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Report: Another issue in Jack Eichel’s trade situation
Zuma Press 

Report: Another issue in Jack Eichel’s trade situation

This is one hell of a roller-coaster, folks!

HockeyFeed

HockeyFeed

For the past week, the Jack Eichel trade chatter has died down. That probably has to do with the fact that it was reported that the captain is in Buffalo for his pre-training camp physical.  But questions of whether he will be cleared to play and his future with the team in limbo remain and on Tuesday, another issue arose for Eichel and the Sabres. 

As you know, Eichel hasn’t played since March 7 when he sustained a herniated disk that has created a widening rift between the player and the Sabres. Eichel favors having artificial disk replacement surgery. The Sabres are against him having the procedure because it has never been performed on an NHL player, and TSN’s Darren Dreger reports that GM Kevyn Adams believes that the best option is fusion surgery.

This is a fork in the road no doubt! 

If Eichel fails the physical this week, the Sabres have the option of placing him on injured reserve or long-term injured reserve because the injury is hockey related. If Eichel had chosen not to report and undergo the aforementioned physical, the team would have had the option to suspend the player.

So you have to admit that Eichel probably still cares about the Sabres, or has enough respect for the franchise to show up at camp and get evaluated by a club that wants him to go under the knife in a different way that he would prefer. That’s big. 

We also wonder how climate in the dressing room will be, for teammates and Eichel himself whenever he plays, knowing that he wants out. 

Eichel switched agents last month and is now represented Pat Brisson, who can make tough moves when necessary.  Eichel is under contract through 2025-26 with a $10-million cap hit and GM Adams is believed to be asking for a hefty return in exchange for his captain: he is reportedly seeking and not budging from his demand of the equivalent of four first-round picks,  which could be anything from young, established roster players, A-level prospects, or actual first-round draft picks in the next two NHL drafts.

This neck injury is truly … a pain in the neck for this trade situation! 

Source: TSN