mr grieves said:
I can't really think of any prospects the Leafs have had since Jim Hughes has taken over that were rushed into prominent roles. I think most look to Kadri and Gardiner when thinking of recent precedents, and believing Rielly's on that path better fits with the often heard pronouncements that the team isn't rushing any more of its prospects into the NHL (hi, Luke) and the general belief that Nonis is patiently and conservatively building the team. So, it seems to me highly unlikely Rielly's on the Leafs and being expected to be a key member of a competing team for the next two years.
I think that kind of shows a poor understanding of what it really means to rush a prospect. I mean, the two examples of the Leafs not rushing prospects you give(Kadri and Gardiner) seem sort of at cross purposes with one another. In Kadri they had a player who they seasoned for a year but gave an opportunity to make and stick in the NHL the year after but in Gardiner they have a player they didn't even
acquire until he was almost 21(and in the middle of a collegiate season) and made the big club and played 75 games(while averaging over 20 minutes a night) after his first training camp with the club.
So Gardiner was basically thrust into a big role with the Leafs the second they could and Kadri wasn't "rushed" in the same way Schenn was but he was absolutely given a chance to be an NHL'er in his second pro season, the exact same way busta is saying Rielly will.
The narrative might exist for some that Luke Schenn was "rushed" and that the reason he's sort of stalled as a defenseman is because of that and that's why Rielly, if they want to develop him "patiently", will be given a ton of time in junior and probably the AHL but let's examine that. Let's compare the way the Leafs "developed" Schenn with other defensemen from his draft class. Here are the other defensemen taken in the first round that year:
Drew Doughty - Straight to the NHL, 0 career AHL games
Zach Bogosian - Straight to the NHL, 5 career AHL games
Alex Pietrangelo - Two half years back in Junior, 1 career AHL game
Tyler Myers - Straight to NHL, 0 career AHL games
Colton Teubert - 2 years back in junior, 160+ career AHL games
Erik Karlsson - 1 year back in Sweden, 12 career AHL games
Jake Gardiner - As discussed
Luca Sbisa - Kind of a jumble but played 39 NHL games after being drafted, 8 career AHL games
Michael Del Zotto - One year back in Junior, 11 career AHL games
Tyler Cuma - Two more years of junior, 140+ AHL games
John Carlson - One more year of Junior, 48 career AHL games
So looking over that I really question the idea that two more full years in junior or a lengthy apprenticeship in the AHL are at all required or even beneficial to the development of young, talented defensemen. The only players who got a full season of AHL time are Teubert and Cuma who are also the only two who are question marks right now in terms of having NHL careers and of the rest Carlson is the only one for whom the AHL wasn't the briefest of layovers before becoming full-time NHL'ers(and even Carlson was in the NHL for 20+ games in his second pro season).
So blaming whatever happened with Schenn(and for what it's worth I still think there's time for Schenn to be a very good NHL defenseman) on him being "rushed" seems to be the definition of a confirmation bias. Considering how good that class of defensemen have been the idea that giving a young defenseman 2 extra years in junior is necessary for proper development doesn't really have a basis in fact and the idea that anything other than a cup of coffee in the AHL is required just seems to be an outright fiction.
When you factor in that Rielly is a top 5 pick and therefore more comparable to your Doughty's and Bogosian's than to your Sbisa's and Carlson's I think the idea that he's a contributing member of the Leafs blueline in his second professional season is the opposite of reckless optimism. I think that if there's anything the above list tells us it's that if a young defenseman isn't a regular in the NHL by the time they're 21 or 22 then you're probably going to start wondering about their future in the league at all.
mr grieves said:
Nothing's just about this season, yeah, but blowing a hole in an already weak defense corps certainly doesn't help anything this season, or likely next (unless, of course, management breaks from the steady and patient plan -- that is, panics -- and brings in Rielly).
Well, we've already addressed the idea that Rielly making the team would in any way be a panic so instead, let's focus on two things here that I think should be mentioned. First the idea that not re-signing Franson would "blow a hole" in the defense seems kind of silly. Here are the Leafs top 4 regular defensemen from last year in terms of TOI(ignoring, for the moment, Mike Kostka):
Dion Phaneuf - 25:10
Carl Gunnarson - 21:16
Cody Franson - 18:47
JM Liles - 18:46
So Franson, who had a good season no doubt, was the #3 guy. Didn't log a ton of minutes, didn't kill penalties. Now, when the bench tightened in the playoffs his TOI jumped to 22:49 but that still left him #3. #1 was Phaneuf obviously but #2 was the guy who is the reason that, Rielly aside, Franson is somewhat expendable and that's Jake Gardiner. Franson was an effective player last year but I don't think anyone would really say that he did a ton Gardiner can't do. I can't speak for Busta but when I look at the defense next year the idea of a top 4 of Phaneuf, Gunnar, Gardiner, Rielly doesn't look like it has a hole blown in it compared to Phaneuf, Gunnar, Liles, Franson.
mr grieves said:
I do wonder how to square the options here with what we've already seen this off-season. If we don't sign Franson because we're thinking 3 years ahead to Rielly playing a significant role and, in that year, Franson falling down the depth chart to overpaid-PP-specialist, then what are we doing with Clarkson other than wasting the most 3 productive years of his contract? If you want to get as much as you can out of the Clarkson contract or the best goalie tandem in the league or the last year you've got a Stanley-Cup-winning shutdown center in the league, you want Franson on your team next year.
All of this might be a valid point(well, except for the "Rielly in 3 years" nonsense) if it weren't for the fact that what is being discussed is
trading Franson. Not letting him walk as a UFA. A trade. Where the team gets something back in return. The idea being that coming off a season where he scored in the top 10 as a defenseman Franson's value is a little inflated which makes signing him risky but trading him lucrative. Maybe you can add forward depth or a more defensively minded defenseman or a ready or very nearly ready NHL prospect who can chip in this year or next while still being very controllable cost wise.