The Five Types of NHL Trade Deadline GMs (The DNA Summary)

After watching deadlines for years, most general managers tend to fall into one of five personality types. No one fits perfectly into just one box forever, but the patterns are real — and they repeat.

1) The Aggressive Builder

These GMs believe in action.

If they’re contending, they add.If they’re rebuilding, they accelerate it.

They help set the market rather than react to it.

These are the patient ones.

They don’t make a lot of moves — but when they do, it’s usually for a very specific need.

One right move beats three risky ones.

3) The Conservative Protector

These GMs trust their core.

They’ll make a move if they have to…But they don’t like disrupting a room that’s already working.

These are the hardest to predict.

They read the moment and adjust.They don’t lock into one philosophy.

5) The Old-School Horse Trader

This is the rarest type today.

Hockey trades

Player-for-player deals

Fixing needs with needs

They’re less interested in:

Rentals

Pick hoarding

Cap gymnastics

They believe if your team needs a defenseman and you have an extra forward, you go find another GM with the opposite problem and make a real trade.

This was once the backbone of the league.Now, in the cap era, it’s becoming more of a lost art.

But when these deals happen, they tend to be the most interesting ones — because they’re about roster construction, not just asset management.