Subj : Maple Leafs' Recent Dealings With the Senators
To   : All
From : The Hockey Writers
Date : Sun Sep 16 2018 09:42 am

Bitter rivals for years and regular opponents in the playoffs during the early
2000s, it's understandable that the Toronto Maple Leafs and Ottawa Senators
have rarely come to terms when it comes to trades.

With just one move in the last 20 years between the two clubs, we had to go all
the way back to 1933 to find the fifth most recent deal between the Maple
Leafs and Senators, while the other three ranged from the early to late 1990s.

That said, here's a look at the five most recent trades between the Maple Leafs
and Senators.The Phaneuf Deal

The last time these two teams walked away from the trade table with something
agreed upon was Feb. 9, 2016, when the Maple Leafs moved their captain Dion
Phaneuf, along with four other pieces to the Senators.Related: 7 Years Later,
Who Won the Phaneuf Deal?

The deal went as follows - the Maple Leafs acquired Jared Cowen, Colin
Greening, Milan Michalek, Tobias Lindberg and a 2017 second-round pick in
exchange for Phaneuf, Matt Frattin, Casey Bailey, Ryan Rupert and Cody
Donaghey.

Cowen never played for the Leafs and hasn't played in the NHL since 2015-16. In
fact, a disgruntled member of the trade, Cowen described his time with the
Maple Leafs as a "joke of a process."

Greening played 30 games for the Maple Leafs following the trade - tallying
seven goals and 15 points over that span. Since then, he's played two seasons
with the Toronto Marlies in a veteran leadership role where he's notched 26
goals and 53 points over 142 regular season games.

As for Michalek, he played just 18 games for Toronto, collecting eight points
over that span. After spending some time in the AHL with the Marlies in
2016-17, Michalek hasn't played another game in North America.Phaneuf played a
lesser role on the Senators blue line, but was instrumental within their
lineup. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

Lindberg went on to play just six games with the Maple Leafs where he recorded
two assists before Toronto traded him to the Vegas Golden Knights along with a
pick for Calvin Pickard.

The pick might be the only thing of value that the Maple Leafs picked up in the
deal, as they used it to take Eemeli Räsänen with the 59th overall pick in
2017. Räsänen played two seasons in the OHL with the Kingston Frontenacs
where he tallied 72 points in 127 regular season games as a defenceman, but he
joined Jokerit Helsinki of the KHL for the 2018-19 season.

As for what the Senators got back in the deal, Frattin, Donaghey and Rupert all
haven't played for the Senators with each of them playing across the globe at
this point. As for Bailey, he played seven games for the Senators in 2016-17
with nothing to show for it offensively and spent the entire 2017-18 season
with the AHL's Bridgeport Sound Tigers where he tallied 41 points in 76 regular
season games.Rasanen is the one key piece the Maple Leafs have left from the
Phaneuf deal. (Photo by Aaron Bell/OHL Images)

Finally, Phaneuf notched 54 points for the Senators in parts of three season
and 154 regular season games. He tacked on another five points in 19 playoff
games in 2016-17, but in February 2018, the Senators moved the big blueliner to
the Los Angeles Kings.

This Leafs-Senators deal opened a lot of cap space for the Maple Leafs who were
heading down another path with their rebuild around the corner and landed them
a possible defensive-prospect in Räsänen.Deep-Per Into the Draft

Before the Phaneuf deal, however, the Maple Leafs and Senators didn't have much
of a trade history. In fact, next to that big deal in 2016, you have to go all
the way back to 1998 to find the second most recent trade between the two
clubs.

Even then it wasn't much of a headliner when the Maple Leafs acquired a 1998
eighth-round pick on March 17, 1998, in exchange for Per Gustafsson.

Gustafsson played nine games for the Senators following the trade with one
assist, but that was the end of his NHL career. From there, he joined HV71
Jonkoping of the SEL where he played until 2009-10.

As for the pick, the Maple Leafs used the 215th overall selection to take
defenceman Dwight Wolfe from the Halifax Mooseheads. Wolfe never made the jump
to the NHL and last played with the SEHL's Cape Fear Fire Antz in
2003-04.Miller for Demitra

Jump back to Feb. 25, 1993. The Maple Leafs acquired Brad Miller from the
Senators for a ninth-round pick in 1993 which ended up being the 227th overall
selection. With it, the Senators took Pavol Demitra - a pick that would end up
turning into quite the player over his NHL career.

Demitra played just 59 games with the Senators over parts of three seasons and
had 12 goals and 26 points over that span. The Senators eventually traded
Demitra to the St. Louis Blues in 1996, and he went on to tally 768 points over
847 regular season games. On top of that he won the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy
in 1999-00.Related: Maple Leafs'; Recent Dealings With the Rangers

Demitra was one of the 43 that died in the plane crash that killed members of
his KHL team on Sept. 7, 2011.

As for Miller, he didn't play a single game with the Maple Leafs before they
shipped him out to Calgary. Even then, he only played eight games with the
Flames before his NHL career ended.Trading Away the Future

Before that, it was a trade that took place on July 20, 1992. The Maple Leafs
acquired future considerations for defenceman Brad Marsh. Marsh went on to play
59 games for the Senators in 1992-93, with just three assists to show for it
and a minus-29 rating. That was his final season in the NHL.

As for the future considerations, well they never came into fruition.The Early
Senators

Aside from those trades, you have to go back to 1933 and the early edition of
the Ottawa franchise to find the fifth most recent trade between the Maple
Leafs and Senators. On Oct. 4, 1933, the Maple Leafs moved Bob Gracie and
$10,000 to the Senators for Hec Kilrea.

Kilrea - uncle to legendary junior coach Brian Kilrea - went on to play 89
regular season games for the Maple Leafs over parts of two seasons following
the trade - notching 21 goals and 47 points over that span. The Maple Leafs
went on to trade him to Detroit in 1935.

For the Senators, on top of the cash, they got Gracie. However, they moved
Gracie the same day to Boston for another trio of players.

With that in mind, look back at these moves. Was there any clear winners or
losers? Be sure to have your say by leaving your thoughts in the comment
section below, or tune in next time when we look at the five most recent deals
between the Maple Leafs and Philadelphia Flyers.

The post Maple Leafs'; Recent Dealings With the Senators appeared first on The
Hockey Writers.

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