NHL Trade: The Pittsburgh Penguins Trade Erik Gudbranson to the Anaheim Ducks

2 Min Read

The Pittsburgh Penguins have traded defenseman Erik Gudbranson to the Anaheim Ducks for left winger Andreas Martinsen and 2021 7th round pick.

The 27-year old Gudbranson was drafted 3rd overall in the 2010 draft by the Florida Panthers. He carries a $4 million cap hit through next season.

The 29-year old Martinsen was undrafted. He carries a $750,000 cap hit and will be a UFA at the end of the season.

Thoughts from the media

Pierre LeBrun: “The Ducks have had interest in Gudbranson for some time. The Manson injury obviously put those discussions into high gear.”

Bob McKenzie: “PIT has been working at this for awhile. Designed to give them more cap/roster flexibility.”

David Pagnotta: “This deal almost came together Tuesday, but needed a few more days to finalize. Ducks wanted to bolster blueline.”

Puck Pedia: “After trading Gudbranson ($4M Annual Cap Hit -$3.5M Remaining this yr) & Trotman off Season Opening IR ($150K), #LetsGoPens have $80.96M Projected Cap Hit w/ 21 (13F/7D/2G) on Active Roster. IR: Dumoulin, Bjugstad, Galchenyuk LTIR ($13M): Malkin, Rust”

Charlie O’Connor: “So for Pittsburgh:

Carl Hagelin turns into Tanner Pearson turns into Erik Gudbranson turns into Andreas Martinsen and a 7th

And that’s in one calendar year!”

Matt Larkin: “I don’t think he was the *right* guy to get, but Gudbranson acquisition sends interesting message: Ducks think they can compete this season and reacted quickly to Manson news.”

Adam Gretz: “I will say Gudbranson probably exceeded expectations for me. He wasn’t as good this year, but he was solid last year after the trade. Bad contract to add to a cash-strapped team and not a great fit for the style of play, but that’s not his fault.”

Andreas Martinsen (traded to Pittsburgh with a late pick) is a below-average forward. Erik Gudbranson, to Anaheim in return, is exceptionally, prodigiously bad. pic.twitter.com/ki6aYhoDNQ

— Micah Blake McCurdy (@IneffectiveMath) October 25, 2019

 

Erik Gudbranson

Andreas Martinsen