLobster69I think he could've if he had been the 1st RHD on a bigger market. Here he was in the shadow of Josi and Weber/Subban. I personnally think he was the most valuable Preds Dman in the 2017 run and could have gotten a shot at the Norris if he didn't get injured in 2018
As a Caps fans I gotta say the Lang trade wasn't even close to being a bad deal (see Dino Ciccarelli or Filip Forsberg for examples of terrible Caps trades) they got a pretty decent return on Lang in picks and a serviceable nhl winger. The Caps were looking to rebuild at that time and front office was pretty certain there was going to be a work stoppage in the near future (turned out to be a whole year) giving them lots of time to get those picks ready for the nhl.
I agree with this. The Lang trade really needs to be looked at with context. The Caps had tried to go all in by acquiring Jaromir Jagr and some other veterans, but after 2.5 years it went nowhere. They knew they couldn't win with their core, so they sold hard. Peter Bondra, Sergei Gonchar, Steve Konowalchuk, Jagr, Michael Nylander, Mike Grier, and Robert Lang were all sold off. It didn't matter what they got in return; the objective was clear: tank for Ovechkin. Many of our sold off veterans went on to have great success after the trade, but in the end, the Capitals walked away with their grand prize, and the rest is history. The Forsberg trade remains the worst trade for me. If the Caps had held onto him, who knows what they could have accomplished.
Espo was just part of it. Hodge turned into a 50 goal scorer. Stanfield is overlooked, but with Sanderson, he became half of the best penalty killing line in the league. Fred Stanfield was a great player.
Drafting Corey Perry as a direct result of a trade, instantly makes that trade decent. If that's actually Anaheim's worst ever trade, they've done great overall.
Kessel for picks that led to Seguin and Hamilton is the worst leafs trade ever. That trade set the leafs who were supposed to be rebuilding back by another 5 years.
For the Sharks it’s the Karlsson trade bar none. We had already had Burns so it didn’t make sense in the first place. Gave up a good 3C in Chris Tierney, Rudolf Balcers, Dylan Demelo who’s a good depth D-Man, Josh Norris who was the best prospect we had and put up 35 goals his sophomore NHL season with Ottawa even though right now he’s having a third shoulder surgery, and a 2020 1st rounder that after the Sharks fell so hard after signing Karlsson that it ended up being a #3 Overall selection who Ottawa used to select the best player of that draft Tim Stutzle. The San Jose Sharks were never the same. We continued to fall, and have now sold off every player that was tradeable and for the second season in a row are a basement dweller. This wasn’t entirely Karlssons fault but that trade expedited a basement dweller of a team that is stripping everything down to the frame before rebuilding again. Worst trade ever for the Sharks.
Fleury was not the reason VGK didn't make the playoffs that season, they suffered lots of injuries, and Deboer was not the best coach for the job to take the team to Stanley Cup glory. They needed the cap space and they did what they had to do. Yea it sucks the way they did Fleury dirty, as well as shipping off other big name misfits like Nate Schmidt and the Reilly Smith, but VGK is currently vindicated in their ruthlessness with a cup and an NHL Record for undefeated defending cup champion with its current team. Wouldn't be surprise if they Back to Back this year and other teams start adopting the same ruthlessness of just dumping players to free cap space and get draft picks.
Smith was a cap casualty last offseason, so they got a draft pick for him at least. Plus, they needed space to extend Hill and Barbashev who were important in their cup run.
Explain to me how anaheims trade was bad? They traded a player and got Corey Perry in the end…and the player returned for a resurgence….that’s a great trade
All about relative values. They didn’t trade for Perry, they traded for a pick, that they flipped with another pick for a pick, and took Perry. And the idea is trading away a player of Selänne’s caliber and not getting anything of significant value back in return is pretty bad.
this guy dosent know anything about hockey thier unfit to do this stuff they made a video on the lindros tradebut didnt even ention it lead to the aves getting forsberg and roy i feel like any hockey fan that actually pays attention knows about this
You completely missed THE WORST trade in NHL history. Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge, and Fred Stanfield to Boston for Pit Martin and a couple of guys you've never heard of. One of the top 5 scorers of all time, along with two all-stars, in return for one all-star.
I totally agree the other two players were Gilles Marotte and Jack Norris that the Blackhawks got. that trade gave the Bruins two Stanley Cups in 1970 and 1972. even Bobby Orr mention if it wasn't for that trade they might have not won those cups.
You have to remember, this is a millennial making this list and to them nothing happened before 1990 or else they would have said the worst Flyers trade was trading Bernie Parent for Bruce Gamble.
I can't believe you never mentioned the Erat-Forsberg and Jeannot trades. I think these were way worse than the Lang and Richards traded, especially given the circumstances explained in this very video
I was thinking the same. Erat has been out of the NHL since 2015, and we all know what kind of career foresberg has had to this point. I understand that Washington was in win now mode, and sometimes you need to take risks, but I have a hard time understanding that trading away a prospect that was probably projected to have a high ceiling of talent was your best option to get 2 average players at the end of their careers.
Maybe you should do a best deals/trades . I would think one of if not the top of the list for best deal would be Detroit getting Selke trophy winning Kris Draper from Winnipeg for $1 !
You also have to mention that when the Ducks traded Jeff Friesen to the Devils, even though both teams benefited, he was ultimately the one who scored the series winning goals against the Ducks in the 2003 SCF Game 7.
The worst “trade” in Blues history is anything in the 1990s involving Vancouver. In the span of 2 years, the Blues traded Geoff Courtnall, Sergio Momesso, Cliff Ronning, Robert Dirk, Jeff Brown, Bret Hetican and Nathan LaFayette to the Canucks in exchange for Petr Nedved, Dan Quinn and Garth Butcher. Pat Quinn had to have had pictures of Bob Berry with a goat or something.
I was coming here to say the same. Brindamour was fine but those two trades with Vancouver probably cost the Blues a cup run in each of those years. There's no question they f-ed up the team chemistry and were both terrible trades.
@@zlinedavidDepth scoring always wins in the playoffs and Vancouver got all of the Blues depth scorers in the 90’s and the Canucks playoff success speaks volumes of just how important depth scoring is.
@@BobbyBoucher228 Absolutely. At the top level, the Canucks and Blues of the mid-90s had comparable talent. Linden/Bure were comparable to Hull/Shanahan, and CuJo was actually a notch better than McLean. But Vancouver could roll 4 lines out one after the other after the other and just wear teams out. Once you got past the Blues’ first two lines, it was a pretty steep drop.
@@zlinedavid You’re spot on and when the Blues finally won a cup in 2019 they learned their lesson from their failures in the 90’s by having effectively 2 2nd lines and 2 3rd lines that would just wear teams out as each series progressed. It’s the same reason I believe why a team like Toronto that is so top heavy will never win a cup with their Roster constructed how it is since the most elite teams in the playoffs can just shutdown their top 6 and what’s left after that is a non factor for them.
I think Vegas looked down it's pipeline and saw some future gems to man the net. Keeping Fleury would have stalled that and it was a good move all around
8:21 King Jeremy the wicked!!! Loved JR here in Phoenix, my second home town and second team (well, Yotes used to be my second team.... freaking embarrassing). Then....I was even more happy when JR went to Philly, my most favorite team ever😉.... as a FA! I watched JR, here in Phoenix when he was with the Flyers in a game.... Take the puck behind the goalie, skated coast to coast but ...when he got to the boards by the center line, two Yotes tried to pinch him. Somehow, he switch to skating backwards to slip past the two Yotes, never losing the puck and switch back to forward skating, took it to the net beating two more Yotes and went backhand forehand backhand to score! It was like watching an angle skate...lol. he was flying 3" above the ice...or so it seemed. I looked and could see four Yotes, looking at each other just shaking their heads. As if they were all saying...."how in the hell are we supposed to stop that????" It was pure hockey magic! Freaking loved watching JR skate and just play the game with such intensity. A gamer! Still one of my all time favorite players, Flyer and Yote! King Jeremy the wicked! About damn time he made it to the Hall of fame!!!!
As a Vegas fan, I was all for the Fleury trade. If it wasn't for it, we probably wouldn't have won the Cup. Most importantly, it got rid of that hack agent of his being associated with this team, with all connections cut the year after when they booted Max Injur-etty.
Your unfamiliarity with the Hasek trade shows. He was not going to play for Buffalo anymore and would not let Detroit get stripped to be uncompetitive. He brokered the deal. And why are you showing Lanny McDonald when talking about Darryl Sittler?
