Waddell is not ready to accept that as a given with the Hurricanes making plans ahead of the 2020 NHL Trade Deadline on Feb. 24 at 3 p.m. ET. The NHL regular season ends April 4. The playoffs start four days later.
"The only thing that I'm cautious about is with Dougie they say 8-12 weeks," Waddell said Friday. "If he's 10 weeks, that's the last week of March. If he was ready to go that last week of the season, the last week of the season, starting on March 28, we have five games. Those might be the most important five games of the year.
"So if he was ready to come back, you'd want to try to keep space to bring him back."
Hamilton had 40 points (14 goals, 26 assists) in 47 games and was selected to represent the Hurricanes at the 2020 Honda NHL All-Star Game in St. Louis before he was injured. So getting him back before the end of the regular season would be a big boost for Carolina (29-18-3), which holds the second wild card into the playoffs from the Eastern Conference heading into its game against the Vegas Golden Knights at PNC Arena on Friday (7:30 p.m. ET; FS-CR, ATTSN-RM, NHL.TV).
Waddell said Hamilton's recovery is going well.
"He's two weeks into it," Waddell said. "The rehab is going as good as it could go at this point. The biggest thing is you've got to let the bone heal. When you've got a broken bone, there's not much you can do for that, but you can do some other things as far as treatment and try to speed it along as much as humanly you can, and everything so far has gone very well. There's been no setbacks or anything like that."
Not using long-term injured reserve wouldn't prevent the Hurricanes from adding a player before the trade deadline, though.
"At the deadline right now, we can add a contract of over $5 million without going into LTIR," Waddell said.
Waddell discussed the state of the Hurricanes, Carolina's plans for the trade deadline and more in an interview with NHL.com:
What are your thoughts on how the team has done so far this season?
"We've played 50 games, we're 11 games over .500, so that's on pace to be 17, 18 games over .500, which would get you close to 100 points. So I think we've had a pretty good run here the first 50. Now, we're in an unbelievably tight battle in the East right now with teams right around us. We can't afford to go on any kind of three- or four-game losing streak. We've had some of those this year. We've gone and we've won four or five in a row and then we'll lose three or four in a row. We can't afford any kind of losing streak at this time of the year.
"But we like our team. We lost Hamilton, which is a big loss for us. But going into the next few weeks, if there's a D that we feel like would help us and the price is right, we'd certainly look at adding one."
Did losing Hamilton change what you were thinking about doing?
"Not really. It might have changed the type of player we were looking for. We always felt that's one place that we could either upgrade or add some more experience to, on the blue line. Before we probably wanted more of a defensive guy. Now, we're probably more open-minded toward that. We've got some young guys; [Haydn] Fleury has jumped in the lineup and played the last three games and played well. The good thing is going into the break, we won the last couple before the break, so that gives you confidence that those guys can get the job done for you, too."
Are you set with your forward group now after signing Justin Williams on Jan. 7 or are you looking to add there, too?
"No, we feel like we're in pretty good shape. It's your job as a GM, you're always talking and always seeing what's out there. If we ever used a forward to get a D, we might have to look at getting another forward. But you want to keep your finger on the pulse and see if you can stay on top of things as much as possible."
You've had some young players take a step this season with 19-year-old forward Andrei Svechnikov having 45 points (19 goals, 26 assists) and rookie forward Martin Necas getting 27 (12, goals, 15 assists). Are you happy with how the team has progressed in that way?
"Yeah, we are. Svechnikov after one year has taken another big step. Necas, I think the smartest thing we've done is leaving him down in the [American Hockey League] last year. He got to play an extra 18 games in the playoffs and they won the Calder Cup. Playoff hockey, I don't care what level you're playing at, it's good experience and it's always hard hockey. So certainly, I think, that was the right move. … And we knew we needed to add a center, so we added [Erik] Haula in the offseason (in a trade with Vegas) and he's done a good job for us.
"So the void that we felt we needed to improve on in the summertime, I thought we addressed those, and we like our team. If we do nothing, we do nothing. We would go to battle with these guys, but if we're able to do something, then that would just enhance our opportunities."