Jamie Sabau-USA TODAY Sports

The 2022-23 NHL Trade Deadline concludes this Friday, March 3rd at 3:00 PM, and the trade frenzy is underway around the league. Timo Meier, Ivan Barbashev, Denis Gurianov, Ryan O’Reilly, and a slew of other players have already changed addresses, and plenty of others are yet to come, like Patrick Kane. The Arizona Coyotes, who have yet to make significant moves, have quite the list of intriguing names to throw on the table, including Jakob Chychrun , Shayne Gostisbehere, Nick Bjugstad, Nick Ritchie, and either Karel Vejmelka or Connor Ingram.

Another name to throw on that list whose name has been heating up in trade rumors for the past few weeks is forward Nick Schmaltz. He’s been one of the club’s most underrated players and is steadily becoming a point-per-game player. With 39 points in 43 games this season on 17 goals and 22 assists, the Coyotes forward is on track to set a new career high in points and goals.

Why Move Him?

The Coyotes could capitalize off the stellar season Schmaltz is currently having and use that as trade bait to potentially speed up the organization’s current rebuild. At 27 years of age, he doesn’t fit the team’s current core, as he’ll be 30 years old by the time the Coyotes are playing competitive and meaningful hockey. This factor poses the case for general manager Bill Armstrong to pull the trigger now if there is a deal in place while he’s on a roll. The potential return would be fairly appealing and would help Arizona amass draft picks ahead of this season’s and future drafts.

In his past five seasons with the Coyotes, he’s amassed 189 points in 245 games on 66 goals and 123 assists, including two, potentially three four points seasons if he records one more point. His recent hot play hasn’t always been the case for the Coyotes though. Two seasons ago, he recorded just 10 goals in 52 games, struggling to stay consistent for parts of the year. Questions arose on his ability to be a consistent top-six forward that could produce, leading many to believe the Coyotes had a middle-of-the-pack player that would never live up to the hype after originally being selected 20th overall by the Chicago Blackhawks in 2014. He’s since then turned into one of the league’s top right-wingers.

What Could The Coyotes Get In Return?

While Armstrong has no obligations to move Schmaltz as he has developed chemistry with forward Clayton Keller since being traded for during the 2018-19 season, he currently doesn’t fall into the team’s future plans going forward. This leads to the option of the Coyotes moving him for draft capital while they can gain a big return. While losing such a dynamic player would be a huge loss for not only Keller but the organization and the fans, it’s a necessary move for a team going through a rebuild that’s trying to build a young core.

The current future of the Coyotes remains bright with young and upcoming talent waiting in the pipeline. Arizona remains hard at work building and growing its core. The return expected for guys such as Chychrun and Gostisbehere is expected to be a potential haul, loaded with first and second-round picks. If you add Schmaltz to the team’s trade list, the possible return could be anywhere from a first to late second-round pick. Some teams will certainly be calling, with the Carolina Hurricanes rumored to be interested, as they try to bolster their already deep roster for hopefully a Stanley Cup run.

Whatever happens at the end of the day, is what’s best for the Coyotes. The team is eager to build a contender, and one way to do that is through the draft. Whether the team moves Schmaltz or not remains to be seen, but his days in a kachina sweater look to be numbered ahead of Friday’s deadline.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Report reveals why the NBA did not suspend Jamal Murray
Pressure mounts on Nuggets as Nikola Jokic wins third MVP Award
Jalen Brunson shakes off injury to lift Knicks to Game 2 win
Panthers dominate Bruins to even series
LSU HC pins transfer portal struggles on reluctance to 'buy players'
Pirates announce date for 2023 No. 1 overall pick's MLB debut
Shohei Ohtani showing what would happen if he only focused on hitting
Joe Burrow shares 'support' for Bengals who requested trades
Canucks erase three-goal deficit to stun Oilers in Game 1
Watch: Pacers star ties playoff high in threes in one half
Former NFL player has major warning for Steelers QB Justin Fields: 'You can't fall into this'
Watch: Brad Marchand hurdle Panthers player on Charlie Coyle goal
LeBron James rues 'missed opportunities' against Nuggets
Cardinals star gives update on timeline for injury rehab
Police investigating Patrick Beverley incident
J.J. Watt addresses possibly ending retirement to play for Texans
Inter Miami's Lionel Messi could surpass two major MLS records
Reporter weighs in on potential Giants quarterback controversy
Cowboys to release veteran WR
Lakers want Anthony Davis' opinion in search for next head coach

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.