ALL of us in Vegas were pissed about the Fleury trade. His agent got into a pissing match with the coach, so MAF was a casualty of their bad blood. We still miss Flower!
While the B's trade of Joe Thornton looks horrible from a glance, you have to realize that trade allowed Boston to get Bergeron and Krejci minutes as Top 6 centers, it also cleared the cap space needed to sign Zdeno Chara.
Why isn't Roy's trade set as the worst for the Canadiens? Even if they were forced to do it, the impact was much worst than the trade with Gomez. Just like Gretzky's trade, they were forced to trade him for financial reasons. Roy was traded for... different reasons!
AND to make matters worse he helps the new Avs team (their first season) win their cup. I watched all of that live and could not believe it. I was a huge Forsberg fan and to see Roy come to Avalanche was beyond LOL stacked. That HAS TO BE the worst trade in Canadiens history
100% i was thinking that it would be there on the list. They basically gave away a Hall of Famer because of beef with him and the coach lmao. (Im not laughing as Im from Mtl)
As much as I hated to see Sittler go (and McDonald for that matter due to awful and vindictive ownership and management) I think two trades are worse. Giving up the draft pick that turned into Scott Niedermeyer and trading Rask for Rycroft
Im not sure why jumbo gettin traded from boston was bad looking back since the bruins made 3 appearances in the final after parting ways with him in 2011, 2013 and 2019 and the sharks eventually did in 2016 along with conference final runs in 2010, 2011 and 2019 as well?
Lifelong B’s fan here. Thornton was unhappy in Boston and his play showed it. I’m glad he made a soft landing and extended his career in stellar fashion.
It might be recency bias but worst for the caps would be trading away Filip Forsberg for Martin Erat. At least the Lang trade brought back good players in Fleischmann and Green.
The problem with that one though is Forsberg really didnt have a defined role and spot in Washington. Nashville was just so much better suited for him in every way. Better development system, better play style for his skills.
This video is lazily done. While San Jose got the far better end of the deal in the Joe Thornton trade, Boston also won the trade because it was addition by subtraction. Trading away Joe and his nearly 7 million a year salary freed up the cap space for Boston to sign Zdeno Chara just one year later. He became the captain and leader Boston needed, and he won them a cup just 4 years later. So while Boston lost the trade on paper, they ultimately won the trade by freeing up cap space to get the captain that took them to the promised land.
u know what this guy got wrong tho .he made a video on the eric lindros trade but forget to mention how it lead to the aves getting forsberg via one of the draft picks and roy by trading one fo the draft picks from th elindros trade
Oh no. Im sorry man but this video needed a bit more research on the Bruins trade. As a Bruins fan I used to think it was a terrible trade too until I found out that we traded away Thornton so that we would have enough to pay Patrice Bergeron when he was , so you were correct that the Bruins wanted to move in a differenr direction. This was a cap dump and we took 3 players that wouldnt take up too much cap space. It was 1000% the correct decision and was not our worst trade. I would argue that honor belongs to Tyler Seguin.
I’d honestly say that the Kunitz trade for the Ducks was way worse as he became a very good role player for the penguins in 2009 and 2017. Maybe if the Ducks kept him around they might’ve been in the 2017 Stanley Cup finals instead of the Predators.
Part 2 on Nashville: RyJo was later traded to Colorado at 50% retention in exchange for an older, beat up Alex Galchenyuk, who Nashville never signed. Meanwhile, Johansen became a key player on Colorado's power play and scored 4 goals in his first 6 games with his new team.
I’m an Avs fan and he’s been huge for us. When that trade happened I was confused but I’m only assuming they planned to buy him out so figure it was the cheaper rout
@@jakeheerwagen8007 I'm also an Avs fan, and I agree he's been great! When I first saw the trade, my instant reaction was YEEEEESSSSSSS! Also wth is Nashville doing? But then we saw them dismantle the rest of their core so yeah
What a second.... You mean to tell me Future Considerations has a name and that name is Kent Strong??? Does THG know about this lol Great video. Enjoying your channel. Best of luck to you in the New Year
5:37 "On January 2, 1992, the Calgary Flames made a trade that would go down as THE worst trade in franchise history." I certainly did not expect that from a video titled "The WORST Trades For All 32 NHL Teams".
Mcdonagh in front of Roy exchange for the habs?? If feels like you search a bit too far just for education purpose. Yeah this trade was bad, but it was the beginning of the end for Montreal after the Roy trade. The longest we ( yeah I’m from Montreal ) went without a cup was 7 years. Since Roy has been traded, wow it hurts to think about it…. It’s now been 30 years since our last Stanley cup. Nothing left to say.
Surprisingly, you didn't highlight the Caps Forsberg for Erat in a one-for-one. Another trade the Caps were involved in was for Dale Hunter and Clint Malarchuk from Quebec. In return, the Capitals gave up center Alan Haworth, left-wing Gaetan Duchesne, and their first-round pick of that year. That first round pick was used on drafting none other than Joe Sakic.
sakic was a mid round first to act like they traded him is dumb he wasnt a top 5 pick if it was id agree .... u traded the 15th overall pick not sakic thats liike saying hey my team traded a 4th round pick and these guys drafted a good player tha mmeans its a bad trade
@@lilwoodiewood3457 I get what you are saying. However, my point was based on the player Sakic would become. Now, I probably can guess the Caps would not have drafted him, but it's a thought of him playing in DC.
How exactly is the caps trading Lang a bad move? Lang was 34 on a bad team, the capitals wanted to rebuild, so they got a decent return for him in a 1st that ended up being Mike Green in the same year they won the draft lottery and got Ovi. That’s a pretty great trade off if you ask me especially with the hindsight of the regular season domination that would come in the Ovechkin-Bäckström era and eventual first cup in franchise history.
No argument from me, a Penguins fan regarding the Naslund for Stojanov trade… but there was another trade that deserved to get the gong: George Ferguson to the Minnesota North Stars for Anders Hakansson and an exchange of first round draft picks. The Penguins finished dead last that season, but could not capitalize on draft day as Baz Bastien traded away the number one overall draft pick. They had to wait until 15th to draft Bob Errey. Bastien died in March 1983, Hakansson was traded to the LA Kings that September for the rights to Kevin Stevens.
Seguin trade was way worse for bruins. Stuart and primeau were traded in same deal to Calgary for ference and kobasew, kobasew was later flipped to Minnesota for picks and minor leaguers, they then flipped some of those assets to Florida for seidenberg, ference and seidenberg were massive pieces to the 2011 cup. In the Seguin deal they basically got nothing, lost all assets for nothing.
Spot on for the Devils. Never got to see Verbeek, but from what I've heard from the old timer Devils fans/seen from old games is that he was really solid for us. Numbers don't lie, he's 7th all time in goals for the franchise. In general, he had 522 G/540 A/1062 P for his career. I think he would've been a great offensive piece on the cup teams for sure.
Turgeon had 30 goals in his one season with the Devils and was then traded for Claude Lemeiux who would be a huge contributor to the Devils success as well as a Conn Smythe trophy winner for the Devils. If that's the Devils worst trade they've done well for themselves. IMO what a team does with draft picks and/or the players acquired have to be considered, not just the initial players' career stats.
@@timconcannon oh man I completely forgot he was part of the trade that brought Claude to NJ. Also I completely agree. It’s just a nice “what if” question for Devils history.
I'd say a close second would be the Kovulchuk trade. That's mainly because he walked but only after he stayed long enough to make sure we couldn't lock up Parise. Seeing Parise walk hurt my heart although I was happy to see him play close to his home.
@@Robdammit oh I completely agree, trading for Kovalchuk in the long run is what honestly set us back. Ultimately for 5 seasons at that (Hall did drag the Devs to the playoffs in 2017/18). Like you said, getting him also caused us to not be able to lock up Zach Parise which absolutely hurt (at the very least, he did go back home so I definitely wasn’t mad when he left). Then another factor was Marty and Elias getting older, 2 cornerstones of the franchise. Kovalchuk leaving in his prime after getting one of the biggest paydays in league history though was definitely the biggest factor. Sucks because he was my first favorite player too lolol.
