By Nick Obergan This summer is poised to have one of the shallowest pools of quality free agents in years, but the trade market is flush with opportunities to change the landscape of the NHL. Apart from the potential address changes by Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, below are ten names who could conceivably be on the move this offseason (listed alphabetically). Jarome Iginla, Calgary Watching Iginla giving interviews toward the end of another lost season is like seeing a kid who gets made fun of for being the smartest one in school; you feel so bad for the guy, you wish you could put him in a better school. Iginla has aced all of his tests and proven he is too good for his current school, but the school is in such disarray and doesn’t have the funds or ownership capable of improving the curriculum. He has been more than a good soldier about all of the losing and terrible roster management, and is an icon in Calgary (and rightfully so), so it is obviously difficult to make a move of this magnitude. But the team badly needs to rebuild even if they refuse to use that term, and Iginla would bring in the most and best assets. Meanwhile Iginla deserves to play in the playoffs, and more importantly deserves another chance to play for the Stanley Cup, which has eluded him so far in his first-ballot-Hall-of-Fame career. He will be 35-years-old when next season starts, time is running out. Iginla brings with him only one more year on his contract with a big dollar amount ($7M), but would still be good fits for the Rangers, Devils, Capitals, Kings, Blackhawks, Red Wings, Blues, or Bruins. Miikka Kiprusoff, Calgary If Iginla goes, Kiprusoff should follow soon-after. The 35-year-old goalie has recorded over 300 wins, a Vezina trophy, and is still capable of being a starter for another three seasons or so by the looks of things (he is coming off a season with a 2.35 GAA and .921 SV%). He brings with him a manageable cap hit just north of $5.8M for two more seasons. )Three more good seasons - putting 400 wins within reach - puts Kiprusoff in Hall of Fame territory as well. For two more years, wouldn’t he be a much better fit (for someone like the Leafs, Blackhawks, Lightning, Blue Jackets, Jets, Devils if Brodeur retires, or Islanders), than the guy below him on this list? Roberto Luongo, Vancouver This much is certain: it will be Luongo or Schneider in Vancouver next season, and not both. Schneider is on the verge of stardom, while Luongo is a Vezina-nominee still capable of a couple more All-Star seasons. That being said, he is also capable of handcuffing you both financially (his contract has 10 more seasons left on it with over $47M remaining) and in the playoffs, where his inconsistency the past three years have been well documented. The Canucks would no doubt prefer to trade a 33-year-old with a contract they very much regret. Toronto, Tampa Bay, Columbus or New Jersey (if Brodeur retires) may show varying degrees of interest, but it looks like Tampa makes the most sense, given for Luongo’s comfort level with media scrutiny. Patrick Marleau, San Jose To put it kindly, Marleau is not the NHL’s version of Mr. October. Despite scoring 30+ goals in six of the last seven seasons and is a regular point producer in the playoffs, he tends to completely disappear when the games get more difficult. In 129 career playoff games he has 88 points and is minus-11. This year, he managed nine shots in five games and didn’t record a point. Sadly he has a No Movement Clause, and has stayed quiet and loyal to the organization even though they stripped him of his captaincy after a playoff flameout a couple years ago. The Sharks desperately need a change to an underachieving unit, and Marleau may finally feel the need for a change himself. His cap hit is large ($6.9M) but he only has two more years left, and could interest any team with the cap room necessary. Rick Nash, Columbus Iginla can thank Rick Nash for taking the annual trade deadline heat off of him this season, when it was announced that Nash has submitted a list of teams he would accept a trade to. The list was rumored to contain the Leafs, Bruins, Rangers, Kings and Sharks. A trade would not be easy, given his contract ($7.8M for six more years), but you cannot deny the star power and goal scoring potential he would bring to any lineup. In only his second year in the league, Nash tied for the league lead with 41 goals; he has scored 30+ in six of the seven years that followed, despite his teammates getting progressively worse. True, he has yet to have a 70-point season, but give him an actual top-line center