The San Jose Sharks moved Fabian Zetterlund to the Ottawa Senators, but originally, the deal could have included star centre Josh Norris going the other way.
The trade deadline was a wild time full of many deals, with few teams around the NHL being more active than the San Jose Sharks, who were involved in many deals over the past few days.
One of those deals came as a major surprise, and that was when GM Mike Grier sent 25-year old Fabian Zetterlund to the Ottawa Senators, getting back Noah Gregor, a second-round draft pick and Zack Ostapchuk in return.
However, the deal was originally set to be much different, as Grier reportedly wanted the often injury Josh Norris in a deal, but after he was dealt to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for Dylan Cozens, the Senators kept calling, and a deal was ultimately made.
"Mike Grier did not want to trade Zetterlund. Ottawa went back at least 3-4 times to keep pecking at him because they had Zetterlund in their crosshairs. Grier wanted a bigger package involving Josh Norris but the Sens kept persisting."
While often injury, Norris can be one of the most talented players in the NHL when he's healthy, so it's easy to see why San Jose valued him so highly, but persistence in this case clearly paid off for GM Steve Staios, with the team getting a very talented player in return.
In 64 games with San Jose this season, Zetterlund has tallied 17 goals and 36 points, and now that he's surrounded by much better talent, he should be able to take the next step in his career.
As for the Sharks, they ended up getting a solid return for the former third-round pick, and while it wasn't Norris coming back, they're hopeful that they can land with their draft pick and find NHLers in the two players they got back.
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Oregon wide receiver Jurrion Dickey has struggled to live up to expectations in his first two seasons with the Ducks, and he is now in a terrible position heading into 2025 as well. Dickey has been suspended indefinitely by Oregon, head coach Dan Lanning announced on Tuesday. Lanning also suggested that Dickey may not play for the Ducks again. "We have two team rules; that’s respectful, be on time,” Lanning said, via James Crepea of The Oregonian. “There’s some pieces of that where I felt like he needed a break from us and we needed a break from that so we could focus on what’s in front of us right now. "Wishing him nothing but the best, as far as success and want to see him get back to where he can be a contributor somewhere; that might be here that might be somewhere else.” Dickey was a five-star recruit and rated as one of the top wide receivers in the country when he came out of Menlo-Atherton High School in Atherton, Calif., in 2023. He suffered an injury in his senior year in high school and redshirted as a freshman at Oregon. Dickey has two catches for 14 years during his time with the Ducks. Oregon went 13-1 in Lanning's third season with the program last season. The Ducks lost to eventual national champion Ohio State in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals.
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