The trade deadline isn't until 3 p.m. ET on Monday. Last year, three days before that deadline, Chicago gave up defenseman Klas Dahlbeck and a first-round pick to get Vermette from the Arizona Coyotes.
Vermette, who also was playing on an expiring contract, scored three game-winning goals in the Stanley Cup Playoffs to help the Blackhawks win the championship. The first-round pick Arizona got wound up being No. 30. That might be what Winnipeg gets in this trade for Ladd. At the very least, it's expected to be a late first-round pick because Chicago is better positioned with Ladd to win the Stanley Cup than it was without him.
Under most circumstances, it'd be fair to call Dano and a first-round pick, regardless of where it slots, a steep price to pay for a rental forward, particularly because Dano was a first-round pick himself (No. 27 in the 2013 NHL Draft). It's not fair in this case because of where the Blackhawks are, and how nothing but defending the Stanley Cup matters to them.
Late first-round picks and high-end prospects with untapped potential are for rebuilding or retooling teams like the Jets. Ladd, a veteran player who comes back to the Blackhawks six years after winning the Cup with them, his second Cup championship (Carolina Hurricanes, 2006), is the perfect player for Chicago as it tries to become the first team to repeat as Stanley Cup champion since the 1997-98 Detroit Red Wings.
Ladd fills the massive hole that has been visible in the Blackhawks' top-six forward group all season.
As soon injured right wing Marian Hossa returns, Ladd, who had 17 goals and 34 points in 59 games with the Jets, will slide in on a line with Hossa and center Jonathan Toews, becoming the final piece to Chicago's enviable top-six group.
The Blackhawks can contend with any team in the NHL with its other top-two line that features NHL leading scorer and Hart Trophy favorite Patrick Kane, rookie leading scorer and Calder Trophy contender Artemi Panarin, and Artem Anisimov.
Ladd's addition also puts Andrew Shaw back on the third line, where he has always fit best in Chicago. That gives Joel Quenneville the ability to play Teuvo Teravainen on the wing, where it appears the coach likes him best. Richard Panik also can go to that third line once Hossa returns. Andrew Desjardins can center the fourth line.