7. Boston Bruins (36-13-15)
Total points: 142
Last week: No. 5
The Bruins should be in the market for a center, ideally someone who can play in their top six. Their top two centers, Pavel Zacha and Charlie Coyle, have combined for 12 points (six goals, six assists) in the past 13 games. It's hurting the rest of the lineup. Brad Marchand has one goal and five assists in that same stretch. The problem is getting a center to play in their top six will be difficult. Chris Johnston reported Tuesday about discussions the Bruins have had with the Canucks about Lindholm going to Boston in a three-way trade that would also include Guentzel going to Vancouver. Lindholm would certainly fill the Bruins need at center.
8. Colorado Avalanche (39-20-5)
Total points: 134
Last week: No. 7
The Avalanche were busy Wednesday re-jiggering their roster with two big trades. They were busy Thursday filling out their depth. On Wednesday, they first got defenseman Sean Walker from the Philadelphia Flyers, trading a first-round pick and forward Ryan Johansen. Then they replaced Johansen by getting center Casey Mittelstadt from the Buffalo Sabres for defenseman Bowen Byram, who became somewhat expendable because they got Walker. Mittelstadt instantly becomes Colorado's No. 2 center behind Nathan MacKinnon. Walker replaces Byram. On Thursday, the Avalanche added Brandon Duhaime from the Minnesota Wild and Yakov Trenin from the Nashville Predators, improving their overall forward depth. In addition, they will add Valeri Nichushkin to the lineup soon. He's been practicing and is expected to be cleared to play shortly after spending time in the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program. There is also a chance Gabriel Landeskog might be able to come back in the playoffs. He's missed two full regular seasons because of knee surgeries. There's still a chance they address their backup goaltending, but Justus Annunen has shutouts in his past two starts, so maybe he's filling the need in that spot.
9. Carolina Hurricanes (36-19-6)
Total points: 105
Last week: No. 8
The Hurricanes are usually conservative around the deadline, but they could also use another front-line scorer. Guentzel would fit perfectly, but are the Hurricanes willing to pay the price to get him? The same can be said about Pavel Buchnevich. The St. Louis Blues forward is signed through next season. He makes sense for Carolina too given his ability to score goals and play a two-way game. Guentzel plays a two-way game too. The Hurricanes scored six goals in four games against Florida in the Eastern Conference Final last season. They didn't have Andrei Svechnikov. They do now. But adding another scorer would be a huge boost to their chances of scoring enough to win in the playoffs. We already know they can defend well enough.
10. Toronto Maple Leafs (36-18-8)
Total points: 91
Last week: No. 9
The Maple Leafs added a second defenseman by acquiring Joel Edmundson from the Washington Capitals on Thursday for a third-round pick in the 2024 NHL Draft and a fifth-round pick in the 2025 NHL Draft. They previously acquired Ilya Lyubushkin from the Anaheim Ducks. They have clearly targeted depth on defense at the deadline this season. Lyubushkin is a right-handed shooter and Edmundson is a lefty. Morgan Rielly, Jake McCabe, TJ Brodie, Simon Benoit, William Lagesson and Mark Giordano are also lefties. Toronto is lefty heavy on the back end, but the depth is stronger now with Lyubushkin and Edmundson than it was previously. That was a big need for Toronto and it has been filled. The Maple Leafs might be done as their cap space appears to have run dry.
11. Vegas Golden Knights (33-22-7)
Total points: 65
Last week: No. 11
The Golden Knights have done what they always seem to do, add in a big way to bolster their Stanley Cup chances. This season, it's a repeat chance. They acquired Noah Hanifin from the Flames on Wednesday after filling a big need, quite literally, by getting 6-foot-5, 234-pound forward Anthony Mantha from the Washington Capitals on Tuesday. The Capitals retained 50 percent of Mantha's $5.7 million AAV, allowing the Golden Knights to get a 20-goal scorer at half price and giving them the ability to add another impact player, which they turned into Hanifin on Wednesday. They can do this because Mark Stone is expected to be on long-term injured reserve for the rest of the regular season. Stone's AAV is $9.5 million, but Vegas can use that cap hit if Stone isn't going to be back. And the Golden Knights may not be done. They could still be in the market for another forward. It's hard to categorize that as a straight need, but it would be a luxury if they can make it happen cap-wise. There's the potential for a reunion with Reilly Smith, an original Golden Knight who was traded to the Penguins in the offseason. But other options could include Guentzel and Vatrano, among others. Never sleep on the Golden Knights around the deadline.