princedpw said:
Honest answer: no one knows, but it improves the odds.
But that's why I asked you what you thought. We've all been hockey fans for a long stretch of time, we've all seen teams with 4th lines we thought were effective and 4th lines we thought weren't. The question is about how significant an impact you feel a good 4th line would have over the course of the season. Not having empirical data on the subject doesn't make it a worthless thing to talk about with, of course, the obvious starting point that whenever you say "What is the impact of a good ______ vs. a bad ______ on the team" that the good one is better.
princedpw said:
And I've said this before, but I forget the answer. If you think the leafs are so "meh". If Grabbo vs Bozak doesn't really matter because they are both sucky 2nd line centers, then why aren't you *more* upset over the *long-term* loadstone that is the Bozak/Clarkson contracts.
Well, two things. One, as I said elsewhere, to me what you're doing is akin to complaining about Christmas Tree decorations when the house is on fire. That I don't like the larger, overall approach is precisely the reason I'm not pulling my hair out about the smaller stuff. Secondly, I don't think those contracts are quite as problematic as you do. The Clarkson one is one I don't like but considering that it was widely reported that the Leafs were
not the high bidder the idea that his contract couldn't possibly be moved now or, say, a year or two from now if he plays well seems pretty counter-intuitive. As for Bozak, I think that's a straight up decent contract.
princedpw said:
It is the long-term problem that kills me so bad and that makes these smaller moves grind on my psyche.
Well, then right off the bat I feel like the fundamental difference between us is one of perspective.
princedpw said:
You complained for years on Kessel vs. Seguin because of the long-term impact, not the short term differential. That is what is bugging me. I see little hope this season and, unfortunately, I see it getting worse in the next 3 or 4 years.
But that's because, at least in part, the problem with the Kessel deal was always one of philosophy and how the Kessel deal was a stand-in for Burke's quick fix strategy that I knew didn't stand much of a chance of succeeding. If your complaint about the Bozak/Clarkson deals were "The team is fundamentally flawed, therefore the team needs to be blown up" I'd understand your reasoning if not, perhaps, the verve you're bringing.
However, the complaint seems to be, in Bozak's case, "I don't like the one mediocre player with the problematic contract, I much prefer the other mediocre player with the problematic contract" and in Clarkson's "I'd rather the team just putter along and maintain the so-so core they built rather than go all in with lousy cards" and both of those seem like kind of strange things to find so troubling, let alone feel so strongly about.
The Kessel trade, which I don't think I complained about "for years" but rather that I always felt consistently about and only really mentioned when someone else would bring up as a positive, was still always one where I openly acknowledged that it's ultimate epitaph would be written by how well the team did with Kessel and not by how good Seguin turned out to be or whether Boston did better than the Leafs. When Kessel scored a goal I pumped my fist(metaphorically), I didn't say "But grrrrr, that trade!". I disagreed with it, and still do, from a team building perspective but I think my post count over the years would serve as a pretty good testament that it didn't kill my enthusiasm for the club.