Kin
New member
princedpw said:Niedermayer was 2005 -- 11 years. Let's call it 12 so that would be 1 every 2 years. There are 30 teams in the league. You only need 1 place to be more desirable for the FA. If they let decide not to go for the guy this year, they maybe have 2 more shots at that level guy over the next 2-5 years. Nobody can calculate the probabilities on these things, but if those are the level of guy you want, it doesn't seem the chances are all that high. They arent zero either. It is a risk no matter what you do.
But there are other factors. For starters, the newer cap system where players aren't going to be taking artificially lowered cap hits on long-term deals probably means teams are going to be under more cap pressure which means you're probably going to see more and more good players find the free agent market. We can talk all we want about Stamkos clashing with Cooper or Stamkos wanting to be a Leaf but the reality is that Tampa can't really offer Stamkos a 10+ million dollar a year deal without then having to make some very hard choices about the future. That's a situation we're likely to see more, not less of in the future.
But also, and maybe more importantly, even if the odds aren't great for there being an elite free agent available(and this is again where I'll mention that those 6 are just the elite free agents who performed up to their contracts) there's really no evidence that one is necessary. Sure, some teams like the Ducks, Bruins and Blackhawks won with one but the Kings, Red Wings and Penguins didn't. Whoever wins the cup this year will do so without having signed a big-deal UFA. Adding big pieces through smart trades is just as valid a method of adding those final building blocks and teams like the Penguins, Sharks and Blues have added huge pieces to their team without breaking the bank and trading someone the calibre of a Marner or Nylander or even Kadri.
Honestly, I think people are making too much of that post of mine. It wasn't intended as a statement about the relative merits of UFA as a method of adding players, it was simply a response to the people acting as if elite free agents only find themselves on the free market once in a blue moon. That, in and of itself, is not a compelling argument for signing Stamkos.