? Sergei Belski-USA TODAY Sports

On Wednesday, the lengthy saga of the Calgary Flames and Noah Hanifin came to an end when the blueliner was traded to the Vegas Golden Knights. Reviews of the return the Flames received for Hanifin have been decidedly mixed (The Athletic’s trade grades, for example, gave the Flames C grades), as the Flames received a conditional 2025 first-round pick, a conditional 2025 third-round pick (that could become a second-rounder) and blueliner Daniil Miromanov.

On Thursday’s edition of Sekeres and Price (part of the Nation Network of podcasts), Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli explained why the trade return wasn’t larger for the Flames.

Here’s Frank:

I know people have been speed-bagging Craig Conroy and the Calgary Flames on social media for the return, they had zero leverage. Noah Hanifin completely and totally hijacked that trade process. Basically any team that had called… and I’m told the Flames had two to three different trades that were nearing the finish line that were scuttled by Hanifin’s camp because invariably the team makes a call to the agent and says ‘Hey we’re thinking about trading for this guy, what are the chances we could get him to sign a contract extension?’ And the answer was always, ‘No, no, he’s not re-signing with you.’

So then you add in the other teams that were in the mix, like Florida, like Tampa, Vegas, obviously on the Hanifin ‘yes list.’ He didn’t have the full no-trade clause but he leveraged it and the process like he did, leaving the Flames to the point where me personally, watching all of this unfold – and if you’ve been listening to me I’ve been telling you for three weeks that they’re not going to get a huge return – getting basically a first and probably a second if Vegas wins a round, which I think we all consider probably pretty likely with the moves that they’re still to make, is a first, a second and an NHL defenceman for no having leverage, is that god-awful?

Hanifin is expected to debut for the Golden Knights on Thursday night, while Miromanov is expected to join the Flames in time for Saturday’s game against Florida.

The 2024 trade deadline is Friday at 1 p.m. MT.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Cavaliers punch back, blowing out Celtics in Game 2
Coach: Oilers star center could miss Game 2 vs. Canucks
Watch: Cavaliers' Evan Mobley turns defense into offense in Game 2 vs. Celtics
Xander Schauffele tops stacked leaderboard after first round of Wells Fargo Championship
Rangers center making long-awaited return in Game 3 vs. Hurricanes
Suns talks with head-coaching target 'expected to move quickly'
Knicks get even more bad injury news ahead of Game 3
Frank Vogel fell victim to a Suns ownership group eager to win
2008 Celtics champion sentenced to prison despite emotional plea
Skip Bayless makes huge Tom Brady prediction after Netflix roast
14-year-old phenom signs unprecedented MLS deal that includes future Man City transfer
Pacers coach claims officials are biased against 'small market' teams
Hall of Famer makes bold prediction about Russell Wilson, Steelers
49ers Hall of Fame CB Jimmy Johnson dies
Rams make surprising move with former team captain
NBA announces discipline for Bucks' Patrick Beverley
Hall of Fame RB defends Najee Harris after Steelers decline fifth-year option
Pacers file shocking number of questionable calls after Game 2 loss vs. Knicks
Former NBA star says Anthony Edwards becomes face of the NBA if Wolves knock off Nuggets
Hornets hire top Celtics assistant as next head coach