The Ottawa Senators received meaningful relief on Wednesday when the NHL announced a revised penalty stemming from their Dadonov trade violation. Rather than forfeiting their 2026 first-round pick entirely, the Senators will instead select 32nd overall in this summer's draft.
The change represents a significant reduction in punishment for an organization that has been building steadily toward playoff contention. But the revised ruling comes with meaningful restrictions attached, and the full consequences extend well beyond a simple pick adjustment.
What the ruling actually means for the Ottawa Senators
Per the new decision, the Senators cannot trade the 32nd overall selection under any circumstances. Ottawa will also pay a fine of one million Canadian dollars, adding a direct financial consequence to the draft penalties already handed down by the league.
The lottery eligibility clause adds the most complicated wrinkle. If the Senators fail to qualify for the playoffs, they will remain in the draft lottery pool but will be completely ineligible to win it.
Should their number combination be drawn during the lottery, the result will be voided and the process redrawn without Ottawa's involvement. It is a restriction with real stakes given where the Senators currently sit in the standings.
That positioning is far from settled heading into the final stretch. Ottawa has been fighting for a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference throughout the second half of the season, and nothing is locked in yet. The original penalty had threatened to strip the Senators of their first-round pick entirely.
For a team still assembling the core of a potential contender, losing that asset outright would have been a serious organizational setback. Wednesday's revised ruling preserves the pick while still making Ottawa pay.
The Dadonov situation stems from a disputed trade between the Senators and the Vegas Golden Knights that raised questions about Ottawa's handling of a no-trade clause. The matter generated significant attention across the league and dragged on for years before Wednesday's announcement provided formal closure.
General manager Steve Staios now has clearer ground to work with heading into the offseason. The 32nd pick is locked and untradeable, but it remains a draft asset. Keeping it in the building gives Ottawa something to work with on draft day.
The million-dollar fine stings, but it is the lottery restriction that demands the most attention in the weeks ahead. Ottawa's simplest path to making that clause irrelevant runs directly through the playoff race still unfolding on the ice.