All quiet on the Nash front

Blue Jackets GM, player not talking

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COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Columbus Blue Jackets general manager Scott Howson isn't saying much about his quest to trade captain Rick Nash.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 06/07/2012 (4931 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Columbus Blue Jackets general manager Scott Howson isn’t saying much about his quest to trade captain Rick Nash.

“We are working very hard” was about the limit of the conversation when Howson was reached Thursday. He also added that he is not facing a deadline to make a deal.

Just about everyone else believes that things should be heating up.

CP
Kathy Willens / the associated press archives
Blue Jackets right-winger Rick Nash will command a hefty price � young prospects and draft choices.
CP Kathy Willens / the associated press archives Blue Jackets right-winger Rick Nash will command a hefty price � young prospects and draft choices.

Nash, the Blue Jackets leader in most offensive categories, revealed midway through last season that he had asked to be traded. He has a no-trade clause in his contract, and has given the club a list of possible destinations.

It was thought that once top free agents Zach Parise and Ryan Suter signed (both with Minnesota earlier this week), interest in Nash would climb. Among the reported suitors are the New York Rangers, Detroit, San Jose, Carolina and Philadelphia.

Nash’s camp is not speaking, either. He has not addressed the situation publicly since the regular season ended and his Toronto-based agent, Joe Resnick, did not return a telephone message seeking comment Thursday.

Since this was an already sparse free-agent crop in terms of offensive firepower, Nash should be a prized commodity. It’s a question whether teams want to meet Howson’s asking price, believed to be a couple of top young NHL-ready players with a high draft pick or two.

There is much to like about Nash. He is one of only four players to score at least 30 goals in each of the past five seasons (Calgary’s Jarome Iginla, New Jersey’s Ilya Kovalchuk and Washington’s Alex Ovechkin are the others), and many of them are highlight-reel quality.

The quiet 28-year-old is also a model citizen, winning the NHL Foundation Player Award in 2009 for his commitment and service to charities in his community.

Nash is coming off a season in which he scored 30 goals and added 29 assists, but had a career worst minus-19 plus/minus. Of course, that number also has a lot to do with his teammates, and the Blue Jackets were far and away the worst team in the NHL last season.

When it was revealed in February he wanted to be traded, Nash curiously said he asked for a deal because he wanted to help the only NHL club for which he has ever played.

“I was informed by management that there was a rebuild, a reshape, in the team and I personally felt I could be a huge part of that toward bringing assets in,” he said. “In my view, that was the best thing for the team, the organization, and personally for my career.”

Nash has spent the off-season working out with teammates, shuttling between his summer home in Canada and playing golf in the Columbus area.

Nash has four years remaining on his contract, with a cap hit of $7.8 million.

— The Associated Press

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