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Nik the Trik said:herman said:In a lineup with a dearth of talent, we were able to stave off any of the Babcock advantages, but still lose without being an embarrassment.
Between guys like JVR, Kadri, Gardiner, Rielly and so on I don't know that what really plagued the team was a horrible lack of talent. I don't think, for instance, it was talent that separated the Leafs from New Jersey or Carolina.
RedLeaf said:Here's one. Discredit away...
https://mapleleafshotstove.com/2015/09/15/ken-hitchcock-on-mike-babcock-his-team-is-going-to-do-a-lot-better-than-people-think/
Bullfrog said:I'm good either way, though I don't see the urgency in signing him. And though it is wise to be cautious, I'm optimistic Matthews is going to be a top-5 centre (top 10 at least) within three years. In which case, Matthews/Kadri is a very good 1-2. I think the larger need is on defense and in goal.
Nik the Trik said:Between guys like JVR, Kadri, Gardiner, Rielly and so on I don't know that what really plagued the team was a horrible lack of talent. I don't think, for instance, it was talent that separated the Leafs from New Jersey or Carolina.
Nik the Trik said:RedLeaf said:I get where your going with this. I put together a list of names and you systematically discredit each one.
I am notorious for the way I apply scrutiny to claims.
herman said:For those guys, Babcock seemed to coach with an eye towards development. He leaned hard early on Spaling and Hunwick while feeding Rielly defense-only assignments. Kadri ran into a PDO-black hole thankfully and managed to post up a bajillion shots with only 2 going in for the first half of the season (off-setting Komarov's hot start).
RedLeaf said:Right. There were many many voices on radio shows I listen to that work in the game that said Babcock would have the Leafs team playing better than people expected and that it could hurt their rebuilding plans.
bustaheims said:So, I've been doing some number crunching, and, based on what I've come up with, I'm really not sure the whole "Stamkos doesn't mess with the Leafs' cap" argument holds water.
With Marner, Matthews, Nylander, Soshnikov, Zaitsev and Hyman on the opening day roster, $750K 1 year contracts for the 3 RFA defencemen, $1M, 1 year for a backup goalie, the Cowen buyout credit, no performance bonuses included, and a rough estimate of a $73.2M cap (current cap with 2.5% growth - which was the last estimate I saw of what it might be after the PA uses the escalator) I put the Leafs at ~$7.8M in cap before they get into LTIR space.
Now, why is the pre-LTIR number important? Because it can't be used to cover performance bonuses. Unused LTIR space disappears at the end of the season - and, if you use any of it, you're considered to have hit the cap ceiling - and performance bonuses are awarded after. Depending on what Schedule B bonuses are in Matthews' contract, the Leafs will have somewhere between $3.6M and $5.6M in available bonuses on the roster next season - and, if they go into LTIR space, every penny of those bonuses will be carried over into the 17/18. Now, obviously, it's unlikely every one of those bonuses are reached, but, I'd say it's not unreasonable to estimate that ~$2M of them will be.
So, with that, in 17/18, the Leafs would be looking at a total of roughly $4.5M in dead space, while still having a number of contracts that will require space for bonuses. That puts them at ~$46.75M committed (or ~$26.5M in space) to 9 forwards, 2 defenceman, and no goalies - still with $2.75M+ in potential bonuses (depending on whether or not other prospects make the roster), Zaitsev and Hyman needing new contracts (as well as the 3 RFA defencemen), and uncertain growth in the cap. That's a pretty tight squeeze, as far as I'm concerned.
Nik the Trik said:RedLeaf said:Right. There were many many voices on radio shows I listen to that work in the game that said Babcock would have the Leafs team playing better than people expected and that it could hurt their rebuilding plans.
Well, I certainly can't discredit people on the radio.
Nik the Trik said:RedLeaf said:Right. There were many many voices on radio shows I listen to that work in the game that said Babcock would have the Leafs team playing better than people expected and that it could hurt their rebuilding plans.
Well, I certainly can't discredit people on the radio.
