There are trades that happen which just don't fully grab your attention. You notice them, but they don't really register because at first glance it doesn't look like a move that's going to make a big impact on the team, or maybe there is just a vague recognition of those involved in the deal.
All these factors may have come into play when Edmonton decided to deal defence prospect Dmitri Samorukov to the St. Louis Blues on Oct. 9. Samorukov was selected in the third round of the 2017 NHL Draft and had played one game for Edmonton, coincidentally against St. Louis.
In return, the Blues sent Klim Kostin, a veteran of 46 NHL games who was the final pick of the first round of the 2017 Draft. The deal looked like an exchange of one guy not working out for one team, for a guy not at the NHL level with the other team.
Samorukov was playing in the AHL with the Bakersfield Condors at the time, so it really wasn't 'Kostin' Edmonton General Manager Ken Holland very much to make the swap of two friends, who called each other thinking they were joining one another, until they found out they were both in the deal.
Teams make these under-the-radar deals all the time, but this one was different. Kailer Yamamoto and Evander Kane were both injured in Tampa about a month after the trade, so Edmonton went to Bakersfield and plucked Kostin off the farm. Expectations weren't high, or maybe better put, they were unknown. Kostin had the kind of start you might expect from a new player in a new organization -- slow and steady for the Russian.
GENE'S BLOG: A Klim Slate
In his latest blog, Gene discusses the clean slate Klim Kostin was given in his trade to the Oilers and the tremendous impact he has made since
© Icon Sportswire/Getty Images