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Opening trades of the NHL offseason contain several goalies but few surprises

Jacob Markstrom

Jacob Markstrom

Goaltenders are on the move as NHL teams prepare for next season, and the trades made so far are far from stunners.

Center Pierre-Luc Dubois said he was surprised by Los Angeles sending him to Washington for goalie Darcy Kuemper, but his impending full no-movement clause kicking in July 1 was the impetus for the move. The Kings filled their hole in net after 2023 Vezina Trophy winner Linus Ullmark declined to join them at the March trade deadline.

Boston finally traded Ullmark on Monday, getting a first-round pick, depth center Mark Kastelic and a new backup, Joonas Korpisalo, from Ottawa in a deal completed just before Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final. Jacob Markstrom knew there was buzz around New Jersey wanting to get him from Calgary, and that move went down earlier in that series, with teams around the league getting down to important business before Florida hoisted the Cup.

Much more movement is expected in the coming days, leading up to and through the draft Friday and Saturday in Las Vegas. A look at the big names who have already changed places:

Pierre-Luc Dubois

He only turned 26 this week but has been traded three times since entering the league. The first two were his choice, but this one was not — a cross-country shift 12 months since signing a $68 million, eight-year contract with the Kings.

The trade came after Dubois was a bad fit in L.A. under two coaches: since-fired Todd McLellan and interim replacement Jim Hiller, who got the full-time gig after making the playoffs and losing in the first round. Dubois had 16 goals and 24 assists for 40 points, his lowest career totals over a full 82-game season.

“It wasn’t the season I necessarily wanted, so already there I had motivation,” Dubois said Wednesday “And then anything like this happens, I think any guy in the league will admit that there is an extra motivation behind it. You want to do well even more.”

Darcy Kuemper

After losing the starting job in Washington, Kuemper became the odd man out with three years left on his contract at a salary cap hit of $5.25 million. Charlie Lindgren carried the Capitals into the playoffs, and they wanted to clear an organizational logjam in goal to make room for top prospect Clay Stevenson or back-to-back American Hockey League Calder Cup champion Hunter Shepard.

Now two years removed from backstopping Colorado to the Cup, Kuemper went 13-4-3 with a 3.31 goals-against average and .890 save percentage last season.

“I’m looking to prove…

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