Nik the Trik said:herman said:For those guys, Babcock seemed to coach with an eye towards development. He leaned hard early on Spaling and Hunwick while feeding Rielly defense-only assignments. Kadri ran into a PDO-black hole thankfully and managed to post up a bajillion shots with only 2 going in for the first half of the season (off-setting Komarov's hot start).
That's sort of my point though. It wasn't that Babcock's super awesome coaching ran into the team's lack of talent, it's that Babcock coached with the rebuild in mind. A lot of people on the board said that Babcock hated losing to the point that he wouldn't be on board with the tank but I think he showed that he's fully with the long term plan.
So, let me get this straight: Mike Babcock, one of the most respected, productive hockey coaches alive today and the most sought-after free agent this summer ? player or otherwise ? signs with the Toronto Maple Leafs, and this is a negative? The Maple Leafs use some of the millions they?ve saved under the NHL?s salary cap system and establish instant credibility in a dressing room that needed a full fumigation after the the toxic 2014-15 campaign, and team president Brendan Shanahan somehow screwed this hire up?
Bill_Berg said:Nik the Trik said:RedLeaf said:Right. There were many many voices on radio shows I listen to that work in the game that said Babcock would have the Leafs team playing better than people expected and that it could hurt their rebuilding plans.
Well, I certainly can't discredit people on the radio.
Maybe the tons of speculation was from callers calling in to these radio shows.
Bill_Berg said:bustaheims said:So, I've been doing some number crunching, and, based on what I've come up with, I'm really not sure the whole "Stamkos doesn't mess with the Leafs' cap" argument holds water.
With Marner, Matthews, Nylander, Soshnikov, Zaitsev and Hyman on the opening day roster, $750K 1 year contracts for the 3 RFA defencemen, $1M, 1 year for a backup goalie, the Cowen buyout credit, no performance bonuses included, and a rough estimate of a $73.2M cap (current cap with 2.5% growth - which was the last estimate I saw of what it might be after the PA uses the escalator) I put the Leafs at ~$7.8M in cap before they get into LTIR space.
Now, why is the pre-LTIR number important? Because it can't be used to cover performance bonuses. Unused LTIR space disappears at the end of the season - and, if you use any of it, you're considered to have hit the cap ceiling - and performance bonuses are awarded after. Depending on what Schedule B bonuses are in Matthews' contract, the Leafs will have somewhere between $3.6M and $5.6M in available bonuses on the roster next season - and, if they go into LTIR space, every penny of those bonuses will be carried over into the 17/18. Now, obviously, it's unlikely every one of those bonuses are reached, but, I'd say it's not unreasonable to estimate that ~$2M of them will be.
So, with that, in 17/18, the Leafs would be looking at a total of roughly $4.5M in dead space, while still having a number of contracts that will require space for bonuses. That puts them at ~$46.75M committed (or ~$26.5M in space) to 9 forwards, 2 defenceman, and no goalies - still with $2.75M+ in potential bonuses (depending on whether or not other prospects make the roster), Zaitsev and Hyman needing new contracts (as well as the 3 RFA defencemen), and uncertain growth in the cap. That's a pretty tight squeeze, as far as I'm concerned.
And this is all without signing Stamkos?
herman said:Bill_Berg said:bustaheims said:So, I've been doing some number crunching, and, based on what I've come up with, I'm really not sure the whole "Stamkos doesn't mess with the Leafs' cap" argument holds water.
With Marner, Matthews, Nylander, Soshnikov, Zaitsev and Hyman on the opening day roster, $750K 1 year contracts for the 3 RFA defencemen, $1M, 1 year for a backup goalie, the Cowen buyout credit, no performance bonuses included, and a rough estimate of a $73.2M cap (current cap with 2.5% growth - which was the last estimate I saw of what it might be after the PA uses the escalator) I put the Leafs at ~$7.8M in cap before they get into LTIR space.
