Holland seemed pessimistic about his chances of trading Datsyuk's contract at the time. Maybe he was managing expectations. Maybe he was posturing for trade partners. Or maybe he was being realistic, considering few teams seemed able, let alone willing, to absorb Datsyuk's cap charge for a reasonable price. Holland did not want to give up too much in assets, especially top young players.
In the end, Holland said more teams were interested than he expected, but many of them wanted to unload bad contracts as part of any deal. Holland felt he could make some deals if he needed cap space when free agency opened July 1, but he would have paid a steeper price than he did Friday.
Coyotes GM John Chayka called Holland during the draft because a player his staff liked was dropping. The Red Wings held the No.16 pick; the Coyotes held the No. 20 pick. Detroit traded Datsyuk and the No.16 pick to the Coyotes for the No. 20 pick, No. 53 pick and Vitale.
This was not a bad deal for the Coyotes. They drafted the player they wanted, Jakob Chychrun, a defenseman from Sarnia of the Ontario Hockey League. They gave up a second-round pick, but they had cap space, won't have to pay Datsyuk's salary and got out of paying Vitale's salary.