Forward Micheal Ferland has heard the speculation that he might be traded before the NHL Trade Deadline, but he is trying to stay focused on helping the Carolina Hurricanes qualify for the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time since 2009.
The Hurricanes (29-22-6) are three points behind the Pittsburgh Penguins for the second wild card into the playoffs from the Eastern Conference heading into a home game against the Edmonton Oilers on Friday (7:30 p.m. ET; FS-CR, SNW, NHL.TV).
"Yeah, it's tough obviously seeing your name all over the place and not sure what's going to happen,"
Ferland told the Raleigh News & Observer
. "I think we've put ourselves in a good spot. I hope I stay here."
Ferland can become an unrestricted free agent July 1, so the Hurricanes must decide whether to sign him to a new contract, keep him for the remainder of the season without re-signing him, or trade him. There would be much interest in Ferland, a 26-year-old forward who has 31 points (15 goals, 16 assists) and plays with an edge.
It appeared initially as if the Hurricanes would move Ferland, but a 14-5-1 surge in their past 20 games has them back in playoff contention.
In an extensive Q&A with NHL.com on Sunday, Carolina general manager Don Waddell
said he was considering keeping Ferland,)
for at least the remainder of the season.
"Maybe he's our rental player," Waddell said. "You trade him and then you might need someone like that if you're still in the thick of things. So, you can look at it the other way and say, 'Well, we like him. We'd love to keep him. So, why do we even think about trading him?"