"We're going to go about our business here and try to win hockey games, make the playoffs and go as deep as possible this spring too," Kekalainen said. "That's what we're going to focus on."
The Blue Jackets are the only team in the NHL that has never won a playoff series, and they are oh so close to breaking through.
The last two seasons, they've lost in the Eastern Conference First Round to the eventual Stanley Cup champions -- the Pittsburgh Penguins in five games in 2017, the Washington Capitals in six games in 2018.
Now, despite the uncertainty surrounding two of their best players, the Blue Jackets (28-17-3) are third in the Metropolitan Division with 59 points entering their game against the Buffalo Sabres at Nationwide Arena on Tuesday (7 p.m. ET; FS-O, MSG-B, NHL.TV).
Coach John Tortorella spoke to the team about the situation Tuesday morning.
"The stuff flying around this club has not affected us," Tortorella said.
Making a playoff run would have value. It would reward the fans who have followed the Blue Jackets since they entered the NHL in 2000 and everyone in the organization who has made a commitment to Columbus. It would excite the city, attract new fans, give the current players experience and show everyone around the NHL -- including Bobrovsky and Panarin and other potential free agents -- that the Blue Jackets can win.
Keeping a pending unrestricted free agent past the trade deadline is like renting your own player, and you don't have to give up an asset to do it. Kekalainen did it with forward Matt Calvert and defenseman Jack Johnson last season, and Calvert signed with the Colorado Avalanche and Johnson with the Penguins on July 1.
"We thought that was the best thing for our team short term, basically because the long-term benefits of trading them weren't good enough," Kekalainen said.
No, Bobrovsky and Panarin are not Calvert and Johnson. But Kekalainen isn't dealing from a position of strength.