Meh, I'd argue, and usually do, the burnsie trade isn't the worst trade in the history of the franchise. Got a serviceable Coyle, Seto (who was a good potential forward, but never amounted to much) and Zack Phillips, who, as a late 1st rounder, couldn't be expected to be much as most NHL draftees amount to nothing. Should have done the Barker trade for Leddy/Johansson. That one hurt deep for Wild fans, especially since Leddy was part of team that won the cup. This was just the start to fletcher fucking the team over for years to come, outside a certain 5th round draft pick. An alternative would have been Nino for Rask or even the Martin Hanzal and Ryan White trade deadline deal that was so fucking stupid and a waste of draft picks to, yet again, lose in the 1st round.
Amazing video mate as always, for the Senators (although it was via free agency) I think that choosing Redden over Chara backfired in a massive way lol!
why click bait us with bs ..thornton trade looked bad for 5 years then turned into a great trade ... the bruins dont win a cup without that trade .. ....joe didnt want to be in boston his whole career he was going leave as a free agent if we didnt trade him please tell me how one year of joe thronton is worth more then a cup the thornton trade was a win
kinda funny that Vegas had fleury the first year and went to the cup and lost and now has Hill and won so I'd say no it wasn't a bad trade just wish Fleury would have worked out
When Joe Thornton got traded it was a shock around the league because nobody knew he was available, that part of the trade was bad. Its level of bad is blunted by 2011.
35:14 I am still surprised that Kelly Mckrimmon hasn't been fired after the Flurey trade. Showing a GM can get away with these kinds of trades, especially if the team wins the cup the following year.
re: Flames trade Yes, thank you. So many other similar lists will cite the trade of Iginla, which was pretty terrible. But this trade in 1992 set the team back over a decade at least.
A few Original Six era trades were worse for the Wings. My pick would be losing prime Ted Lindsay and Glenn Hall in one swoop and getting peanuts in return. The fact GM Adams had justified trading away Sawchuk 2 years prior by pointing to the fact the Wings had Hall makes it all the more disastrous.
I’m suprised you didn’t use the Tom Kurvers trade against Toronto, as they not only gave up Scott Niedermayer (or potentially Lindros) but also lost Brian Bradley, the guy they traded Kurvers for the year after; meaning they gave up the 3rd overall pick for nothing.
Flyers should of been trading Bob to C-bus for I think a 3rd rounder. Bum Homer Holmgren traded him after signing Bryz to some ridiculous contract like 9 or 10 years for like $50 mil.
Bruins didn't regret trading Thornton at all and they didn't have an issue with the return either. They wanted to be cap flexible. Trading Thornton and later Samsonov (who's return was frankly way worse but they ended up getting Lucic from one of the picks involves so no one talks about it) freed the cap for them to get Chara and Savard. They correctly felt that with Thornton as the number 1 on the team that they'd never win. In the years to come they decided to build an identity around Bergeron and that served the team far better.
What has Fleury done for the teams he's been traded, got vegas to the finals than choked in a must win game 4 where he should've been almost impossible to beat. Then the following year he gave up 4 goals in the span of 10 minutes blowing a 3 goal lead and letting in one in ot losing the game and series, everyone makes the excuse that it was because of the sharks powerplay, but it's common knowledge that your goalie is supposed to be your 1 penalty killer, then he followed that up with that horrible turnover in a game that they were under 1 minute away from winning, and gave Montreal all the confidence they needed to eliminate them. What did he do before the trade, won 1 cup then lead the pens to four 1st round exits in 6 years, then got pulled after a game and a half of the first rd so Murray could go in and lead the pens to a cup destroying Fleurys best numbers in the process, than Fleury got pulled the next year and Murray again lead the pens to another cup. Fleury is the most overrated goalie in the nhl, 3 separate head coaches have lost complete confidence in him for the playoffs, he's lost his starting role numerous times, his atrocious puck handling skills has cost teams plsyoff series and Canada gold at the WJC, and his rebound control is absolutely horrible. Very strong pens and Vegas teams have made him look better than he is, and it'll be a sad day if he passes a true legend in the pre shootout era Patrick Roy
Something I think is lost in this scenarios is the players thriving in other locations isn’t just because the player turned out to be good. The found the right people to bring out their full potential. It’s like talking about guys that left bands right before they became famous. It’s usually that missing piece that is the catalyst to their greatness. It’s not a given that their greatness would’ve been achieved if things didn’t change. Just food for thought.
Exactly. Chris Drury is an East Coast kinda guy and he wanted to go back "home". He didn't like playing 3C minutes in Colorado, and made it known he wasn't happy here. He wanted/demanded a bigger role, but he wasn't going to supplant Sakic and Forsberg. Who did he think he was kidding?
I'm a Habs fan, Patrick Roy's trade still hurts 30 years later, and is not even mentionned here... Sad for Fleury, but hey, Vegas got the Cup, hard to consider it a bad trade.
I’m not even a Bruins fan and I can tell this is done by someone that just noticed Thornton was drafted by Boston and thought …”wow huge mistake moving him”
personally as a wings fan, our worse trade that I would have to look up to double check, was either trading dionne to LA or trading our 1st round pick for quincey, that pick turned into vasilevsky...
it is as far back as all youtubers look their dummb this guy made a video on the lindros trade but neglected to mention it lead to the aves geting roy and forsberg
The Ducks worse trade is one that saw them eventually get the player back plus a Hart/Richard Trophy winner AND a Stanley Cup. Every team should be so unfortunate.
Good video and I learned some things - even though I have followed the game quite closely since the 1970s. You are a young guy - one can go back another 20 years (or more) and find many more bad trades, for one: Ken Hodge for Rick Middleton ("Nifty") - this was a Ranger debacle. I believe the Joe Thorton was bad as you highlighted -because none of the players the Bs got in return stuck very long. However, I love Joe - but he was a perimeter player and like a Tony Romo - great player and person...but never gonna get you the coveted ring. Oh and you missed perhaps the worst trade in sports history and it was the NHL: Filip Forsberg for Martin Erat! At the time, I thought it was a hoax! I mean, here was an extremely high draft pick , not played a game yet with the team that selected him and was traded for a glorified grinder. I also blame the Caps owner for allowing it - horrendous! Thank you George McPhee! The debacle of all time!!!!!
I don't think Boston regretted the Thornton trade, they went on to win a cup, and Joe retired without ever getting his name on it. It stung at the time with the rather lopsided return and seeing how much individual success he was having with the Sharks, but it could be argued Boston would have never gotten the right pieces they needed to eventually go on to win it all if they still had him.
@@Chrisman77 I agree 100% You could go a step further, and I hate saying it because I liked Savard so much, but maybe if he hadn't gotten injured, the Bruins wouldn't have the cap space from LTIR, and again, wouldn't have been able to get the right pieces for the cup run. Chiarelli eventually turned into a total bonehead, but back then he did an excellent job with FA signings and trades to build a winning team. But without a doubt, Savard was an integral piece in bringing the Bruins back to a contender post Thornton era, especially since Bergeron was missing so much time with concussion issues.
Calgary trade - may be trumped with the Huberdeau / Tkachuk trade - but that trade nearly caused me to rearend someone as I saw it on a billboard on Mcleod Trail. Gary Leeman had 50 goals the previous year - but 13 I believe were empty net goals IIRC - I know he set a record for EN goals that year. The trade was made by Cliff Fletcher who just went to TO from Calgary and Risebrough who was Cliffs understudy in Calgary and took over GM duties when Fletcher left. Obviously Doug trusted Cliff implicitly and got taken to the cleaners but at least he redeemed himself when he went to Minne to be the GM there
Seems a bit crazy to not have the Patrick Roy trade for the Habs as the worst in franchise history. They probably could’ve won another cup without making that trade
Agree 100%. The two preeminent goalies from that era were Roy and Hasek. They alone could keep a team halfway competitive. That’s value you can’t even quantify.
@@zlinedavid I would add Brodeur.
@@ramimahka4636 He’s just a half notch behind. Marty was incredible, but there isn’t a scenario where I would take him over Hasek or Roy.
That's what I was thinking. Hockey is my major weak point in the four sports but even I know about the mess they made for themselves with Roy. Not to mention the immediate impact it had for the Avs
The habs didnt have a choice patrick himself said im leaving straight on bench during the last played game wich made tv, because of his absolutly toxic relations with the coach mario tremblay it was all over the place in quebec.heck in 2021 uber eats managed to get them to forgive and forget and launch a series of food commercial ta set the quebec hockey on fire for finaly putting it behind them. Wasnt a trade it was a player slamming the door and leaving.
Completely disagree about the Capitals -- 2004 was a fire sale year once they fired Bruce Cassidy. It yielded Alex Ovechkin.
