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The NHL could be rocked as a 130-point superstar becomes available

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David St-Jean
May 4, 2026  (7:48 PM)
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Dec 10, 2024; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Tampa Bay Lightning forward Nikita Kucherov (86) and Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid (97) battle for a loose puck during the first period at Rogers Place.
Photo credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

Nikita Kucherov went pointless again Sunday night as the Lightning fell 2-1 at home in Game 7, and Julien BriseBois now has a real problem on his hands.

Tampa Bay's $9.5 million winger finished the series without a single point in the elimination game. Three shots, a minus-1, 20:16 of ice time. Nothing to show for it.

The Canadiens stuck to him all series. Game 7 was the cleanest neutralization job yet, and the body language on the Tampa bench told the story before the final horn.

Kucherov is signed through next season and becomes a free agent in 2027. That ticking clock is the part nobody inside the organization can ignore anymore.

The Lightning finished the regular season 50-26-6 with 106 points and a plus-59 goal differential. Strong on paper. Then the playoffs hit and the same script played out again.

So how does a contender pivot when its $9.5 million driver disappears in the moments that decide everything? BriseBois has built his career on answering exactly that kind of question.

Tampa's draft cupboard is bare and the window is closing fast

Tampa has no first-round pick in 2026 and no first-round pick in 2027. The prospect pool is thin. The veteran core is aging. The math is starting to feel cruel.

Trading Kucherov sounds insane until you look at the asset return. A 32-year-old winger with one year left on his deal still moves the needle league-wide. The package could reset everything.

BriseBois has never been shy. Jake Guentzel, Brandon Hagel, Oliver Bjorkstrand, Yanni Gourde, Ryan McDonagh, J.J. Moser. All trade acquisitions. All bets he was willing to make.

Keeping Kucherov means running it back with a roster that just lost a Game 7 at home to a younger team. Letting him walk in 2027 for nothing would be the worst outcome of all three.

There's a middle path. It's painful. It involves trading the most creative passer this franchise has ever developed while his value is still tradable rather than evaporating.

Cooper's bench got out-coached at the margins all series. The locker room needs an honest mirror this summer, not another patch job dressed up as a contender's offseason.

The next move belongs to the GM. Whatever he decides, the Lightning fans grew up watching is no longer the team that walks through the door in October.