*Editor's note: This post has been brought back and updated.

There have been plenty of Jim Nill moments in his time with the Dallas Stars. There's been the good (2015 Jason Spezza, Ben Bishop) and the bad (2017 Jason Spezza, Antti Niemi). But nothing really compares to what he did five years ago today.

Nill had been with the Stars for just over two months when he traded for Tyler Seguin. Inversely, the Bruins pulled the trigger on the deal just 10 days after losing in the Stanley Cup Final to the Chicago Blackhawks.

The deal: Boston sent Seguin, Rich Peverley and Ryan Button for Loui Eriksson, Reilly Smith, Matt Fraser and Joe Morrow.

What makes the trade extra sweet for Dallas is the fact that none of the four pieces it gave up to get Seguin were on Boston's roster a mere four years after the trade.

Meanwhile, Seguin has nearly been a point-per-game player for the Stars, tallying 384 [173 goals and 211 assists]. He has scored at least 26 goals per season every year in Dallas and reached 40 for the first time in his career in 2017. Oh, and he's been a four-time All-Star as well.

Hockey News' Jared Clinton sums up the trade pretty well here:

At the time of the Bruins-Stars swap in 2013, most anyone would have said the return was uneven, a definite win for Dallas. That came with caveats, however, with the potential for Eriksson, Smith and Morrow to become fixtures of the Bruins' lineup as the one way for Boston to win some portion of the trade. Four years later, though, a bad deal looks worse, and as Seguin continues to succeed with the Stars, the Bruins are now officially left without any trace of arguably their most significant trade of the past decade.

Celebrate the trade with some of our best Seguin stories below:

How former Boston problem child Tyler Seguin became the next big thing for Dallas Stars

Dallas Stars forward Tyler Seguin at the Stars practice facility (Dr Pepper Arena in Frisco October 2, 2014. (Nathan Hunsinger/The Dallas Morning News)

-- Click/tap here to read the story.

Tyler Seguin revealed: His big house, Justin Bieber love and how he shredded his bad-boy image

Nicole Berinshteyn, 13, of Plano, Texas, hugs Dallas Stars center Tyler Seguin while Seguin meets fans at Rally House in Dallas Monday March 14, 2016. (Andy Jacobsohn/The Dallas Morning News)

-- Click/tap to read the story here.

Quick preview: Tyler Seguin wasn't due until 5:45 p.m., but the line for this meet-and-greet at the Rally House Alpha sports boutique formed much earlier.

Would you believe 1 p.m.? On a Monday? For a hockey player? In Dallas?

By evening's end, 500-plus fans, roughly 60-percent of them female, got one-on-one face time with 24-year-old Star-attraction Seguin. Some came from out of state, including two young ladies from New Jersey.

"He's good at hockey," explained Amy Simons, one of the Garden Staters.

"And he's good-looking," chimed the other, AnnMarie Lapelosa. "Not gonna lie."

Days later, Seguin's mother, Jackie, was told of the numerous blushing, tongue-tied teen girls who took selfies with Tyler and wobbled out of Rally House in shock.

"Just as long as he's polite and kind to everybody," Jackie said. "Because Tyler's just Tyler. He's no superstar to me. He's just my son."

Though she was 1,400 miles away in the Seguins' hometown of Brampton, Ontario, Jackie need not have worried about Tyler's Rally House manners.

He made friendly small talk, shook every hand and looked each fan in the eyes. The event was supposed to end at 7, but at 6:49 chants of "Tyler, Tyler!" rang through the store when, with Seguin's blessing, extra fans were ushered in.

He treated the last person, at 7:13, the same as the first -- in the manner he says he was taught as a kid by his father, Paul.

Boston GM: Bruins 'probably could have done some things differently' with Stars' Tyler Seguin

Dallas Stars' Tyler Seguin (91) celebrates his goal during the second period of an NHL hockey game against the Boston Bruins in Boston, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)

-- You don't say? Click/tap here to read more.

Mike Modano 2.0? How Tyler Seguin's evolution led Dallas back to the playoff picture

Mike Modano (left) and Tyler Seguin. (Photos by Getty Images -- Jared Silber, Richard Wolowicz / Illustration by Joshua Friemel - The Dallas Morning News)

-- Check out Tim Cowlishaw's work here.