The worst trade the Capitals made was in 2013 with the Nashville Predators: Martin Erat for Filip Forsberg.
100%
There is NOTHING worse for Montreal than trading away Patrik Roy.
Gomez and Mcdunnah was a nonsense side show
I guess maybe the video didn't consider Roy as Roy demanded to be traded...... so I dunno
Yeah that wasn't a bad trade as much as a bad and stupid coach.
You mean trading away a guy who basically said "trade me, because i refuse to play for you anymore" is a bad trade?
The mistake was the Coach not the Trade. Roy was left in for an 8 Goal Shellacking. That made Roy demand a Trade. Montreal got lucky they made a Trade so quickly.
@@andrewheffelbower9807 The smart move would have been to IMMEDIATELY fire Mario Tremblay. (And I was an avid Montreal hater, so I basically jumped for joy when the drama was unfolding, hahah)
Honestly the Fleury trade wasn't that bad in hindsight and made a lot of sense. We traded him for cap space not for nothing. Vegas won't have their Cup without that trade. Their worst trade imo, is trading a 1st, 2nd, and 3rd for Tomas Tatar
Could have traded robin lehner instead
@@jameskillbot2867 Nah. Fleury's cap was higher by $2m and Lehner is younger. No one can predict injuries.
@@karlogonzales1282 lehner is 10 mil in debt and will not play again. Do you know how injured/stupid he is outside the game?
@@jameskillbot2867 You don't know that at the time. Trading Fleury was the right move
@@jameskillbot2867 most knew lehner was a headcase by then. Talented but mental.
Fluery was a result of a series of moves trying to “go for it” eventually it worked out but no one would’ve predicted quite like this
the thornton trade actually helped the bruins, it allowed bergeron to become the 1st center and krejci to become the 2nd center, allowed them to sign chara and then they won the cup after that.
this channel is one of the worst on youtube they spread alot of lies they dont do their research ..... this channel did a video on the eric lindros trade but didnt even mention they got peteer forsberg in the trade they dont do any resaerch their not even real hockey history fans otherwise theyd know about the lindros trade .. they have horrible opinions. they basically just recycle information without fact checking or knowing what their doing their is no point in watching this channel
Plus thornton had way to much pressure on him to win a cup there
Freeing Bruins $$$ to sign Chara that next summer changed the mentality of that team, they adopted his work horse mentality that we still see today
And it got the gm fired. Don't think with Thornton and old gm they'd be to a single finale tbh
The Thornton trade looks good in the long run, because the B's won the Cup and Thornton did not. They also let go of Kessel and Seguin before they were household names. A lot of talent just thrown out the window on a whim. By all rights, moves like that shouldn't have won the B's anything....And yet, Tim Thomas came out of nowhere, stood on his head in all directions, up down and sideways, and willed that team to a Cup. I can only imagine how truly great those B's teams would've been if they had kept everyone.
If you're going put the Gretzky deal as a trade and not a sale, then for Pittsburgh their worst would have to be the Jagr deal to the Caps for prospects and a little cash, which was made to keep the team from going bankrupt, being sold, and possibly moved out of Pittsburgh. It was both a franchise saving move and the worst trade in their history.
It's also worth noting that the Penguins *ALLEGEDLY* had a deal with the Rangers that would've netted them guys who were actually decent, but Patrick shot it down due to a grudge with Sather.
That said, the Jagr trade was lose-lose because the Caps went nowhere with Jagr
Yeah, The Caps were a defensive team - why in the world Jagr and his agent made that choice is still a wonder, but it was clearly a mistake. LOL: Then the Caps brought in Lang from the Pens to give Jags someone to work with - that worked even worse. At least the Caps finally started to show willingness to spend $$ to get a ring - of course it took them 18 more years and they should have won more - they were never "big on bright" - even to this day, but that's another story :-)
@valpix7007 Decent but old from what i remember. Ultimately, I think they end up with nothing to show for Jagr with either trade
How is the Jagr trade then bad for the Penguins if the trade succeeded in its purpose???
The Jagr trade was a win for Pittsburgh, it KEPT THE TEAM IN PITTSBURGH! Why the hell does someone have to point that out? The Caps went nowhere and the Penguins stayed in Pittsburgh, Mario bought the team and then drafted Crosby and won 3 Cups! How the hell is that lose-lose!? Commenting on social media needs to be tied to ones IQ@@valpix7007
There is a far worse Blackhawks trade. Phil Esposito to the Bruins for Pit Martin and a.couple other pieces. Pretty much the Chicago version of trading away Joe Thornton, with the added pain of Boston getting a couple of cups out of it.
Boston also got two all-stars, Fred Stanfield and Ken Hodge. It was the worst trade in NHL history.
For most youtubers, "History" begins much sooner than it actually does.
i read somewhere that Blackhawks wanted Gilles Marotte unfortunately his career was derailed by injuries. Martin was good but not Phil Esposito good. the oddball was there was a goalie involved who played maybe 2 games for Chicago and then basically disappeared from the NHL. why they included him i have no idea.
spot on
That is an Epically bad trade. A Hall of Fame bad trade. So of course there's no mention of it.
The Neely trade is no longer the worst trade by Vancouver. The trade for Ekman-Larson is, and it's not even close.
Neely trade is worse cause at least the Canucks got Gralund from that trade and he is productive
However Garland (who I suspect is who you mean) doesn't cover the fact that the Canucks now have a massive cap hit that will be hanging around until 2030. And they could have had a ton of money come off their payroll if they'd just waited one year longer. @@Crosby4ever
you want Loui back?
Especially because it allowed the Yotes to get back into the first round and draft Dylan Guenther and had them take on a lot of expiring contracts so they weren't in cap hell for much longer.
Exactly. Any discussion of 'worst' trades has to consider the fact that we're in a hard cap environment now, and the cap has as much, if not more, of an impact than the quality of the players. @@ITDBruins
The Blues to me made a lot of the worst trades ever. Having Mike Keenan as coach who his own players despised, turned a franchise that made the playoffs EVERY YEAR and could have won many stanley cups, into a unmotivated underperforming team that would always lose by round 2. They should have had it all, I mean they had Pronger AND Macinnis who won back to back Norris, and barely made the conference finals 1 time in a decade.... the Shanahan Janney thing hurt them a lot too but, Hull wanting to leave hurt them more. Adam Oates and Rod Brind'Amour being there long term, man. That franchise reeeeaaallllyyy should have many stanley cups.... 25 years in the playoffs in a row and I believe ONLY 2 conference finals, that's it.
the kings traded Gabriel Vilardi he's going to be huge in a few years massive talent
I personally think the Ottawa/Colorado/Nashville trade in 2017 was the worst for the Predators. It was clear (and had been for a while) that David Poile wanted to bring in Duchene who had also expressed wanting to play in Nashville, but the best Poile could do was acquire Kyle Turris who was immediately signed to a six year contract in the same day. By the second year into the deal Turris was noticeably struggling, and to make things even murkier, Poile signed Duchene in the 2019 offseason making Turris mostly redundant on a roster that by then included Ryan Johansen, Duchene, and Nick Bonino which effectively made Turris a $6M/year third liner at best or a 4th line center at worst. After just the third year into his contract the Preds bought Turris out. Meanwhile Colorado got a major injection of young talent and prospects into their promising rebuild including Sam Girard from Nashville who has continued to do well and won the cup with them. The Predators are still currently paying Turris $2M a year and will until 2028. I think this trade is worse than the Johansen/Jones trade because while Johansen did not become the true first line center as advertised/hoped, he was still a more-than-serviceable player who made a big impact during their cup window, and I don't think it's fair to factor in the 8x8M contract extension into the choice as that came to pass a year after the trade itself and following the Stanley Cup Final run. That extension could be up for debate as one of the worst contracts that the Predators ever signed though.
A little befuddled that any Canadiens trade would get the nod over Patrick Roy. That trade was so devastating, that no team residing in Canada has won a Stanley Cup since. Don't be surprised if they name a Cup-drought curse after him 30 years from now.
that’s super interesting, that was the random fact i needed today. thanks for sharing!
I came into the comments to write exactly this.
There seems to be a bit of a recency bias in much of the video.
Fitting if it gets snapped after 33 years 😉
Roy himself requested teh trade because he didn't want to play for the Habs anymore due to the coach.
Arizona's worst trade has to have been when they were the OG Jets. Draper for $1.
