NEW YORK — Every NHL trade deadline has its stars.
There are the general managers frantically working the phones. There are the insiders racing to break news. And then there is the one man who, whether fans love him or love to complain about him, always ends up at the center of it all.
Gary Bettman.
Yes, the commissioner of the NHL — the man who technically just approves the paperwork — somehow manages to become the unofficial main character of trade deadline day.
Fans know the routine.
A blockbuster trade breaks. The hockey world explodes on social media. Analysts dissect the cap implications, the draft picks, the fit in the lineup.
But everyone knows the deal isn’t truly real until Bettman’s league office signs off.
No stamp, no trade.
That’s why some fans jokingly call deadline day “Gary Puck.”
And frankly, they’re not wrong.
The insiders get their moment too. On NHL deadline day, Elliotte Friedman becomes hockey’s version of Jeff Passan, Shams Charania or Pete Thamel — a relentless reporting machine firing off trade updates like a one-man newswire.
But even Friedman knows the truth.
Gary still has to say yes.
Bettman has overseen the NHL since 1993, navigating lockouts, expansion, new television deals and a rapidly changing sports landscape. Love him or hate him, the league has grown dramatically under his watch.
Which makes deadline day a perfect snapshot of the modern NHL.
Deals flying. Phones ringing. Fans refreshing timelines every 10 seconds.
And somewhere in a league office, Gary Bettman making sure the paperwork is right before the hockey world can officially celebrate or panic.
So if you’re planning to watch the chaos unfold, there’s only one proper way to do it.
Crank up some Treaty Oak bourbon.
Light a cigar.
Kick back and relax.
Because the trades may belong to the general managers.
But the show?
The show still belongs to Gary.








