Get a breakdown of the Chris Kreider trade and find out what it means. For the Anaheim Ducks headed into this offseason will this be just the tip of the iceberg? Let’s figure out what it all means into next season.
What the Chris Kreider Trade Means for the Anaheim Ducks
The Chris Kreider Trade Signals a Bold Shift
The Chris Kreider trade is the latest signal that the Anaheim Ducks are done waiting. Earlier on this Thursday, general manager Pat Verbeek acquired the veteran winger from the New York Rangers in exchange for centre prospect Carey Terrance and a swap of mid-round picks. Anaheim absorbs the full $6.5 million cap hit over the final two years of Kreider’s deal, with no salary retained.
?Trade
To #FlyTogether
Chris Kreider, 34 y/o, F, Yr 6/7 $6.5M
’25 4th (orig ANA -#104)To #NYR
Casey Terrance, 20 y/o F (’23 #59 pick) – Yr 1/3 $887K
’25 3rd (orig TOR – #89)Net Cap Change $6.5M, Net Pick Value Change 0.45https://t.co/Z5XRFO1L9L
— PuckPedia (@PuckPedia) June 12, 2025
For the Ducks, it’s a calculated swing to end a seven-year playoff drought. For Kreider, it’s a fresh start after an injury-plagued season and a tearful exit from the only NHL team he’s ever known. And for Verbeek, it’s the clearest move yet that Anaheim’s rebuild has officially transitioned into win-now mode.
What Kreider Brings to the Ducks
Kreider, 34, has logged 883 regular-season games and 123 playoff appearances with the Rangers since debuting in 2012. At his peak, he was one of the league’s top net-front scorers, with 52 goals in 2021–22 and a string of 30+ goal seasons thereafter. His 2024–25 campaign, however, was marred by back spasms, vertigo, and a hand injury, resulting in just 22 goals and eight assists in 68 games. That said, even that goal output would have tied Mason McTavish for Anaheim’s team lead.
The Ducks finished 30th in goals and dead last on the power play last season. Kreider directly addresses both weaknesses. He excels in front of the net, screening goalies, tipping pucks, and cleaning up rebounds, important skills Anaheim has sorely lacked. Verbeek called him “a clutch performer” and praised his special teams impact, noting that both the power play and penalty kill needed upgrades.
Kreider also brings character and experience. As a long-time alternate captain in New York, he mentored younger players and received praise for his leadership and community presence.
Players since 2012-13 to have:
300 goals
100 power play goals
50 game-winning goals
10 shorthanded goalsChris Kreider. That’s the list.#FlyTogether pic.twitter.com/SBVyPjtqAm
— Anaheim Ducks (@AnaheimDucks) June 12, 2025
Fitting Into Anaheim’s Evolving Core
With Joel Quenneville behind the bench and owner Henry Samueli willing to spend, the Ducks are no longer rebuilding in the traditional sense. Verbeek’s recent moves, including deals for Jacob Trouba and the extension of Frank Vatrano, indicate a desire to surround a young core with experienced, playoff-tested leaders. It also signals a desire to build what fans are calling the Anaheim Mighty Rangers or the Rangers West. Furthermore, Kreider joins a forward group featuring Trevor Zegras, Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, and Troy Terry, along with veterans Ryan Strome and Alex Killorn.
However, his arrival creates potential logjams. Kreider plays the left side, as do Zegras, Vatrano, and Gauthier. If the Ducks also land Mitch Marner in free agency, there will be even more pressure to find the right mix. That said, Kreider’s net-front specialty makes him a likely fixture on the top power-play unit, even if his five-on-five role is more limited.
The financial picture remains manageable. Anaheim still has over $30 million in cap space, even after this deal. Extensions for McTavish and Lukáš Dostál will chip away at that, but the rising salary cap and upcoming expirations (Trouba, Gudas) leave flexibility to make further moves.
The Verdict: A Low-Risk, High-Message Move
The Chris Kreider trade won’t define the Ducks’ summer, but it sets the tone. Anaheim gave up a mid-tier prospect and moved down 15 spots in the draft to land a proven scorer with leadership pedigree. For a franchise starving for relevance, that’s a bet worth making.
The risk lies in Kreider’s decline. If injuries persist and his five-on-five impact continues to slide, the $6.5 million AAV may feel steep. But if he rebounds to 25 goals, drives the power play, and mentors Anaheim’s emerging stars, he could be a key bridge between the rebuild and a competitive era.
More moves are likely coming. Verbeek has the cap space, the mandate, and a motivated owner. But this trade, the first big swing of the Ducks’ offseason, makes one thing clear. Anaheim is done playing the long game. The Ducks are back in it.
Main Photo: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
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