groundskeeper willie
New member
This is a bit of a theoretical question that obviously has no one right or wrong answer, but I was thinking about it the other day and wondering what other people's thoughts are.
At some point the Leafs will have to stop making the highest draft pick possible their top priority. I'm not saying they will immediately then have to go into all out 'now' mode, but they will have to accept the reality of letting their future core players break out a bit, which will result in a couple of seasons of winning enough games to miss out on a top pick, but not enough to make the playoffs. So how do you know when the time is right to allow that? I don't think you can just sit back and say 'if the team starts winning on its own then we'll let it'. With in-season moves so hard to make I really think you have to make your off-season plans with a transition year in mind.
I guess the first thing to determine is what a Cup winning core looks like. Given that the Hawks are held up as the standard, I would say during their run their primary core has consisted of six players - Toews, Kane, Hossa, Sharp, Keith and Seabrook. Others have been important and have been there the whole time as well (ie. Hjalmarsson) but those six have been the key players (ignoring for the moment that their depth and ability to replace depth players is also extremely important to their success). In the past top teams arguably had more core players, but the Hawks are proof that the cap prevents you from being able to hang on to all of them now.
So using this as a template, how do the Leafs get there and how do they determine that they are?
Hypothetically speaking, lets assume a few things happen this summer. Now I know the instinct is to say that this summer is too early in the rebuild to plan on stopping the full on tanking, but its just an exercise for discussion. So lets say four things happen this off-season:
1- the Leafs draft second overall and pick Patrik Laine
2- they sign Steven Stamkos
3- JvR, Kadri and Bozak are sent out via trade
4- Jacob Trouba is brought in via trade
It goes without saying that the odds of these exact four things happening are remote, but the important thing is that all four are within a realistic realm of possibility. So with these events, that would leave the future Leafs to build a core around the following players:
Laine - Stamkos - Marner
Kapanen - Nylander - Hyman
Soshnikov
Plus Brown, Leipsic, Johnson, Bracco, Timashov etc
Reilly - Trouba
Gardiner
Plus Carrick, Corrado, Zaitsev, Dermott, Loov etc
In this group you have five top 9 picks under 22 years old (all of who are looking very good and unlikely to completely bust), plus Stamkos. You've also got a handful of solid former first and second round picks sprinkled in, along with a few later round surprises and a couple free agents that are impressing.
Goaltending is the obvious blemish, but unless Sparks or Bibeau become solid starters (and I have my doubts they will) then I think the Leafs are going to have to look outside the organization regardless of how long they tank for. Goalies just take too long to develop and are too unpredictable to do otherwise at this point in the process, IMO.
Is there a realistic (key word, can't just hope for the best) possibility of there being a legitimate Cup contending core there? You'e banking a lot on Reilly and Trouba at least coming close to their potential, and even then you don't have a Keith or Doughty level guy, but not all contenders are able to have one. Could they lead a d corps that rivals Washington, Dallas, NYR, St. Louis etc? How about the forwards? Stamkos, Laine, Marner, Nylander etc seems like a pretty solid foundation there at least. There's a decent enough amount of depth at both forward and defence that will be added to significantly over the next 2-3 drafts based on the number of picks already acquired. The importance of rotating the non core players the way the Hawks have can't be overstated.
Would you be comfortable with that core going forward if it means next season has a bottom 10 finish instead of a bottom 3? The lack of a true star pick available next year makes tanking again less desirable, and do you just stay in holding pattern until one is available otherwise?
If you aren't comfortable with that potential core, then what do you feel is missing? How many more players do you think are needed, and where? Do you start drafting for position at that point or is there still an overall lack of talent that there are holes all over the lineup?
Thoughts?
At some point the Leafs will have to stop making the highest draft pick possible their top priority. I'm not saying they will immediately then have to go into all out 'now' mode, but they will have to accept the reality of letting their future core players break out a bit, which will result in a couple of seasons of winning enough games to miss out on a top pick, but not enough to make the playoffs. So how do you know when the time is right to allow that? I don't think you can just sit back and say 'if the team starts winning on its own then we'll let it'. With in-season moves so hard to make I really think you have to make your off-season plans with a transition year in mind.
I guess the first thing to determine is what a Cup winning core looks like. Given that the Hawks are held up as the standard, I would say during their run their primary core has consisted of six players - Toews, Kane, Hossa, Sharp, Keith and Seabrook. Others have been important and have been there the whole time as well (ie. Hjalmarsson) but those six have been the key players (ignoring for the moment that their depth and ability to replace depth players is also extremely important to their success). In the past top teams arguably had more core players, but the Hawks are proof that the cap prevents you from being able to hang on to all of them now.
So using this as a template, how do the Leafs get there and how do they determine that they are?
Hypothetically speaking, lets assume a few things happen this summer. Now I know the instinct is to say that this summer is too early in the rebuild to plan on stopping the full on tanking, but its just an exercise for discussion. So lets say four things happen this off-season:
1- the Leafs draft second overall and pick Patrik Laine
2- they sign Steven Stamkos
3- JvR, Kadri and Bozak are sent out via trade
4- Jacob Trouba is brought in via trade
It goes without saying that the odds of these exact four things happening are remote, but the important thing is that all four are within a realistic realm of possibility. So with these events, that would leave the future Leafs to build a core around the following players:
Laine - Stamkos - Marner
Kapanen - Nylander - Hyman
Soshnikov
Plus Brown, Leipsic, Johnson, Bracco, Timashov etc
Reilly - Trouba
Gardiner
Plus Carrick, Corrado, Zaitsev, Dermott, Loov etc
In this group you have five top 9 picks under 22 years old (all of who are looking very good and unlikely to completely bust), plus Stamkos. You've also got a handful of solid former first and second round picks sprinkled in, along with a few later round surprises and a couple free agents that are impressing.
Goaltending is the obvious blemish, but unless Sparks or Bibeau become solid starters (and I have my doubts they will) then I think the Leafs are going to have to look outside the organization regardless of how long they tank for. Goalies just take too long to develop and are too unpredictable to do otherwise at this point in the process, IMO.
Is there a realistic (key word, can't just hope for the best) possibility of there being a legitimate Cup contending core there? You'e banking a lot on Reilly and Trouba at least coming close to their potential, and even then you don't have a Keith or Doughty level guy, but not all contenders are able to have one. Could they lead a d corps that rivals Washington, Dallas, NYR, St. Louis etc? How about the forwards? Stamkos, Laine, Marner, Nylander etc seems like a pretty solid foundation there at least. There's a decent enough amount of depth at both forward and defence that will be added to significantly over the next 2-3 drafts based on the number of picks already acquired. The importance of rotating the non core players the way the Hawks have can't be overstated.
Would you be comfortable with that core going forward if it means next season has a bottom 10 finish instead of a bottom 3? The lack of a true star pick available next year makes tanking again less desirable, and do you just stay in holding pattern until one is available otherwise?
If you aren't comfortable with that potential core, then what do you feel is missing? How many more players do you think are needed, and where? Do you start drafting for position at that point or is there still an overall lack of talent that there are holes all over the lineup?
Thoughts?