to play with and he should be a lock for 40 goals again. Nash would really benefit from playing with a contender. You can argue his status as an elite player all you like, but if you watched him in the 2010 Olympics when he had good teammates, his play was elevated to the degree where he was one of the best players in the tournament on both ends of the ice. Conversely, Columbus would really benefit from the haul of youth and draft picks they would receive in return for Nash, as they desperately need to re-stock the cupboard and start over. Bobby Ryan, Anaheim Trading Ryan is both incredibly easy and incredibly difficult. It is easy because every team in the league would love to have a 25-year-old 30-goal scorer for a $5.1M cap hit over the next four years. It is difficult because you need to convince yourself, your ownership, your players, and your fans that this is a good idea. The fact remains that Anaheim stunk for a lot of last season, and a shakeup needs to be made to the core dynamic. Ryan Getzlaf has been talked about recently, but he is their captain; Bobby is the one talked about every year for the last three, and he would bring in a lot of value to the team through a trade, maybe more than Getzlaf would because he is younger and signed for longer. Luke Schenn, Toronto Like the guy above him, Schenn probably wants to get traded just so everyone stops asking him about it, because he is in rumors on a weekly basis, involving pretty much anyone the Leafs could possibly be linked to. The newest rumor out there has the Leafs shopping Schenn with the #5 pick for the Oilers’ #1 pick in the draft. The fact of the matter is, when you are drafted 5th overall, you are supposed to progress much quicker than Schenn has, especially playing in the NHL’s unofficial capital of Toronto. The flip side of that, is Schenn is still only 22-years-old and has shown flashes in his four years to suggest he is capable of being a top-pairing defenseman (or at least a top-3 guy). Now I may be an idiot, and you are likely to find someone that shares that belief, but I think Schenn will be a top-pair defensive defenseman when he reaches his prime in a couple of years. With his age and easy-to-stomach contract (four years, $3.6M cap hit), there would be no shortage of suitors should the Leafs officially put him on the block, but perhaps they shouldn’t be real eager to do so (he was seventh in the league in hits last season, and third on the team in blocked shots). Cory Schneider, Vancouver As we have stated, either he or Luongo have to go. The Canucks would obviously prefer to keep him due to age and money, but that is the same reason other teams will come knockin’ on GM Mike Gillis’ door for his services. Obviously teams such as Toronto, Columbus, Tampa Bay, New Jersey, NY Islanders, maybe Chicago would all love to have him, but he will cost more than Luongo. For instance, Toronto would do well to offer up Nazem Kadri and the 5th overall pick, plus a B-rated prospect. Goaltending can you very far, and Schneider looks like a top-10 goalie already. Tim Thomas, Boston This idea seemed ridiculous a year ago when Boston won the Cup and Thomas won the Vezina and Conn Smythe after a historic season. But now, after flaming out in the first round without putting forth a dominant performance, and on the heels of a controversial season that saw him skip the White House visit and bring other political attention to his Facebook page, the window for his departure could now be open. Boston also has his replacement, Tuukka Rask, ready and waiting for a full-time job. Additionally, Thomas only has one more year remaining on his contract, and the $5M cap hit isn’t burdensome for a team needing a one-year stop gap in net. If teams like Toronto, Columbus, Chicago, and Tampa Bay fail to land a young goalie to build around, they may take a flier on Thomas for one year. James van Riemsdyk, Philadelphia Something has to give in Philadelphia. After a dominating first round victory over Pittsburgh, the Flyers didn’t have any juice left in the second round and had their season end sooner than expected, If there is no amnesty provision in the next CBA, the lineup might get shuffled another way, and one could be to dangle the former No. 2 pick van Riemsdyk. He is injury prone and hasn’t lived up to his expectations or his new contract yet (six years, $4.25M per year), but that shouldn’t stop the Flyers from receiving numerous offers from teams looking to take a crack at the 23-year-old forward. Nick is RealGM’s NHL Feature Writer. You can reach him by email nick.obergan@realgm.com or on twitter @NickObergan