NHL Trade: Toronto Maple Leafs Trade Nikita Soshnikov To The St. Louis Blues

Mark Easson
3 Min Read

The Toronto Maple Leafs have traded forward Nikita Soshnikov to the St. Louis Blues for a 2019 fourth round pick.

The 24-year old Soshnikov was undrafted and carries a $736,666 salary cap hit.

Thoughts from the media …

Pierre LeBrun: “Feeling within Leafs was that Soshnikov simply wasn’t ahead of anyone in their main group. Good person, fresh start will be good for him. Good buy-low pickup by Blues. Leafs open up a spot on their 50 contracts so they can add if need be before deadline”

Cap Friendly: “With the trading F Nikita Soshnikov to St. Louis in return for a draft pick, Toronto now drops down to 49 contracts giving them a little more flexibility leading up to the trade deadline.”

Chris Johnston: “Nikita Soshnikov came a long way in a short span of time in Toronto. Learned a language and how to play in North America. Simply got caught in a numbers game with .”

Mike Augello: “Soshnikov is a good player and plays a feisty game, but durability has always been a concern, the waiver factor had him stuck in Leivo land and based on his ELC expiring, a return to the KHL was highly probable.”

Jeremy Rutherford: “Soshnikov is on IR but the club says he’ll be added to the active roster when he’s cleared by team doctors and obtains a work visa.”

Lou Korac: “Soshnikov, who’s 24 and is currently on IR, plays right wing and is in the final year of a three-year entry level contract that carries a $736,666 cap hit. He is set to be a RFA this summer.”

Lou Korac: “Soshnikov will report to St. Louis in 7-10 days after he has attained a United States visa.”

Jeff Gordon: “Blues lack a dedicated farm team, so didn’t have a full load of contracts. Smart to add another young forward to the pile. Adds flexibility as trade deadline nears.”

Cap Friendly: “With the trade deadline only 11 days away, the currently have the following assets: have $5,448,334 of deadline cap space are no longer at the 50 contract limit have 8 draft picks in both 2018 and 2019 NHL entry drafts.”

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