Gretzky was not traded. He was sold
he was traded assets came back that wasnt just money get over i
@@lilwoodiewood3457facts are facts man. His contract was sold in order to save the oilers because pocklington was mismanaging finances and if you listen to quotes from Gretzky now he will say the same thing:
“First off I was not traded, I was sold to the kings”
He’s been asked this a few times on wether the oilers owner will keep mcdavid. I’m just drawing a blank on his name right now
I have no emotional ties to the Gretzky trade as I wasn’t even born yet
Sounds like you might need a hug
He was traded they trade was Gretzky for picks players and 15mil cash he wasn’t sold
@@codycassel8996do you really think a owner would be that dumb to trade the best player in the game? I don’t think so.
Pocklington needed to sell Gretzky to the kings in order to keep the team in Edmonton.
Read my above comment a little more closely
Well if you believe in conspiracies the oilers owner was strong armed by the league to trade Gretzky because they were trying to grow the game in the southern United States.
Pretty rough start to a video when you begin with Anaheim and state, outright, that their worst trade resulted in them acquiring a player who played in parts of 14 seasons for the team and scoring almost 400 goals and winning a Hart and a Richard trophy, in exchange for 4 seasons of a player, during which said player scored a total of 80 goals... sounds like a win for Anaheim.
I still say the Oilers sold Gretzky for $15M. And even though Pocklington didn't want to go through with trading Gretzky, his businesses were in desperate need of money. There is a documentary where McNall and Pocklington were interviewed and they discussed the process of the sale and accompanying trade. So Gretzky was not traded, but he asked for McSorley and Krush to join him in LA, which led to the trade for the package of players and prospects.
Luongo would ultimately return to Florida for the final years of his playing career, bringing it full circle.
Not only did Columbus acquiring Jeff Carter backfire on them, but so did their decision to trade him to LA and how the return didn't work out for them.
The Sittler trade was the final step in Harold Ballard's master plan to finally get rid of him.
Not only did the Islanders give up on Chara too soon, but so did Ottawa, as they sent him to Boston not long after acquiring him.
As bad as that trade might be, the Oilers still won 2 more Cups afterwards.
@@Rockhound6165 They only won the 1 cup since the trade. They did reach the Finals a second time, though.
@@grahamdamberger7130 you're right. I thought they win in '88 without him but he was still there. Still they won without him and quite convincingly.
Bruins honorable mention: Tom Fergus (After Boston 437 games 137-208-345)
for Bill Derlago (With Boston 39 games 5-16-21)
This has to rank as the worst trade in Detroit Red Wings history.
Consider this pre-1970 trade between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings. February 10, 1960: Red Kelly was traded by the Detroit Red Wings to the Toronto Maple Leafs for Marc Reaume. Kelly won 4 Stanley Cups with Detroit between 1949 and 1955. He was first team all star 6 times and second team all star twice in the 8 years between 1949-57 as a defenseman. He was the first winner of the Norris Trophy.
Montreal won five straight cups between 1956-60.
Toronto's GM, Punch Imlach, knew he needed a great center to go against Montreal's Jean Beliveau if Toronto had any chance of winning a cup in the 1960s. Since Kelly was a great skater Imlach convinced Kelly to move from all-star defenseman to Center. Toronto won Stanley Cups in 1962, 63, 64 and 67 with Kelly at Center.
Red Kelly won a total of 8 Stanley Cups in his career (tied with Maurice Richard, Serge Savard and Jacques Lemaire).
Only Henri Richard (11) Jean Beliveau (10), Yvan Cournoyer (10) and Claude Provost (9) have won more as players.
I can think of a tree that was worse than the Darryl Sittler one…. How about training their 1991 first round pick for Tom Kurvers…. Tom Kurvers ended up being a bum, and that first round pick they traded away, turned into Scott Niedermayer. One of the greatest defencemen of all time.
Rask being trade and Leafs kept Pogee. Bruins win a cup with Rask while Pogee stayed in Marlies pretty much.
@@AlbertTheM00SE rask never played a second in the playoffs when boston won a cup .. that trade didnt win boston a cup .. rask played like 25 games that year and wasnt that good at all didnt play a second in the playoffs thomas won that cup he still wouldve won it with any other backup goalie in the league .. the reason the bruins won that trade isnt because they won a cup ... its because rask was their starting goalie for a decade and was a star and went to the finals twice and lost which isnt a bad thing its better then not making it to the finals like pogge never did
You can think of a tree? 😂😂😂
Toronto has made so many bad trades in their history. You can name a handful of bad moves and they are all the right answer.
lol Johansen trade was good for Nashville, ask any preds fan they will say the same. Preds don't make it to the finals in 2017 and don't win President Trophy in 2018 without Johansen. Look at his playoffs stats in his 3 first season in Nashville. Plus Weber/Subban and Ellis were always better than Seth Jones has ever been
I mean has Ryan Ellis ever finished 4th in Norris voting?
Sure Jones developed into a very good D-man, but it’s not like the Blue Jackets made a deep run in the playoffs with him. He’s not even with that organization anymore, he’s an alternate captain for a rebuilding Blackhawks team.
@@DarkLobster69I think he could've if he had been the 1st RHD on a bigger market. Here he was in the shadow of Josi and Weber/Subban. I personnally think he was the most valuable Preds Dman in the 2017 run and could have gotten a shot at the Norris if he didn't get injured in 2018
As a Caps fans I gotta say the Lang trade wasn't even close to being a bad deal (see Dino Ciccarelli or Filip Forsberg for examples of terrible Caps trades) they got a pretty decent return on Lang in picks and a serviceable nhl winger. The Caps were looking to rebuild at that time and front office was pretty certain there was going to be a work stoppage in the near future (turned out to be a whole year) giving them lots of time to get those picks ready for the nhl.
I agree with this. The Lang trade really needs to be looked at with context. The Caps had tried to go all in by acquiring Jaromir Jagr and some other veterans, but after 2.5 years it went nowhere. They knew they couldn't win with their core, so they sold hard. Peter Bondra, Sergei Gonchar, Steve Konowalchuk, Jagr, Michael Nylander, Mike Grier, and Robert Lang were all sold off. It didn't matter what they got in return; the objective was clear: tank for Ovechkin. Many of our sold off veterans went on to have great success after the trade, but in the end, the Capitals walked away with their grand prize, and the rest is history. The Forsberg trade remains the worst trade for me. If the Caps had held onto him, who knows what they could have accomplished.
Chicago trading Phil Esposito away to Boston is their worst trade. Rangers trading Rick Middleton to Boston thats their worst
this guy made a video on the lindros trade but didnt even mention that it lead to the aves getting roy and forsberg
Espo was just part of it. Hodge turned into a 50 goal scorer. Stanfield is overlooked, but with Sanderson, he became half of the best penalty killing line in the league. Fred Stanfield was a great player.
Drafting Corey Perry as a direct result of a trade, instantly makes that trade decent. If that's actually Anaheim's worst ever trade, they've done great overall.
The Fleury trade, while controversial at the time, was the best thing for the team. 2023 Stanley Cup Champions.
Maple leafs trading away Tuukka Rask to Boston could also be argued to have a place on this list. At least a dishonorable mention.
Kessel for picks that led to Seguin and Hamilton is the worst leafs trade ever. That trade set the leafs who were supposed to be rebuilding back by another 5 years.
For the Sharks it’s the Karlsson trade bar none. We had already had Burns so it didn’t make sense in the first place. Gave up a good 3C in Chris Tierney, Rudolf Balcers, Dylan Demelo who’s a good depth D-Man, Josh Norris who was the best prospect we had and put up 35 goals his sophomore NHL season with Ottawa even though right now he’s having a third shoulder surgery, and a 2020 1st rounder that after the Sharks fell so hard after signing Karlsson that it ended up being a #3 Overall selection who Ottawa used to select the best player of that draft Tim Stutzle. The San Jose Sharks were never the same. We continued to fall, and have now sold off every player that was tradeable and for the second season in a row are a basement dweller. This wasn’t entirely Karlssons fault but that trade expedited a basement dweller of a team that is stripping everything down to the frame before rebuilding again. Worst trade ever for the Sharks.
Fleury was not the reason VGK didn't make the playoffs that season, they suffered lots of injuries, and Deboer was not the best coach for the job to take the team to Stanley Cup glory. They needed the cap space and they did what they had to do.
Yea it sucks the way they did Fleury dirty, as well as shipping off other big name misfits like Nate Schmidt and the Reilly Smith, but VGK is currently vindicated in their ruthlessness with a cup and an NHL Record for undefeated defending cup champion with its current team. Wouldn't be surprise if they Back to Back this year and other teams start adopting the same ruthlessness of just dumping players to free cap space and get draft picks.
