The New York Rangers and Colorado Avalanche have agreed on a trade that will send Jimmy Vesey and Ryan Lindgren to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for a package containing Jusso Parssinen and Calvin de Haan. The details of this trade are still being worked out at the time of writing, but the deal seems to involve two of the Rangers' pending UFAs, whom they would have lost for nothing if things had continued the way they were going.
Lindgren's struggles have been well documented, but he signed a one-year, $4 million deal in the summer that walked him to unrestricted free agency this summer. He's not what he used to be, as injuries have destroyed his body, but the Avalanche will hope to get more out of him in the Mile High City. He might be a good addition for the Avalanche when he's in a more sheltered role. Lindgren was acquired in the trade that sent Rick Nash and was solid during his first few years but has struggled lately.
Vesey came back to the Rangers after a few years in the wilderness. He's struggled to hold down his typical spot on the fourth line this season, as the Rangers youth movement is taking jobs away from those grizzled veterans. He'll be a great penalty killer in Denver, and the Rangers can use his spot to get players like Arthur Kaliyev, Brett Berard, and Brennan Othmann more game time in the NHL.
As for the return, Calvin de Haan isn't much, and he isn't particularly glamorous. He's a veteran defenseman who can play both sides and is also a pending UFA at the end of the year. I wonder if this is a stop-gap until K'Andre Miller is completely healthy, and then he, too, could be traded for more draft picks before the trade deadline next week.
Jusso Parssinen has bounced around. He's shown flashes of upside, but he's never been able to land consistently. New York's got places for him if he is up to it, but he's hardly an upgrade over what the Rangers have. He's an acceptable replacement in the bottom six and can be helpful on the second powerplay unit, but this looks like the first of many moves by Chris Drury and his staff this March.