Jump to content
Hockey Wilderness
  • How Do the Wild Clean Up the Mess They've Created?


    Image courtesy of James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports
    Tom Schreier

    Minnesota Wild owner Craig Leipold was certain his team would be winners this season. "I think we're going to have a very competitive team," he said on September 29 after Minnesota’s third preseason game. "We're going to need some of our young guys to step up, and our hope is that they will. We think we got a couple that we believe are ready for the next step.

    "If they do that, I think we're going to have a better team than we had last year."

    A reporter astutely pointed out that the Wild had $14.7 million in dead cap this year because general manager Bill Guerin bought Zach Parise and Ryan Suter out in 2021. For context, Kirill Kaprizov counts $9 million against the cap, Matt Boldy $7 million, and Joel Eriksson Ek $5.25 million. "It kind of is what it is," Mr. Leipold responded. "We've accepted it. We're not complaining about it. We're doing the best we can and moving forward."

    However, Guerin had complained about the cap restraints in May after the Dallas Stars eliminated the Wild in the first round of the playoffs. "I rarely bring this up, but I'm going to bring it up today because it's real, and it's important," Guerin said at his final press conference of the 2022-23 season. "Our players and our coaches deserve a lot of credit because they're fighting with one hand tied between their back because of these cap restraints. We don't apologize for it. We're fine with it."

    Fair enough. Building a winner with nearly $15 million in dead cap space is difficult. But Guerin chose to buy Parise and Suter out. He intentionally has iced a veteran-laden team that has never gotten out of the first round of the playoffs. And he doubled down on it in the offseason by signing Marcus Foligno, Ryan Hartman, and Mats Zuccarello to extensions. That’s on top of Frederick Gaudreau’s five-year, $10 million extension and Guerin committing to Jon Merrill and Alex Goligoski on the blue line. 

    The Wild entered the All-Star Break with 47 points, second-to-last in the Central Division and fourth-worst in the Western Conference. They’re not going to match last year’s 103-point total, and they’re probably not going to make the playoffs. But they have many league-average veterans locked into long-term deals and oodles of dead cap space. Guerin has stuck Minnesota firmly into the mushy middle. They’re too good to get a top pick, but not good enough to compete in the postseason.

    Guerin should have had a contingency plan. If the Wild hadn’t wantonly signed veterans to long-term deals with no-move clauses, they could trade everyone who isn’t a core player. Keep the goal-scorers: Kirill Kaprizov and Matt Boldy. Retain Jared Spurgeon and Jonas Brodin as the top defensive pair. Continue to build around Marco Rossi, Brock Faber, and Filip Gustavsson. But get any value you can for any other player on the roster. This season is a lost cause; best to ensure next year isn’t, too.

    Mr. Leipold’s best quality as an owner is his commitment to winning. He cut matching $98 million checks to Parise and Suter because Chuck Fletcher felt he could build a contender around them. It’s absurd that the NHL punished the Wild harshly for buying those contracts out, essentially upbraiding Minnesota’s ownership for spending too much. But Minnesota knew the rules (or at least, knew the NHL was upset with the league's rampant back-diving deals), and a responsible GM should take a step back during the harshest dead-cap years to reload for when he can spend again. At the very least, he should have an escape plan if things go haywire.

    Mr. Leipold handed Guerin a vintage Pontiac Firebird that was having trouble getting up to speed on the freeway. Experts, or anyone who regularly watches the team, will tell you that the engine has some good components but that Guerin needed to replace some old parts. The transmission might work, and it has power steering, but the alternator and fuel pump are starting to fail. Unless Mr. Leipold mandated that Guerin drive on the freeway, the GM should have taken side roads until he had the cap space to fully replace the faulty parts.

    But instead of replacing the aging components, Guerin superglued the alternator and fuel pump to the engine and hit the gas. Predictably, it started to overheat. Guerin complained last year when the media highlighted the Wild’s inability to get out of the first round, saying that his regime shouldn’t have to repent for Fletcher’s sins. But he inherited Fletcher’s car that couldn’t get up to speed on the freeway. It’s his fault that he tried to get onto I-94 when he should have stayed on Marshall and University.

    The Wild should never enter a season trying to tank so long as they have Kaprizov under contract. But they should have started selling the aging parts while they had value and replaced them with newer components. Extending Zuccarello makes sense because he’s Kaprizov’s linemate, and Kaprizov is the franchise. But Guerin overcommitted to aging veterans, and the organization nearly botched Rossi’s development, potentially costing them their first bona fide No. 1 center since prime Mikko Koivu.

    Things have been chaotic in St. Paul this year. Guerin fired Dean Evason, “mutually parted ways” with his cap guy, and was the focus of an investigation for allegedly verbally abusing an employee. Guerin appears perplexed by the number of injuries the Wild have had, but it’s likely due to their undisciplined play. Still, he seems ready and willing to drive the Firebird onto the freeway, even if the engine looks prepared to give out.

    Think you could write a story like this? Hockey Wilderness wants you to develop your voice, find an audience, and we'll pay you to do it. Just fill out this form.

    • Like 2

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    Although it is reality I'm tired of hearing and being reminded of the buy outs.  We got rid of 2 cancers in the locker room and know full well what the imp[acts are and would be.   It's time to stop the excuse of "dead cap money" and play with the hand we are dealt.  Find those young players that can make a difference....  look at  other sports, look at Ivan Pace for the Vikings or Adam Thielen 2 UNDRAFTED players that achieved greatness through hard work and a salary cap.  

