BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – OCTOBER 30: Linus Ullmark #35 of the Boston Bruins looks on wearing his mask during the second period against the Florida Panthers at TD Garden on October 30, 2023 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
Based on that rationale, Ullmark does not sound like a man who is eager to waive his no-trade clause this summer. It will hardly get any easier for the Bruins to move him to a team on that list, too, as Ullmark’s trade protection drops from a 16-team no-trade list to a… 15-team no-trade list next season.
And Ullmark, for what it’s worth, did not feel like disclosing much of anything to me when it came to the details of that no-trade list.
“I mean, I have my list and my list is there,” Ullmark told me. “We’ve worked very hard for it. There’s a reason for why it’s there. And that’s something that the players before me worked really hard to get to the point where we have that luxury, and there’s a reason why it’s there, and there’s a reason why certain teams are on there. And there might be personal things, but that’s up to each and every player to have and what it comes from my personal things.
“That’s something for me, my family and, my agent to deal with and take care of. And I don’t have any obligations to share the reasonings or the reasons that I have certain teams on that list.”
Internally and externally, there’s been a belief that Ullmark does not want to waive his no-trade clause to go to a team in the Western Conference and that his no-trade clause involves a lot of teams that play in the West. The thought there is that being in the East makes it easier for Ullmark and his family to go back to Sweden in the offseason.
But it’s not as simple as a geography decision for Ullmark, as he revealed without outright naming — or confirming at the very least — any teams that may or may not be on that list.
“It all depends,” Ullmark said when asked about the potential geographical limitations involved in his no-trade. “It’s very hard. I mean, like I said, we don’t really have all these luxuries to really tell like, ‘I don’t want to be at certain areas.’ And there might be other things as well throughout your career that let’s say, for example, you have one team that would be on the West Coast that is really, really bad and you have them on your trade list. But then all of a sudden, maybe three years later, they’re not [bad]. They might be a contender.
“You can just look at Edmonton or whatever and look at those teams that might have been really bad, but now are really good. You might want to waive at that point, but you can’t really think about that, you know, in advance [like] how are these teams going to be in three or four years? You can’t really look into your little [crystal] ball in the future and say, ‘Hey, this is what it’s going to be, I’m going to go there’ and whatever because it might go to shit as well.”