Kin
New member
mr grieves said:Well, the four teams in the Finals, for starters. Blues and Sharks both got far with tandems cobbled together of trades, reclamation projects, and not-stars they developed. The Lightning got someone who shook loose from Ottawa, went deep with him last year, and signed him to a big contract, which they're now trying to move. Pens just won the Cup with their younger, cheaper option and are now trying to move Fleury. -- I mean, seems there's been a pattern of teams going deep or winning with cheaper options, overpaying them, and regretting it as they're passed by teams getting value of cheaper, younger options.
Thing is, if you look at any of the goalies on those teams that actually got developed by the teams they're on you'll see that four years is the absolute minimum it takes from the draft to when they're able to significantly contribute. Allen and Fleury are the only goalies drafted by the teams who made the conference finals who've played 30+ games in a season. In Fleury's case it wasn't until five years post draft where he played 40+ games with a better than league average save percentage and in Allen's case it was seven years post draft.
So if drafting and developing a goalie figures to play a part in any future Leafs success either you have to make a compelling case that that guy is already in the system or realistically that's not going to be happening until the next decade.