The NHL Draft Lottery was held on May 5th, resulting in the Anaheim Ducks dropping two spots to the 10th overall pick in the 2025 NHL Entry Draft. The Ducks entered the lottery with the eighth-best odds but will still make their seventh straight top-10 draft selection. The team’s management is focused on ending their NHL’s third-longest active playoff drought by aiming to make the 2025-26 playoffs.
Potential free agent needs for the Ducks include a mobile defenseman, a middle-six center, and top-line point scorers. As one of the league’s strongest young cores and with the third-most cap space available in 2024-25, the Ducks might consider trading the 10th pick for a proven impact player. However, trades involving top-10 picks have been rare over the past 15 years.
Highlighted draft day trades since 2011 show only a few instances where top-10 picks were traded for established players, reflecting how valuable these picks are. According to Martin Madden, the Ducks’ assistant general manager and director of amateur scouting, teams usually hold onto these picks because they’ve studied their top prospects all season and prefer to keep them.
Top-10 draft picks can be franchise-changing players who provide long-term stability. Trading these picks could bring in immediate help but often leads to a weaker team in the short term. Some NHL teams are expected to be near the salary cap limit for the 2025-26 season, including the Colorado Avalanche and Dallas Stars, who might consider trading talented players like Jason Robertson.
Such trades involving top-10 picks are increasingly rare, but if a young core player becomes available, teams like the Ducks might be interested in making a deal close to the draft day. Any major trades involving these picks could happen just before or during the first day of the 2025 NHL Entry Draft.
Fan Take: This news is crucial for hockey fans as it highlights the strategic balancing act teams face between developing young talent through the draft and acquiring proven players to compete immediately. For the sport, it underscores how the value of top draft picks continues to shape team futures and the NHL’s competitive landscape.