The New York Rangers executed several trades at the 2026 NHL trade deadline but failed to secure a first-round pick, drawing criticism for general manager Chris Drury's decisions. Key moves included sending star forward Artemi Panarin to another team in exchange for draft picks and a prospect. The trades are seen as part of the Rangers' retooling efforts amid a challenging season.
The 2026 NHL trade deadline on March 8 proved underwhelming for the New York Rangers, who are undergoing a retooling process after a difficult season marked by a lack of goal scoring. General manager Chris Drury completed four trades, but none yielded a first-round draft selection, leading to questions about the organization's direction.
In the most notable deal, the Rangers traded forward Artemi Panarin, who had a no-movement clause, to an undisclosed team for a conditional 2026 third-round pick, a conditional 2028 fourth-round pick, and prospect Liam Greentree. Additional transactions included sending defenseman Carson Soucy for a 2026 third-round pick, forward Brennan Othmann for Jacob Battaglia, and forward Sam Carrick for a 2026 third-round pick and a 2026 sixth-round pick.
Drury opted not to trade center Vincent Trocheck, a top target, despite interest, as the Rangers sought a premium return including a first-round pick and prospect Charlie Stramel. Similarly, opportunities to move defenseman Braden Schneider, a 24-year-old restricted free agent with team control, and forward Taylor Raddysh, signed through 2026-27 at $1.5 million AAV, were not pursued. Reports from The Athletic indicated Drury prioritized an 'impact forward' in potential Schneider deals.
The market was strong for defensemen, as evidenced by the Winnipeg Jets' acquisition of Logan Stanley and Luke Schenn for assets including a second-round pick and prospect Isak Rosén. Critics point to past decisions, such as the trade of Pavel Buchnevich, and current cap commitments to players like Will Borgen ($4.1 million), J.T. Miller ($8 million), and Vladislav Gavrikov ($7 million), as contributing to the Rangers' struggles. Owner James Dolan may evaluate Drury's leadership as the team eyes offseason moves for Trocheck and Schneider, plus a high draft pick.