Utah Hockey Club acquires defenseman Olli Maatta from Red Wings

The Hockey Club is sending a 2025 third-round pick, previously acquired from the Rangers, to Detroit to complete the deal.

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Utah has acquired defenseman Olli Maatta from the Red Wings in a late-night trade, the team announced . The Hockey Club is sending a 2025 third-round pick, previously acquired from the Rangers, to Detroit to complete the deal. It’s no surprise to see the first-year franchise swing a deal for a defenseman.

They’ll be without a pair of top-four defenders, Sean Durzi and John Marino , for most of the season after they both underwent surgeries in the past couple of weeks. Durzi could miss the rest of the regular season after having a procedure to repair his right shoulder, while Marino will likely be out until the 4 Nations Face-Off in February while recovering from lower back surgery. Initial reports suggested Utah would likely lean on internal solutions to fill the void.



They recalled 2022 first-round pick Maveric Lamoureux from AHL Tucson and have gotten solid hockey out of 24-year-old Michael Kesselring , who’s now averaging over 20 minutes per night and has five points and a team-leading +5 rating through 10 games. But losses have kept piling up for Utah, who remain at .500 with a 4-4-2 record after yesterday’s third-period collapse to the Sharks, which resulted in a 5-4 overtime defeat.

A report from Pierre LeBrun of TSN last week suggested Utah had at least checked in on the availability of Blue Jackets defender Ivan Provorov , but they’ll end up netting a much cheaper player in Määttä in terms of both contract and acquisition cost. Maatta, 30, is in the second year of a two-year, $6M extension he signed with the Wings in 2023. The Finnish stay-at-home defender has called Detroit home since signing there as a free agent in 2022.

He’s inexplicably been pushed down the lineup in recent days, sitting as a healthy scratch in two of the Wings’ last four games despite controlling 57.8% of expected goals when he’s on the ice at even strength. That number jumps out in a big way on a Detroit team that’s again struggled to maintain possession at 5-on-5 this year, controlling 42.

5% of shot attempts, 43.7% of scoring chances, and 41.9% of high-danger chances.

He’d yet to get on the scoresheet this season and was averaging a career-low 15:52 per game, but his 44.4 CF% was second among Wings defenders only to Simon Edvinsson . Detroit’s loss is Utah’s gain.

Maatta should post better results on a Utah club that’s actually been one of the league’s better 5-on-5 teams this season despite their roller-coaster record. He’s a left-shot but has played on the right side frequently throughout his 12-year NHL career, a task he’ll likely be asked to replicate in Salt Lake City. Whether he immediately steps into a top-four role with Durzi and Marino out remains to be seen, but at the very least, he’s a demonstrable upgrade on either of their current third-pairing options, Robert Bortuzzo and Vladislav Kolyachonok .

He had 18 points and a +14 rating in 72 appearances for Detroit last season. For the Wings, it’s the second time in a few months that general manager Steve Yzerman has traded away one of the more effective defenders on a blue line that has struggled to prevent quality scoring chances. He dealt Jake Walman to the Sharks in a somewhat similar cap-dump move back in June, although that transaction required him to offload a second-round pick to get San Jose to take his entire contract.

He’s at least receiving an asset back for Maatta here with no salary retention, but it’s still a puzzling move for a team looking to push for a playoff spot. Detroit does at least free up a roster spot and a fair amount of cap space with the move. They now have a comfortable $3.

58M in current cap space, per PuckPedia . The flurry of paper transactions to conserve cap space and juggle a full roster should now calm down, and the Red Wings do have far more in-season maneuverability to perhaps address other roster weaknesses in a more cost-effective manner. This article first appeared on Pro Hockey Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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