When the Vegas Golden Knights swooped in to win the Rasmus Andersson sweepstakes, the Boston Bruins were left scrambling for a Plan B. Now, the picture is coming into focus, and it’s a big one. According to James Murphy of Rg.org, Boston Bruins general manager Don Sweeney remains hyper-aggressive in his hunt for a top-four, right-shot defenseman and has locked his sights on St. Louis Blues veteran Justin Faulk.
If you’re a Bruins fan, this is the exact reward you wanted for clicking: confirmation that Sweeney isn’t sitting on his hands. Boston desperately needs a right-handed puck-mover to balance their pairings, and the 33-year-old Faulk perfectly fits the mold. But getting him out of Missouri won’t be easy. The Blues are fully aware of a depleted defense market and have set an astronomical asking price. They want a package mirroring the Andersson deal—which cost Vegas a roster player, a top prospect, a conditional first-round pick, and a conditional second-rounder.
The St. Louis Blues’ High Asking Price for Justin Faulk
As someone who covers the NHL relentlessly, I can tell you that Sweeney is in a precarious position. The Bruins’ prospect pool isn’t exactly overflowing with blue-chip talent, nor do they want to casually part with first-round picks given their aging core. The St. Louis Blues, however, hold the leverage. They know Boston’s window is open right now, and they are challenging Sweeney to mortgage the future for immediate stability on the blue line.
Faulk’s underlying metrics show he can still eat heavy minutes, jumpstart the transition game, and quarterback a secondary power-play unit. For a Boston team striving for playoff success, adding a player with over 900 NHL games of experience is incredibly tempting. But the hurdles extend far beyond draft capital.
Analyzing Faulk’s Cap Hit and No-Trade Clause Dilemma
Any trade between the Boston Bruins and the St. Louis Blues for Justin Faulk will require serious financial gymnastics. Faulk carries a $6.5 million Average Annual Value (AAV) through next season, though his actual salary drops to $4.5 million. Furthermore, he wields a 15-team no-trade list. This shrinks the market and complicates the math for Sweeney.
Unless the Blues are willing to retain salary—which would undeniably cost the Bruins yet another premium asset in the trade package—Boston will need to ship money out to remain cap-compliant. In my expert opinion, convincing Faulk to waive his no-trade clause for a historic franchise like Boston shouldn’t be the roadblock; the real issue is whether Sweeney is willing to overpay in a seller’s market just to keep pace with the arms race in the Eastern Conference.
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