RedLeaf said:
Significantly Insignificant said:
RedLeaf said:
Bill_Berg said:
RedLeaf said:
Have you considered that losing Kessel and his generally poor attitude, may actually be... wait for it... beneficial to the team?
I would agree that other goal scorers at Kessel's level could provide more benefit to a team than Kessel does, but it's tough to show that Kessel's net worth is actually a minus.
It is tough, and I don't expect people to buy that. But the fact of the matter is the Leafs no longer wanted a top 5 NHL superstar who had more points than anyone at the last winter olympics playing against the worlds best players, and who is in the 'prime of his career'. If that does scream 'problem player', I honestly don't know what does.
Because that top 5 NHL superstar was good enough to get them to 17th or 15th in the league, but not good enough to get them to 10th or 8th. The top 5 NHL superstar didn't have the supporting cast that he needed in order to reach the playoffs, so they traded him for picks and prospects in an effort to build a team that has the necessary pieces to compete for the cup. The plan is to be bad so at some point in the future they are really good. The top 5 NHL superstar can be good enough to hamper that plan.
And why do you think it all worked out that way. I mean, isn't the idea to build around top young superstars? Sundin didn't have the proper supporting cast his whole career as a Leaf. I don't know. I have a hard time buying your argument here.
Mogilny, Roberts, McCabe, Kaberle, Neiwendyk, Antropov, Nolan, Svehla, Tucker, Reichel, Leetch, Belfour.
Those are some of the names from the 2003-2004 season. That's the last season that Sundin made the playoffs. He had some names around him.
Plus, I think Sundin was a more complete player. Also he played centre and could control the game more from his position. He was also 6'5", 230 lbs and could play 25 minutes a night if he had to. Much different player than Kessel.