Nik the Trik said:
x.jr.benchwarmer said:
I agree with the general premise that Lou "had" to make the deal, given what the Sens were offering. Rhetorically, was there ever going to be a better deal out there for Dion?
Considering how mediocre the return was? Sure. If Phaneuf still had some legs near the end of this deal he might have gotten just as good a return in two or three years when his contract was less of a burden.
x.jr.benchwarmer said:
And the fact that they may have gotten less for Dion than Winnick last year points to the fact that there wasn't much if any of a market for Dion, really.
Sure, but that's not really relevant to the question you asked. If you get a not very good return on a player there's not much of a market for and you don't really need the cap space...why would anyone consider that a terrific trade?
x.jr.benchwarmer said:
And (without going on exhaustively hopefully), the trade of Dion does open up, finally, the issue of Gardiner playing the power play on a regular basis, as well as Reilly. The Leafs future is with these two defencemen, I would argue, rather than one with Dion.
Thinking that Phaneuf was being misused by Babcock doesn't in and of itself create a necessity to trade him since they could have used Gardiner on the PP without trading Phaneuf.
x.jr.benchwarmer said:
And I agree that Dion is no Clarkson (who is, really)? But I've always felt that comparing him to Clarkson was equivalent to minimizing his faults, or suggesting that he is a bona fide player since Clarkson was not.
Phaneuf absolutely is a bona fide player, a legitimate top 4 defenseman, and Clarkson is not.
I will try to respond to your points sequentially (without being overly pedantic hopefully).
The premise that Phaneuf would be better in 2 years or so is not necessarily axiomatic. His skating, mediocre at best over the last year or so, is ultimately going to hold him back, IMHO, going forward.
You brought up the point about Winnick. It was a valid point to compare what he brought in as opposed to Dion, which again is pretty minimal. But perhaps that is the reason why the trade resulted in a minimal return for Toronto because Dion may (I know his supporters might not want to hear it) be a relatively minimal talent. I'm sorry; we've all watched him play game in and game out for the past 5 plus years, and it hasn't been pretty good, really.
Phaneuf wasn't "misused" by Babcock. I was pointing out that he was playing the power play, as one blogger noted, because his totals may have gone up, which would have improved his relatively minimal trade value. The point I was making (perhaps vainly) was that there wasn't any good hockey reason to keep on playing him as a de facto quarterback of the power play when it was ranked around 28th or 29th, and Gardiner is a terrific young talent who is better now than Phaneuf is offensively, and I think even now Reilly is better offensively.
I think that pretty well every commentator on the trade has considered it a good one for Toronto because of the terrible contract that the Leafs signed with him a couple of years ago. And also because he was deemed, by Burke and Noonis, as a star defenceman, and for the team to be built around him on the blueline, but that was obviously flawed. (And both are no longer GMs coincidentally).
And I agree with you that he is playing on the second defence pairing with Ottawa now. So that by definition makes him a 3rd or 4th ranked defenceman on an NHL team. But there were many arguments over the last few years about him being a #1 or a true #1 or a de facto #1A, or a #2 or a #3, that never seemed to resolve themselves, of course. The fact that he has been traded for so little may possibly support the premise that he is a 3 or 4 defenceman on a mediocre team. If that makes him a bona fide player, well, OK....
Like pretty well every Leaf fan, you hope that he does well with Ottawa. He is classy, and was good with the young guys, and seemed to care when the Leafs lost (and lost) while he was the captain. It's just that he is, well, overrated, and not quick, and not offensive, and perhaps his talent level, and ultimate worth, to an NHL team can be hashed out by the Sens fans now.
For Toronto fans, arguably, it just doesn't make any difference if the trade "had' to be made or if they should have gotten more (which I haven't read from any "insider/expert" which has indicated that the Leafs should have waited, or gotten more).