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    Home»Sports»Will first-round sweep be the end of Brady Tkachuk’s Senators tenure?
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    Will first-round sweep be the end of Brady Tkachuk’s Senators tenure?

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteApril 26, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    With their 4-2 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes on Saturday, the Ottawa Senators were eliminated from the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs in a four-game sweep that turned out to be an absolutely disastrous showing by the team’s best players. That includes team captain Brady Tkachuk, who did not score a single goal or record a single point in the entire series. 

    Not only was Tkachuk a complete non-factor offensively, but he seemed more focused on trying to be a pest and cage-rattler than an effective hockey player, and on more than one occasion, it ended up becoming a detriment to the Senators’ chances.

    Now that the Senators are done, and with Tkachuk putting a giant goose egg on the board in the series, the focus is going to turn to his future in Ottawa. 

    If he has one.

    Will first-round sweep be the end of Brady Tkachuk’s tenure in Ottawa?

    It’s not a contract situation, as Tkachuk is signed long-term on a seven-year deal that carries an $8.23 million salary cap hit per season. 

    It’s not even a talent question, because if you look beyond the small sample size of a four-game playoff series, Tkachuk is objectively a very talented, very productive first-line player. He is also the type of player a lot of general managers around the league would crawl over miles of rusty nails to acquire. Teams love players like this. They crave them. 

    It’s a question of whether or not he actually wants to remain there, and there is plenty of smoke to suggest that maybe he doesn’t.

    The smoke first started to rise a little over a month ago when his brother, Florida Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk, and his dad, former NHL player Keith Tkachuk, spoke on their podcast and absolutely ripped the coaching staff for Brady’s ice time and role with the team. While Brady attempted to stop them, it was still a weird thing to watch unfold. And it doesn’t take a massive leap to suggest that if the brother and dad are willing to publicly say it, Brady might have privately been thinking it. 

    There’s also been a sense that Tkachuk is just unhappy in Ottawa, a theory that was floated this past week again by NHL insider Frank Seravalli.

    Given his age (26), the fact that he has term remaining on his contract, and is an enticing combination of talent, production and physicality, there would be no shortage of teams lining up to trade for him. As such, the Senators would be able to get a pretty significant return, and still allow them to move forward with Tim Stutzle as their franchise cornerstone. 

    It would likely require Tkachuk forcing the issue and asking his way out, but all options should be on the table after another dismal playoff showing for him and the Senators. 

    He might need a change.

    The Senators might need a change. 

    This might be the offseason for everybody to get it. 





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