Highlander said:Bob McKenzie saying Leafs are bringing back Hainsey on a one year deal.
Unless I'm mistaken, he never said this. He just raised the possibility of the Leafs trying to bring him back on a cheap deal.
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Highlander said:Bob McKenzie saying Leafs are bringing back Hainsey on a one year deal.
hockeyfan1 said:jdh1 said:I,m wondering if the Leafs have to part with some major pieces.I can,t see this working out to a serious cup contender as it appears right now.
For example if Marner gets a big offer from another club.Maybe they have to get their 4 first rounders and move on.Use that room to get some defence and a cheaper wingers. Without him they would still have their 3 main centers to build the team around.
How about if one of the teams doing the offer-sheeting happens to be this one:
https://montrealgazette.com/sports/hockey/nhl/hockey-inside-out/hickey-on-hockey-5
princedpw said:But if the Marner negotiations drag out, offer sheets to Kapanen and Johnsson make a ton of sense. Both guys are currently better than 90% of the 2nd round picks will be in 5 years. So I think many teams have the cap space and the picks to improve via an offer that improves the team now and in the future.
Nik the Trik said:There's still the fundamental problem of offer sheets though. Either the offer is too high, in which case the team offering it is making a bad decision, or the offer is a fair or even good price in which case the Leafs are probably better off matching it and trading the player themselves.
There's a really good reason we don't see many offer sheets despite teams often being in tricky spots financially. GMs know it's a bad business to be in.
bustaheims said:The issue there is they won't be able to trade them for 12 months after matching the offer sheet. They'd need to be proactive about it.
Nik the Trik said:If teams out there are really going to try and come up with a number there which is specifically designed to make the Leafs unable to match then god bless them but that still seems like making a decision that inflates RFA salaries for everyone for a fairly minimal return.
OldTimeHockey said:Exactly. The GM's are in the business of winning. That's a definite. But using the method being suggested, the GM is only screwing himself and the other 30 general managers in the end. That and why would any GM deal with a guy who just purposely held a gun to your head? I mean, he may not need you today, but there's a good chance that, in the not so distant future, he will need to make a deal with you.
Nik the Trik said:OldTimeHockey said:Exactly. The GM's are in the business of winning. That's a definite. But using the method being suggested, the GM is only screwing himself and the other 30 general managers in the end. That and why would any GM deal with a guy who just purposely held a gun to your head? I mean, he may not need you today, but there's a good chance that, in the not so distant future, he will need to make a deal with you.
I don't think teams would begrudge an offer sheet in good faith. Teams still dealt with Philly after their Weber offer sheet and Calgary after they did it with O'Reilly.
Thing is, those guys were still pretty big prizes. I like Kapanen and Johnsson but I have to think that most teams out there basically have their version of those guys and they don't want to see the prices on them rise.
Nik the Trik said:princedpw said:But if the Marner negotiations drag out, offer sheets to Kapanen and Johnsson make a ton of sense. Both guys are currently better than 90% of the 2nd round picks will be in 5 years. So I think many teams have the cap space and the picks to improve via an offer that improves the team now and in the future.
There's still the fundamental problem of offer sheets though. Either the offer is too high, in which case the team offering it is making a bad decision, or the offer is a fair or even good price in which case the Leafs are probably better off matching it and trading the player themselves.
There's a really good reason we don't see many offer sheets despite teams often being in tricky spots financially. GMs know it's a bad business to be in.
disco said:Looking back at the playoffs and the last two teams standing, I was thinking the Leafs in it's current incarnation stack up fine against any other team; the Tampas, the San Joses, the St. Louis'... anyone not named Boston. And even them they play to 7 games. The Leafs may be much, much closer than it appears.
Keefe has developed a lot of players over his now four seasons behind the Toronto Marlies? bench, but the growth of Moore has been particularly nice to watch because of just how far he has come. When it comes to first-round picks, organizations are invested in their success and the expectations are high. Expectations for an undrafted prospect are different.
In their exit meeting, Keefe told Moore that much: Moore?s path had become the model and Keefe wanted him to know that.
?You get players that are on different paths that end up here. When you get players such as Trevor Moore, an undrafted free agent who comes in and struggles in his first year and even in his second year is a healthy scratch in the first half of the season a little bit, and you see him find his way and never look back, that?s a fun process to be a part of,? Keefe said.
?The credit goes to Trevor for believing in himself and just deciding to come to work every single day and bring a level of consistency that really becomes the model around here.?
herman said:The Reason Connor Brown is Now Expendable
https://theathletic.com/996642/2019/05/29/trevor-moores-impressive-marlies-chapter-has-turned-him-into-a-model-for-the-franchise/
Keefe has developed a lot of players over his now four seasons behind the Toronto Marlies? bench, but the growth of Moore has been particularly nice to watch because of just how far he has come. When it comes to first-round picks, organizations are invested in their success and the expectations are high. Expectations for an undrafted prospect are different.
In their exit meeting, Keefe told Moore that much: Moore?s path had become the model and Keefe wanted him to know that.
?You get players that are on different paths that end up here. When you get players such as Trevor Moore, an undrafted free agent who comes in and struggles in his first year and even in his second year is a healthy scratch in the first half of the season a little bit, and you see him find his way and never look back, that?s a fun process to be a part of,? Keefe said.
?The credit goes to Trevor for believing in himself and just deciding to come to work every single day and bring a level of consistency that really becomes the model around here.?
From development camp invite to NHL playoff 4th line goal scorer.
And that's why I say that Hyman goes to. He's a 3rd, 4th line guy playing on the 1st which inflates his numbers substantially. He's replaceable with a guy like Johnsson/Kappy, who have more offensive talent, and his salary, like Brown's is used to help pay those guys. You're 3rd and especially your 4th line is where you go on the cheap. Kadri is a luxury at 4.5 for a 3rd line centre. Brown and Hyman gone equals 4.3 mill towards Kappy and Johnsson.CarltonTheBear said:Brown's expendable because of who is in front of him, not necessarily behind him. $2.1mil for a 4RW is too much for any cap structure.
Guilt Trip said:And that's why I say that Hyman goes to. He's a 3rd, 4th line guy playing on the 1st which inflates his numbers substantially. He's replaceable with a guy like Johnsson/Kappy, who have more offensive talent, and his salary, like Brown's is used to help pay those guys. You're 3rd and especially your 4th line is where you go on the cheap. Kadri is a luxury at 4.5 for a 3rd line centre. Brown and Hyman gone equals 4.3 mill towards Kappy and Johnsson.CarltonTheBear said:Brown's expendable because of who is in front of him, not necessarily behind him. $2.1mil for a 4RW is too much for any cap structure.