Can’t list Smith in those trades as he got to lift the cup.
Smith was a cap casualty last offseason, so they got a draft pick for him at least. Plus, they needed space to extend Hill and Barbashev who were important in their cup run.
TY bubba. Well earned new SUB. Keep Hockey Manly!!! Others can play on a field.
Explain to me how anaheims trade was bad? They traded a player and got Corey Perry in the end…and the player returned for a resurgence….that’s a great trade
Yup.
All about relative values. They didn’t trade for Perry, they traded for a pick, that they flipped with another pick for a pick, and took Perry. And the idea is trading away a player of Selänne’s caliber and not getting anything of significant value back in return is pretty bad.
this guy dosent know anything about hockey thier unfit to do this stuff they made a video on the lindros tradebut didnt even ention it lead to the aves getting forsberg and roy i feel like any hockey fan that actually pays attention knows about this
Trading Theodore to vgk so they'd select Stoner was the worst ducks trade
I agree he lost me right away with that
You completely missed THE WORST trade in NHL history. Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge, and Fred Stanfield to Boston for Pit Martin and a couple of guys you've never heard of. One of the top 5 scorers of all time, along with two all-stars, in return for one all-star.
I totally agree the other two players were Gilles Marotte and Jack Norris that the Blackhawks got. that trade gave the Bruins two Stanley Cups in 1970 and 1972. even Bobby Orr mention if it wasn't for that trade they might have not
won those cups.
You have to remember, this is a millennial making this list and to them nothing happened before 1990 or else they would have said the worst Flyers trade was trading Bernie Parent for Bruce Gamble.
Love this channel you really put the work in for the stats and facts for every video
The Rangers trading Rick Middleton For Ken Hodge was brutal.
I can't believe you never mentioned the Erat-Forsberg and Jeannot trades. I think these were way worse than the Lang and Richards traded, especially given the circumstances explained in this very video
I was thinking the same. Erat has been out of the NHL since 2015, and we all know what kind of career foresberg has had to this point. I understand that Washington was in win now mode, and sometimes you need to take risks, but I have a hard time understanding that trading away a prospect that was probably projected to have a high ceiling of talent was your best option to get 2 average players at the end of their careers.
I'm watching throught the video as I'm writing this but are you serious??? This wasn't Washington's worst trade in this video....I'm suing jk 😂😂😂
Jeannot trade is too early to judge.
Forsberg for Erat is so the worst trade ever by the Caps
Hagel too was a bad trade.
LOVE this topic. Fairly recent to finding your content regularly and like it all man. Keep up the great work!
Maybe you should do a best deals/trades . I would think one of if not the top of the list for best deal would be Detroit getting Selke trophy winning Kris Draper from Winnipeg for $1 !
You also have to mention that when the Ducks traded Jeff Friesen to the Devils, even though both teams benefited, he was ultimately the one who scored the series winning goals against the Ducks in the 2003 SCF Game 7.
The worst “trade” in Blues history is anything in the 1990s involving Vancouver. In the span of 2 years, the Blues traded Geoff Courtnall, Sergio Momesso, Cliff Ronning, Robert Dirk, Jeff Brown, Bret Hetican and Nathan LaFayette to the Canucks in exchange for Petr Nedved, Dan Quinn and Garth Butcher.
Pat Quinn had to have had pictures of Bob Berry with a goat or something.
I was coming here to say the same. Brindamour was fine but those two trades with Vancouver probably cost the Blues a cup run in each of those years. There's no question they f-ed up the team chemistry and were both terrible trades.
@@smithryansmith That 1994 Vancouver team that went to the finals was made up of Linden, Bure, McLean and nearly all the rest were former Blues.
@@zlinedavidDepth scoring always wins in the playoffs and Vancouver got all of the Blues depth scorers in the 90’s and the Canucks playoff success speaks volumes of just how important depth scoring is.
@@BobbyBoucher228 Absolutely. At the top level, the Canucks and Blues of the mid-90s had comparable talent. Linden/Bure were comparable to Hull/Shanahan, and CuJo was actually a notch better than McLean. But Vancouver could roll 4 lines out one after the other after the other and just wear teams out. Once you got past the Blues’ first two lines, it was a pretty steep drop.
@@zlinedavid You’re spot on and when the Blues finally won a cup in 2019 they learned their lesson from their failures in the 90’s by having effectively 2 2nd lines and 2 3rd lines that would just wear teams out as each series progressed. It’s the same reason I believe why a team like Toronto that is so top heavy will never win a cup with their Roster constructed how it is since the most elite teams in the playoffs can just shutdown their top 6 and what’s left after that is a non factor for them.
as a hawks fan, im glad seeing someone come up with a worse trade than the panarin trade to pick apart
The Coyotes franchise worst trade by far was when they were the Jets and they traded Selanne for Kilger, Tverdovsky, & a 3rd
Agreed not even close. Another no hindsight needed trade. From when it happened on it's a terrible move.
11:58 i was at the game where goligoski scored the overtime goal! it was also his 1000th game ceremony
Zarley Zalapski not Zalipsky may he rest in peace
I think Vegas looked down it's pipeline and saw some future gems to man the net. Keeping Fleury would have stalled that and it was a good move all around
8:21 King Jeremy the wicked!!! Loved JR here in Phoenix, my second home town and second team (well, Yotes used to be my second team.... freaking embarrassing). Then....I was even more happy when JR went to Philly, my most favorite team ever😉.... as a FA!
I watched JR, here in Phoenix when he was with the Flyers in a game.... Take the puck behind the goalie, skated coast to coast but ...when he got to the boards by the center line, two Yotes tried to pinch him. Somehow, he switch to skating backwards to slip past the two Yotes, never losing the puck and switch back to forward skating, took it to the net beating two more Yotes and went backhand forehand backhand to score! It was like watching an angle skate...lol. he was flying 3" above the ice...or so it seemed. I looked and could see four Yotes, looking at each other just shaking their heads. As if they were all saying...."how in the hell are we supposed to stop that????"
It was pure hockey magic! Freaking loved watching JR skate and just play the game with such intensity. A gamer! Still one of my all time favorite players, Flyer and Yote!
King Jeremy the wicked! About damn time he made it to the Hall of fame!!!!
As a Vegas fan, I was all for the Fleury trade. If it wasn't for it, we probably wouldn't have won the Cup. Most importantly, it got rid of that hack agent of his being associated with this team, with all connections cut the year after when they booted Max Injur-etty.
Your unfamiliarity with the Hasek trade shows. He was not going to play for Buffalo anymore and would not let Detroit get stripped to be uncompetitive. He brokered the deal. And why are you showing Lanny McDonald when talking about Darryl Sittler?
ALL of us in Vegas were pissed about the Fleury trade. His agent got into a pissing match with the coach, so MAF was a casualty of their bad blood. We still miss Flower!
While the B's trade of Joe Thornton looks horrible from a glance, you have to realize that trade allowed Boston to get Bergeron and Krejci minutes as Top 6 centers, it also cleared the cap space needed to sign Zdeno Chara.
And I really can't call a trade bad if a team win the Cup after.
Why isn't Roy's trade set as the worst for the Canadiens? Even if they were forced to do it, the impact was much worst than the trade with Gomez. Just like Gretzky's trade, they were forced to trade him for financial reasons. Roy was traded for... different reasons!
AND to make matters worse he helps the new Avs team (their first season) win their cup. I watched all of that live and could not believe it. I was a huge Forsberg fan and to see Roy come to Avalanche was beyond LOL stacked. That HAS TO BE the worst trade in Canadiens history
100% i was thinking that it would be there on the list. They basically gave away a Hall of Famer because of beef with him and the coach lmao. (Im not laughing as Im from Mtl)
@@aesirloki4833 and then fired the coach soon after
As much as I hated to see Sittler go (and McDonald for that matter due to awful and vindictive ownership and management) I think two trades are worse. Giving up the draft pick that turned into Scott Niedermeyer and trading Rask for Rycroft
Yeah, but the Leafs wouldn't have picked Niedermayer, they would have picked a bum
RayCrap
I agree. The Rask for Rycroft deal was the worst in Leafs history.
Friesen won the cup in '03 with the Devils. They beat the Ducks in the finals and was credited with the game winning goal in game 7
Yep. GM Doug Wilson never did bring enough offensive pieces. The Sharks were a 1 line team.
