The Jets missed their chance to end the Islanders' playoff hopes and possibly the opportunity to make an upgrade at the trade deadline.
The Winnipeg Jets continue to exceed their preseason expectations, and they are now proud owners of a 9-game win streak. Does this force them into a buyers position ahead of the NHL Trade Deadline? John Lu joins That’s Hockey to discuss this,
And I’ll remind you, for those who kind of wag your finger at the Winnipeg Jets as being conservative – last year at the deadline, Kevin Cheveldayoff traded his first, his second, a third, and a fourth.
Kevin Cheveldayoff has watched his team, the Winnipeg Jets sit near or atop the NHL standings for the majority of this season. So, the question was would that affect how he approached the trade deadline which came at 2 CT on Friday?
Kevin Cheveldayoff and the Winnipeg Jets refused to stand pat at the 2025 NHL trade deadline. No, the Jets did not go out and land perennial sniper Mikko Rantanen or trade for Bruins' captain Brad Marchand,
The trade deadline came and went, and the NHL's first-place Winnipeg Jets didn't address their top need: a second-line center.It wasn't without an effort, though. Jets general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff confirmed that he made a push for former New York Islanders center Brock Nelson,
Coming to the Jets are 35-year-old defenceman Luke Schenn, on his ninth NHL team, and 33-year-old winger Brandon Tanev, who returns to the place he started his career.
Jets GM Kevin Cheveldayoff is approaching the most consequential trade deadline of his 14-year tenure. That’s why it would be downright shocking if Cheveldayoff isn’t wheeling and dealing from now until Friday’s deadline.
This deadline couldn’t have unfolded worse for Kevin Cheveldayoff. When all was said and done, he Jets held onto all their first-round picks and prospects — just not by design. Jacob Stoller looks at the Jets’ trade deadline.
NEWARK – Winnipeg Jets general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff may not have hit it out of the park, but he didn’t go down looking either. Whether or not that was the right path won’t be known for a
The Winnipeg Jets have acquired defenceman Luke Schenn from the Pittsburgh Penguins in exchange for a second-rounder in 2026 and a fourth-round pick in 2027, the teams announced Friday.