Two days ahead of the NHL Draft and less than a week before free agency, the Boston Bruins just cleared a significant amount of cap space. As first reported by Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli , the Bruins traded left winger Taylor Hall to the Chicago Blackhawks. The full trade, as confirmed by Seravalli is as follows:
Full trade, per sources:
To #NHLBruins: Rights to RFAs Ian Mitchell and Alec Regula.
To #Blackhawks: Taylor Hall, rights to UFA Nick Foligno.
No salary retained by Boston, this represents a pure salary dump to clear $6 million off Bruins' books.
— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) June 26, 2023
Hall, 31, had been a member of the Boston Bruins since they acquired him in April 2021 leading up to the trade deadline. He was a pending unrestricted free-agent rental at the time but signed a four-year, $24 million contract to stay with the Bruins. He had eight goals and 14 points in 16 games after coming over in 2020-21 and delivered a strong first full season as a Bruin in 2021-22 with 20 goals and 61 points in 81 games, but he regressed this season, tallying just 16 goals and 36 points, limited to 61 games because of a lower-body injury. With Pavel Zacha forging such strong chemistry on Boston’s second line with David Krejci and David Pastrnak, Hall was mostly relegated to third-line duty on the left wing.
In moving his $6 million cap hit, the Bruins give themselves some crucial breathing room. They were squeezed against the cap because the performance bonus overages for Krejci and Patrice Bergeron dinged them for $4.5 million worth of 2023-24 cap space. It remains to be seen whether Boston, which now has close to $11 million in cap space, will attempt to re-sign left winger Tyler Bertuzzi or defenseman Dmitry Orlov. Both came over as 2023 trade-deadline rentals and were highly effective.
The Blackhawks, meanwhile, get two more seasons of Hall, who can now be expected to get a look in a first-line role alongside generational prospect Connor Bedard, who will be the No. 1 pick in Wednesday’s NHL Draft. Hall makes sense a mentor given he was the first-overall pick in the 2010 NHL Draft. Hall had a 16-team no trade list, but the Blackhawks were not on it, reports Chris Johnston of NorthStar Bets.
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