Im not sure why jumbo gettin traded from boston was bad looking back since the bruins made 3 appearances in the final after parting ways with him in 2011, 2013 and 2019 and the sharks eventually did in 2016 along with conference final runs in 2010, 2011 and 2019 as well?
Lifelong B’s fan here. Thornton was unhappy in Boston and his play showed it. I’m glad he made a soft landing and extended his career in stellar fashion.
It might be recency bias but worst for the caps would be trading away Filip Forsberg for Martin Erat. At least the Lang trade brought back good players in Fleischmann and Green.
The problem with that one though is Forsberg really didnt have a defined role and spot in Washington. Nashville was just so much better suited for him in every way. Better development system, better play style for his skills.
This video is lazily done. While San Jose got the far better end of the deal in the Joe Thornton trade, Boston also won the trade because it was addition by subtraction. Trading away Joe and his nearly 7 million a year salary freed up the cap space for Boston to sign Zdeno Chara just one year later. He became the captain and leader Boston needed, and he won them a cup just 4 years later. So while Boston lost the trade on paper, they ultimately won the trade by freeing up cap space to get the captain that took them to the promised land.
100% correct choice for the Avs. That Drury trade still haunts my dreams
u know what this guy got wrong tho .he made a video on the eric lindros trade but forget to mention how it lead to the aves getting forsberg via one of the draft picks and roy by trading one fo the draft picks from th elindros trade
The Nordiques did not get Forsberg through one of the draft picks in the trade. He was already drafted by Philadelphia.
Oh no. Im sorry man but this video needed a bit more research on the Bruins trade. As a Bruins fan I used to think it was a terrible trade too until I found out that we traded away Thornton so that we would have enough to pay Patrice Bergeron when he was , so you were correct that the Bruins wanted to move in a differenr direction. This was a cap dump and we took 3 players that wouldnt take up too much cap space. It was 1000% the correct decision and was not our worst trade. I would argue that honor belongs to Tyler Seguin.
I would agree. We actually don't have a bad history in terms of terrible trades. That Seguin one did hurt for sure.
I’d honestly say that the Kunitz trade for the Ducks was way worse as he became a very good role player for the penguins in 2009 and 2017. Maybe if the Ducks kept him around they might’ve been in the 2017 Stanley Cup finals instead of the Predators.
Part 2 on Nashville: RyJo was later traded to Colorado at 50% retention in exchange for an older, beat up Alex Galchenyuk, who Nashville never signed. Meanwhile, Johansen became a key player on Colorado's power play and scored 4 goals in his first 6 games with his new team.
I’m an Avs fan and he’s been huge for us. When that trade happened I was confused but I’m only assuming they planned to buy him out so figure it was the cheaper rout
@@jakeheerwagen8007 I'm also an Avs fan, and I agree he's been great! When I first saw the trade, my instant reaction was YEEEEESSSSSSS! Also wth is Nashville doing? But then we saw them dismantle the rest of their core so yeah
What a second.... You mean to tell me Future Considerations has a name and that name is Kent Strong??? Does THG know about this lol
Great video. Enjoying your channel. Best of luck to you in the New Year
5:37 "On January 2, 1992, the Calgary Flames made a trade that would go down as THE worst trade in franchise history."
I certainly did not expect that from a video titled "The WORST Trades For All 32 NHL Teams".
Mcdonagh in front of Roy exchange for the habs?? If feels like you search a bit too far just for education purpose. Yeah this trade was bad, but it was the beginning of the end for Montreal after the Roy trade.
The longest we ( yeah I’m from Montreal ) went without a cup was 7 years.
Since Roy has been traded, wow it hurts to think about it….
It’s now been 30 years since our last Stanley cup.
Nothing left to say.
No Patrick Roy trade here? That was a catastrophe for the Habs
They traded Robert Picard to the Jets to get Patrick Roy drafted, I think it's their best trade ever 😂
3:02 Love Danny B!!! Love that he's the GM of my Flyers too! Class act all around!
Surprisingly, you didn't highlight the Caps Forsberg for Erat in a one-for-one.
Another trade the Caps were involved in was for Dale Hunter and Clint Malarchuk from Quebec.
In return, the Capitals gave up center Alan Haworth, left-wing Gaetan Duchesne, and their first-round pick of that year.
That first round pick was used on drafting none other than Joe Sakic.
sakic was a mid round first to act like they traded him is dumb he wasnt a top 5 pick if it was id agree .... u traded the 15th overall pick not sakic thats liike saying hey my team traded a 4th round pick and these guys drafted a good player tha mmeans its a bad trade
@@lilwoodiewood3457 I get what you are saying.
However, my point was based on the player Sakic would become.
Now, I probably can guess the Caps would not have drafted him, but it's a thought of him playing in DC.
Erat for Forsburg was the worst trade in Capitals (and maybe NHL) history, period
Yeah, but Hunter had more than a good enough Caps career where you don't say OMG WTF was that trade???
@@leavemanycredits not the NHL.
Edmonton and Gretzky fans would monolithically beg to differ.
19:00 Michael Phelps played hockey too? What an athlete.
How exactly is the caps trading Lang a bad move? Lang was 34 on a bad team, the capitals wanted to rebuild, so they got a decent return for him in a 1st that ended up being Mike Green in the same year they won the draft lottery and got Ovi.
That’s a pretty great trade off if you ask me especially with the hindsight of the regular season domination that would come in the Ovechkin-Bäckström era and eventual first cup in franchise history.
Calgary Flames worse trade is trading away Brett Hull period.
I was anticipating for the infamous Poegge for Rask trade..
No argument from me, a Penguins fan regarding the Naslund for Stojanov trade… but there was another trade that deserved to get the gong: George Ferguson to the Minnesota North Stars for Anders Hakansson and an exchange of first round draft picks. The Penguins finished dead last that season, but could not capitalize on draft day as Baz Bastien traded away the number one overall draft pick. They had to wait until 15th to draft Bob Errey. Bastien died in March 1983, Hakansson was traded to the LA Kings that September for the rights to Kevin Stevens.
Seguin trade was way worse for bruins. Stuart and primeau were traded in same deal to Calgary for ference and kobasew, kobasew was later flipped to Minnesota for picks and minor leaguers, they then flipped some of those assets to Florida for seidenberg, ference and seidenberg were massive pieces to the 2011 cup. In the Seguin deal they basically got nothing, lost all assets for nothing.
How dare you speak ill of Ryan Button!
@@TheMilkmanCometh sir he went with Seguin to Dallas
Spot on for the Devils. Never got to see Verbeek, but from what I've heard from the old timer Devils fans/seen from old games is that he was really solid for us. Numbers don't lie, he's 7th all time in goals for the franchise. In general, he had 522 G/540 A/1062 P for his career. I think he would've been a great offensive piece on the cup teams for sure.
Turgeon had 30 goals in his one season with the Devils and was then traded for Claude Lemeiux who would be a huge contributor to the Devils success as well as a Conn Smythe trophy winner for the Devils. If that's the Devils worst trade they've done well for themselves. IMO what a team does with draft picks and/or the players acquired have to be considered, not just the initial players' career stats.
@@timconcannon oh man I completely forgot he was part of the trade that brought Claude to NJ. Also I completely agree. It’s just a nice “what if” question for Devils history.
I'd say a close second would be the Kovulchuk trade. That's mainly because he walked but only after he stayed long enough to make sure we couldn't lock up Parise. Seeing Parise walk hurt my heart although I was happy to see him play close to his home.
@@Robdammit oh I completely agree, trading for Kovalchuk in the long run is what honestly set us back. Ultimately for 5 seasons at that (Hall did drag the Devs to the playoffs in 2017/18). Like you said, getting him also caused us to not be able to lock up Zach Parise which absolutely hurt (at the very least, he did go back home so I definitely wasn’t mad when he left). Then another factor was Marty and Elias getting older, 2 cornerstones of the franchise. Kovalchuk leaving in his prime after getting one of the biggest paydays in league history though was definitely the biggest factor. Sucks because he was my first favorite player too lolol.
@@RobdammitI still have nightmares about that contract, we also lost draft picks on top of that….
