Defensive depth on the left side should not be underestimated.
For NHL teams to contend for the Stanley Cup championship, goaltending, obviously, is key, but so are blueliners who can be trusted to log second- and third-pairing minutes.
General managers continuously seek to add quality defenders and NHL trade rumors indicate teams will be active before the March 6 trade deadline.
Second-line defensemen on struggling squads can sometimes provide a boost to a contender’s bench.
Here are three options:
BACK. ON. TOP!
Jamie Oleksiak puts #GoStars up by 1️⃣. pic.twitter.com/hWOx53u8kt
— NBC Sports Hockey (@NBCSportsHockey) September 20, 2020
Jamie Oleksiak, Seattle Kraken
The Kraken remain in postseason contention, entering Friday as the Western Conference’s second wild card club. With 53 points, they were tied with the San Jose Sharks and Los Angeles Kings. The 33-year-old blueliner could become available if the Kraken slump before the March 6 trade deadline. A free agent this offseason, Oleksiak carries a $4.6 million cap hit, but had appeared in 727 career games. His experience would be valued.
The Maple Leafs could use Jamie Oleksiak. https://t.co/8p9kOXEM68
— Kraken Canada 🍁 (@KrakenCanada) January 22, 2026
Carson Soucy, New York Rangers
The Rangers have a for sale sign hanging on the locker room door. Many of the veterans have their bags packed. The Rangers’ roster “retool” is already under construction and, at 31 years old and a free agent this summer, Soucy remains a prime candidate to become part of a trade-deadline deal, especially with a manageable $3.25 million cap hit. Soucy won’t score much his career-high is 21 points in 2021-22 with the Kraken – but he’s posted a plus-4 rating on a last-place squad with a minus-21 goal differential.
It was nice of Carson Soucy to introduce himself to Barrett Hayton here. #NYR pic.twitter.com/Jxgu0PczQ9
— Snark Messier (@SnarkMessier) January 6, 2026
Mario Ferraro, San Jose Sharks
Since being drafted 49th overall during the 2017 draft, Ferraro has been a mainstay along the blueline during the franchise’s rebuild. In 457 games, the 27-year-old compiled a minus-123 rating, but with a $3.25 million cap hit, a contender could be interested in the newlywed to bolster its third pairing. Ferraro annually gets dangled on the trade market. Will the Sharks’ brass target another forward?
Congratulations to Mario Ferraro and his wife, McKenna on tying the knot last week! 🤍 pic.twitter.com/dRY5MAOorq
— San Jose Sharks (@SanJoseSharks) February 19, 2025