Home US SportsNHL Prospect Tradeability Tiers: What Young Penguins’ Talent Could Be Leveraged In The Trade Market?

Prospect Tradeability Tiers: What Young Penguins’ Talent Could Be Leveraged In The Trade Market?

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Prospect Tradeability Tiers: What Young Penguins’ Talent Could Be Leveraged In The Trade Market?

During his season-ending press conference on Tuesday, Pittsburgh Penguins‘ GM and POHO Kyle Dubas made it loud and clear that he’s ready to begin mobilizing in the trade market to infuse his NHL roster with legitimate “20-something” talent.

In fact, he gave a “sales pitch” of sorts to those very players who may desire a change of scenery or be looking for a new home in 2026-27, as he believes talent in that age range is the major piece that the Penguins are lacking to become true contenders.

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“I think what we really lack are those players in their later 20s that are really true difference makers. Or mid-20s, late 20s, that are true difference makers,” Dubas said. “I think if you’re one of those players that’s a free agent or your situation in your spot is not going well and you have some control, you can look at us and see very clearly that you’re going to be supported by a great coaching staff that gets the most out of players. But you’ll also have young players that are going to push from behind and older players that are going to set the tone.”

And, as is the case with any significant trade at the NHL level, some of those young players are probably going to have to be sent the other way.

The Penguins are in a unique position this summer, as they have a ton of cap space – $42.5 million of it, as of right now – as well as a wide pool of draft capital and prospects that they can leverage in the trade market. While they can leverage some of this talent, however, there are going to be some players who will be harder to pry than others.

With that, here are trade tiers for some of the Penguins’ best prospects, ranging from “untouchables” to “check this guy out” tiers.

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The “Untouchables” Tier

F Ben Kindel

If there is one prospect – well, he’s not technically a “prospect” anymore – who is, currently, untouchable in the Penguins’ organization, it’s Ben Kindel.

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Kindel making the opening night NHL roster as an 18-year-old to begin with was unprecedented. But even more unprecedented was what Kindel showed throughout the regular season as an 18-year-old. His 17 goals and 35 points in 77 games might not jump out on the scoresheet, but the maturity in his all-around game and emergence as a legitimate third-line NHL center in his rookie season highlight that the production – and maybe just a little bit of size – are the only things that need to come around.

He’s a special player, and he’s the best young player the Penguins have right now. He shouldn’t be moved under any circumstance.

G Sergei Murashov

There’s only one other Penguins’ prospect in this tier, and that’s the most promising netminder in their system.

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Like Kindel, the 21-year-old Murashov – currently on cruise control through the Calder Cup Playoffs with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) – is such an integral part of the Penguins’ future. Goaltending is a volalite position, so you don’t see goaltenders crack these kinds of lists every day.

But Murashov is an exception. He’s the most talented goaltender the Penguins have had in quite a while, and right now, there is a sizeable gap between he and the other goaltending prospects, even if the Penguins have depth at the position in their system.

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The “Conditional Untouchable” Tier

D Harrison Brunicke

This tier could easily just be named “the Harrison Brunicke tier,” as he is the lone player in this tier for a reason. As big a gap as there is between Murashov and the other goaltending prospects in the system, the talent gap is even bigger between Brunicke and the next-best defenseman in Pittsburgh’s system.

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The 20-year-old blueliner – selected 44th overall in 2024 – has NHL pedigree and seems to be a first-round talent stolen in the second round. He’s probably a future top-four defenseman, and – at the high end of his ceiling – a mainstay top-pairing difference-maker in transition and offensively. The Penguins should do everything they can to keep him around at, nearly, all costs.

However, when teams shoot for big names like Robertson, Matthews, Harley, or Thomas, typically, the return package requires a top organizational prospect like Brunicke, Murashov, or Kindel. Kindel and Murashov are slightly more untouchable than Brunicke, making him the likely candidate to go of those three.

But, the condition is that he should only be dealt in the event that the Penguins plan on landing another promising young defenseman either through the same trade or a different one. Otherwise, he needs to stay put, because he’s one of one in their system.

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The “Only If A 20-Something Impact Name Is Coming Back” Tier

F Bill Zonnon

For the rest of the tiers, players aren’t really in order. But, for this tier only, Bill Zonnon is at the top of the list.

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Zonnon could, arguably, be in the Brunicke tier. He’s quickly climbing the ranks as one of – if not the best of – Pittsburgh’s top forward prospects, and he likely has a high floor at the NHL level. He has impressed in his first taste of the AHL, coming away with the game-winning goal in WBS’s Game 1 Atlantic Division Final matchup against the Springfield Thunderbirds and tacking on another in Game 2.

He’s a multi-tool player. He excels defensively, can turn on the jets, has excellent vision, is a good playmaker, plays physical, and is a menace on the forecheck. By all accounts, he will be a big part of the Penguins’ future.

Sounds like a guy who should be virtually untouchable, right?

Well, almost. The only reason there is a degree of separation between Brunicke and Zonnon here is because of the talent gap between Brunicke and the organization’s next-best defensive prospect in comparison to the gap between Zonnon and the next-best forward.

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The 19-year-old Zonnon is one in a crop of forward prospects. Brunicke is on an island at this point. By sheer volume, that puts Zonnon a tick below and in the “Only If A 20-Something Impact Name Is Coming Back” tier.

F Will Horcoff

The 19-year-old Horcoff – drafted in the first round along with Kindel and Zonnon in 2025 – impressed in his first full season with the University of Michigan, amassing 25 goals and 39 points in 40 NCAA games. And it’s worth noting that, for the first half of the season, he was scoring at nearly a goal-per game pace.

Like Zonnon, it should take a lot to pry who is the most promising goal-scoring prospect in the organization. After all, Dubas said that Horcoff excels at the game’s most important skill, which is putting the puck in the back of the net. It’s not too often that a bona fide sniper could be waiting in the wings, but that would also be an attractive commodity for another team that is making high-end talent available.

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G Gabriel D’Aigle

It may come as a bit of a surprise that Gabriel D’Aigle is in this tier, but watching a few of his games should help qualm those concerns pretty swiftly.

Not only is he 6-foot-5 and occupying a lot of space in the net, he’s also quick. As in, probably near as quick as Murashov. He gets post-to-post with relative ease, his reads are pretty advanced for his age, and he still managed a .908 save percentage with the Victoriaville Tigres despite facing a ludicrous volume of shots against.

If Murashov doesn’t work out, D’Aigle might just be on his level soon, anyway, as he is already the backup for the Wheeling Nailers (ECHL) in the Kelly Cup Playoffs. He put up a .925 save percentage in three regular-season games for Wheeling and stopped 11 of 12 in relief of Taylor Gauthier in Game 3 of their North Division Final series against the Maine Mariners.

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He’s a very intriguing goaltending prospect who should only be dealt for a higher-profile NHL player.

F Mikhail Ilyin

Watching Mikhail Ilyin in these AHL playoffs has been a bit of a revelation. Yes, those who have been keeping tabs on him in the KHL are aware of his high-level playmaking acumen, as he is a magician with the puck on his stick.

But he’s not only adjusted to the AHL and the North American game pretty quickly, he’s been one of WBS’s best players through six playoff games, not missing a beat. His five points (1G-4A) co-lead the team in the playoffs, and he looks dominant at times.

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