Meh, I'd argue, and usually do, the burnsie trade isn't the worst trade in the history of the franchise. Got a serviceable Coyle, Seto (who was a good potential forward, but never amounted to much) and Zack Phillips, who, as a late 1st rounder, couldn't be expected to be much as most NHL draftees amount to nothing. Should have done the Barker trade for Leddy/Johansson. That one hurt deep for Wild fans, especially since Leddy was part of team that won the cup. This was just the start to fletcher fucking the team over for years to come, outside a certain 5th round draft pick. An alternative would have been Nino for Rask or even the Martin Hanzal and Ryan White trade deadline deal that was so fucking stupid and a waste of draft picks to, yet again, lose in the 1st round.
Amazing video mate as always, for the Senators (although it was via free agency) I think that choosing Redden over Chara backfired in a massive way lol!
25:36 The Ottawa Senators with the Flyers logo haha
why click bait us with bs ..thornton trade looked bad for 5 years then turned into a great trade ... the bruins dont win a cup without that trade .. ....joe didnt want to be in boston his whole career he was going leave as a free agent if we didnt trade him please tell me how one year of joe thronton is worth more then a cup the thornton trade was a win
kinda funny that Vegas had fleury the first year and went to the cup and lost and now has Hill and won so I'd say no it wasn't a bad trade just wish Fleury would have worked out
The Ad with Uber Dads Reserving Airport Rides brought me here 😂😂😂
When Joe Thornton got traded it was a shock around the league because nobody knew he was available, that part of the trade was bad. Its level of bad is blunted by 2011.
35:14 I am still surprised that Kelly Mckrimmon hasn't been fired after the Flurey trade. Showing a GM can get away with these kinds of trades, especially if the team wins the cup the following year.
11:13 what about the 1997 Dallas stars trade Jerome inginla to Calgary
re: Flames trade
Yes, thank you. So many other similar lists will cite the trade of Iginla, which was pretty terrible. But this trade in 1992 set the team back over a decade at least.
that 90s pens team was my fav..stevens, samuelson, jagr, mario....they need to bring back them jerseys with the grey strip tho
A few Original Six era trades were worse for the Wings. My pick would be losing prime Ted Lindsay and Glenn Hall in one swoop and getting peanuts in return. The fact GM Adams had justified trading away Sawchuk 2 years prior by pointing to the fact the Wings had Hall makes it all the more disastrous.
Did you even research this? Flyers trading hartnell for salary? We gave Patrick sharp away for peanuts….
I’m suprised you didn’t use the Tom Kurvers trade against Toronto, as they not only gave up Scott Niedermayer (or potentially Lindros) but also lost Brian Bradley, the guy they traded Kurvers for the year after; meaning they gave up the 3rd overall pick for nothing.
Flyers should of been trading Bob to C-bus for I think a 3rd rounder. Bum Homer Holmgren traded him after signing Bryz to some ridiculous contract like 9 or 10 years for like $50 mil.
Bruins didn't regret trading Thornton at all and they didn't have an issue with the return either. They wanted to be cap flexible. Trading Thornton and later Samsonov (who's return was frankly way worse but they ended up getting Lucic from one of the picks involves so no one talks about it) freed the cap for them to get Chara and Savard. They correctly felt that with Thornton as the number 1 on the team that they'd never win. In the years to come they decided to build an identity around Bergeron and that served the team far better.
San Jose never capitalized on the Thornton trade though. He helped bring them to the playoffs, but never more than that.
What has Fleury done for the teams he's been traded, got vegas to the finals than choked in a must win game 4 where he should've been almost impossible to beat. Then the following year he gave up 4 goals in the span of 10 minutes blowing a 3 goal lead and letting in one in ot losing the game and series, everyone makes the excuse that it was because of the sharks powerplay, but it's common knowledge that your goalie is supposed to be your 1 penalty killer, then he followed that up with that horrible turnover in a game that they were under 1 minute away from winning, and gave Montreal all the confidence they needed to eliminate them. What did he do before the trade, won 1 cup then lead the pens to four 1st round exits in 6 years, then got pulled after a game and a half of the first rd so Murray could go in and lead the pens to a cup destroying Fleurys best numbers in the process, than Fleury got pulled the next year and Murray again lead the pens to another cup. Fleury is the most overrated goalie in the nhl, 3 separate head coaches have lost complete confidence in him for the playoffs, he's lost his starting role numerous times, his atrocious puck handling skills has cost teams plsyoff series and Canada gold at the WJC, and his rebound control is absolutely horrible. Very strong pens and Vegas teams have made him look better than he is, and it'll be a sad day if he passes a true legend in the pre shootout era Patrick Roy
Something I think is lost in this scenarios is the players thriving in other locations isn’t just because the player turned out to be good. The found the right people to bring out their full potential. It’s like talking about guys that left bands right before they became famous. It’s usually that missing piece that is the catalyst to their greatness. It’s not a given that their greatness would’ve been achieved if things didn’t change. Just food for thought.
Exactly. Chris Drury is an East Coast kinda guy and he wanted to go back "home". He didn't like playing 3C minutes in Colorado, and made it known he wasn't happy here. He wanted/demanded a bigger role, but he wasn't going to supplant Sakic and Forsberg. Who did he think he was kidding?
The Red Wings traded away MARCEL DIONNE...Nuff Said!!!
34:04 In 1986 the Vancouver Canucks traded away Cam Neely in 1987 to the Bruins 🤔🤦🏻🤦🏻🤦🏻🤦🏻🤷🏻
I'm a Habs fan, Patrick Roy's trade still hurts 30 years later, and is not even mentionned here...
Sad for Fleury, but hey, Vegas got the Cup, hard to consider it a bad trade.
I’m not even a Bruins fan and I can tell this is done by someone that just noticed Thornton was drafted by Boston and thought …”wow huge mistake moving him”
Exactly….
And yet they won 2 Cups after the trade and Thornton retired with none.
I think it's amazing that none of original six made their worst trades before the 80's. Maybe that's just as far back as you look?
personally as a wings fan, our worse trade that I would have to look up to double check, was either trading dionne to LA or trading our 1st round pick for quincey, that pick turned into vasilevsky...
it is as far back as all youtubers look their dummb this guy made a video on the lindros trade but neglected to mention it lead to the aves geting roy and forsberg
The Ducks worse trade is one that saw them eventually get the player back plus a Hart/Richard Trophy winner AND a Stanley Cup. Every team should be so unfortunate.
Trading Killer was inexcusable. The Flames were brutal for more than a decade afterwards
Good video and I learned some things - even though I have followed the game quite closely since the 1970s. You are a young guy - one can go back another 20 years (or more) and find many more bad trades, for one: Ken Hodge for Rick Middleton ("Nifty") - this was a Ranger debacle. I believe the Joe Thorton was bad as you highlighted -because none of the players the Bs got in return stuck very long. However, I love Joe - but he was a perimeter player and like a Tony Romo - great player and person...but never gonna get you the coveted ring. Oh and you missed perhaps the worst trade in sports history and it was the NHL: Filip Forsberg for Martin Erat! At the time, I thought it was a hoax! I mean, here was an extremely high draft pick , not played a game yet with the team that selected him and was traded for a glorified grinder. I also blame the Caps owner for allowing it - horrendous! Thank you George McPhee! The debacle of all time!!!!!
I don't think Boston regretted the Thornton trade, they went on to win a cup, and Joe retired without ever getting his name on it. It stung at the time with the rather lopsided return and seeing how much individual success he was having with the Sharks, but it could be argued Boston would have never gotten the right pieces they needed to eventually go on to win it all if they still had him.
I was checking the comments to see if anyone had already said this. Chara and Savard both don't happen if we still had Joe
@@Chrisman77 I agree 100% You could go a step further, and I hate saying it because I liked Savard so much, but maybe if he hadn't gotten injured, the Bruins wouldn't have the cap space from LTIR, and again, wouldn't have been able to get the right pieces for the cup run. Chiarelli eventually turned into a total bonehead, but back then he did an excellent job with FA signings and trades to build a winning team. But without a doubt, Savard was an integral piece in bringing the Bruins back to a contender post Thornton era, especially since Bergeron was missing so much time with concussion issues.
Calgary trade - may be trumped with the Huberdeau / Tkachuk trade - but that trade nearly caused me to rearend someone as I saw it on a billboard on Mcleod Trail. Gary Leeman had 50 goals the previous year - but 13 I believe were empty net goals IIRC - I know he set a record for EN goals that year. The trade was made by Cliff Fletcher who just went to TO from Calgary and Risebrough who was Cliffs understudy in Calgary and took over GM duties when Fletcher left. Obviously Doug trusted Cliff implicitly and got taken to the cleaners but at least he redeemed himself when he went to Minne to be the GM there