Now, why is the pre-LTIR number important? Because it can't be used to cover performance bonuses. Unused LTIR space disappears at the end of the season - and, if you use any of it, you're considered to have hit the cap ceiling - and performance bonuses are awarded after. Depending on what Schedule B bonuses are in Matthews' contract, the Leafs will have somewhere between $3.6M and $5.6M in available bonuses on the roster next season - and, if they go into LTIR space, every penny of those bonuses will be carried over into the 17/18. Now, obviously, it's unlikely every one of those bonuses are reached, but, I'd say it's not unreasonable to estimate that ~$2M of them will be.
So, with that, in 17/18, the Leafs would be looking at a total of roughly $4.5M in dead space, while still having a number of contracts that will require space for bonuses. That puts them at ~$46.75M committed (or ~$26.5M in space) to 9 forwards, 2 defenceman, and no goalies - still with $2.75M+ in potential bonuses (depending on whether or not other prospects make the roster), Zaitsev and Hyman needing new contracts (as well as the 3 RFA defencemen), and uncertain growth in the cap. That's a pretty tight squeeze, as far as I'm concerned.
And this is all without signing Stamkos?
Looks like room for only 1 premiere UFA signing, and as Nik pointed out when I asked last night, UFA D-men and UFA goalies are going to be in that 7-9M range too.
CarltonTheBear said:In terms of TOI our top-5 most used forwards were Kadri, PAP, Komarov, Grabner, and Bozak. For Carolina it was Staal, Lindholm, Rask, Skinner, Staal. That's a big edge to them I think when it comes to talent.
Bill_Berg said:herman said:Bill_Berg said:bustaheims said:So, I've been doing some number crunching, and, based on what I've come up with, I'm really not sure the whole "Stamkos doesn't mess with the Leafs' cap" argument holds water.
With Marner, Matthews, Nylander, Soshnikov, Zaitsev and Hyman on the opening day roster, $750K 1 year contracts for the 3 RFA defencemen, $1M, 1 year for a backup goalie, the Cowen buyout credit, no performance bonuses included, and a rough estimate of a $73.2M cap (current cap with 2.5% growth - which was the last estimate I saw of what it might be after the PA uses the escalator) I put the Leafs at ~$7.8M in cap before they get into LTIR space.
Now, why is the pre-LTIR number important? Because it can't be used to cover performance bonuses. Unused LTIR space disappears at the end of the season - and, if you use any of it, you're considered to have hit the cap ceiling - and performance bonuses are awarded after. Depending on what Schedule B bonuses are in Matthews' contract, the Leafs will have somewhere between $3.6M and $5.6M in available bonuses on the roster next season - and, if they go into LTIR space, every penny of those bonuses will be carried over into the 17/18. Now, obviously, it's unlikely every one of those bonuses are reached, but, I'd say it's not unreasonable to estimate that ~$2M of them will be.
So, with that, in 17/18, the Leafs would be looking at a total of roughly $4.5M in dead space, while still having a number of contracts that will require space for bonuses. That puts them at ~$46.75M committed (or ~$26.5M in space) to 9 forwards, 2 defenceman, and no goalies - still with $2.75M+ in potential bonuses (depending on whether or not other prospects make the roster), Zaitsev and Hyman needing new contracts (as well as the 3 RFA defencemen), and uncertain growth in the cap. That's a pretty tight squeeze, as far as I'm concerned.
And this is all without signing Stamkos?
Looks like room for only 1 premiere UFA signing, and as Nik pointed out when I asked last night, UFA D-men and UFA goalies are going to be in that 7-9M range too.
Or none for the next 2 seasons.
herman said:Here's an article that insinuates what RedLeaf claimed earlier, but doesn't really cite where those voices came from.
Nik the Trik said:RedLeaf said:Here's one. Discredit away...
https://mapleleafshotstove.com/2015/09/15/ken-hitchcock-on-mike-babcock-his-team-is-going-to-do-a-lot-better-than-people-think/
That's emphatically not what you claimed. You said there were people saying hiring Babcock was putting the cart before the horse. That's Hitchcock saying Babcock is going to build a really good team and fast. Hitchcock sounds pretty pro-hiring Babcock there. You said there were people arguing the opposite.