Problem with trading Morin is he likely wont get better than a 5th round pick in return. He will be very valuable next year if the cap does not go up or not go up enough. Much more valuable than a 5th round pick. That being said the board of governors are meeting this week and they expect that the cap will be between 72-74 million next year. http://espn.go.com/blog/nhl/post/_/id/33442/expansion-on-board-of-governors-agenda-but-dont-expect-anything-big The salary cap: This is the annual meeting during which the league gives clubs their first projected number for next season's salary cap. It's a projection, not an exact number, but normally it gives teams enough direction in order to plan ahead for next season. There has been much hand-wringing among some of the bigger-market, high-spending clubs that the salary cap isn't quite going up as much as they thought it was going to, which is leaving them pressed up against the ceiling trying to juggle how to re-sign and keep their core together. Montreal Canadiens GM Marc Bergevin pointed to the uncertainty of the cap when he talked about dealing away Travis Moen and later Rene Bourque, both of whom carry contracts that go beyond this season. Still, what governors will be told by the league leadership this week is that despite all the concern, as long as there isn't any significant change (downward) in the Canadian dollar between now and June 30, the salary cap next season is projected to be somewhere between $72 million and $74 million, up from the current $69 million. The governors will actually get a more precise figure though a source told ESPN.com it should be in that range.