    • Like 4
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    It irks me that our owner and management can't seem to see the forest for the trees. We had every excuse to take a step back and really have something solid moving into a time without cap hits. To give some experience to the up and coming youth, get younger and collect picks using the cap space we did have instead of loading up for a run. With Judd here, we should not have stocked the cupboards with our excess cap space last year and instead compiled picks by playing banker for other deals. Every single pickup that exhausted our salary cap last year was a dead end. Reaves, Kilngberg, Johansson, Sundquist and Nyquist really didn't move the needle past the reg season. Nyquist would have been excellent to retain but was moved due the cap constraints.

    Now, this season we double down on the core prematurely and get bit. It leaves us looking in worse shape for the time when the cap its come off. We are handcuffed to Gaudreau and Foligno for the foreseeable future and still waiting ever so patiently to offload the boat anchors that are Merrill and Goli. 

    The bright spots of this season are some young folks are getting play time. Rossi, Faber and Hunt have all had significant time with the club and are all developing. Some better than we could have ever hoped. 

    So far, the moves in free agency have looked good. A couple low cost defensemen to shore up our bleeding blue line without the captain. Things are looking brighter with Dino and Yurov possibly coming over his year or next and our youngest prospects getting a taste for professional hockey down in Iowa.

    Stay the course Guerin. No big splashes in an attempt to bring us in contention! Maybe even play banker with that IR money and load up the picks this year. Take some physical D prospects if you can and we will be fine taking a high pick.

    • Like 7
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I think we need to grab Billy by the scruff of his neck, and rub his face in this season and yell 'NO! NO! BAD! NO!' until he stops shitting all over the place.

    • Like 8
    • Haha 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    After reading this article it’s hard to believe that you couldn’t seem anywhere to mention. The Wild have one of the best prospect pools in the league, Marco Rossi is definitely looking like a top 6 player/#2 center, and Guerin somehow traded Fiala for equal value. I frankly would love someone to explain how there isn’t room for prospects to come up after this season 2 forward positions are up for grabs, 2 defenders, and a goalie🤷‍♂️. Are we really thinking we have that many prospects that just need to jump right in cause wow the Wild just won the lottery!! I’m all good with someone changing my mind but harping on 1 or 2 signings you just don’t like and never looking at the big picture to me doesn’t make sense… has BG been the best Gm in the league 🤷‍♂️, has he been the worst🤷‍♂️, I will tell you he took a team with a 💩 prospect pool and salary cap hell into the playoffs multiple years straight. While navigating a bad hand for the cap and building on of the top prospect pools so take that for what it’s worth but I’d like to see where this team goes and what we are fully capable of in 2 years +. 

    • Like 6
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    "Mr. Leipold’s best quality as an owner is his commitment to winning."

    At this point, this attribute is becoming Leipold's worst quality as an owner. He's become so committed to selling out every night and "winning" that he forgot how to properly build a team.

    "Mr. Leipold handed Guerin a vintage Pontiac Firebird that was having trouble getting up to speed on the freeway."

    Perhaps Mr. Leipold needs to learn about "sunken cost fallacy" as it applies to his hockey team.

    "Experts, or anyone who regularly watches the team, will tell you that the engine has some good components but that Guerin needed to replace some old parts."

    More like, I think experts will tell you that Guerin and Leipold are trying ham-fist a vintage Pontiac Firebird into a Formula One race and still think it is competitive doing so.

    Edited by cloddish
    • Like 5
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    My best guess is that most of the extensions were driven in part by BG’s loyalty to players who had played hard the last few years. The personal relationship elements within an organization are definitely in the mix when it comes to decision making. From an outsiders’ view I believe winning is important to management too. In the short term, other than some new players showing promise, even Wild management is probably going say that this season was not a success. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    47 minutes ago, TheGoosesAreLooses said:

    It irks me that our owner and management can't seem to see the forest for the trees. We had every excuse to take a step back and really have something solid moving into a time without cap hits. To give some experience to the up and coming youth, get younger and collect picks using the cap space we did have instead of loading up for a run. With Judd here, we should not have stocked the cupboards with our excess cap space last year and instead compiled picks by playing banker for other deals. Every single pickup that exhausted our salary cap last year was a dead end. Reaves, Kilngberg, Johansson, Sundquist and Nyquist really didn't move the needle past the reg season. Nyquist would have been excellent to retain but was moved due the cap constraints.

    Now, this season we double down on the core prematurely and get bit. It leaves us looking in worse shape for the time when the cap its come off. We are handcuffed to Gaudreau and Foligno for the foreseeable future and still waiting ever so patiently to offload the boat anchors that are Merrill and Goli. 

    The bright spots of this season are some young folks are getting play time. Rossi, Faber and Hunt have all had significant time with the club and are all developing. Some better than we could have ever hoped. 

    So far, the moves in free agency have looked good. A couple low cost defensemen to shore up our bleeding blue line without the captain. Things are looking brighter with Dino and Yurov possibly coming over his year or next and our youngest prospects getting a taste for professional hockey down in Iowa.

    Stay the course Guerin. No big splashes in an attempt to bring us in contention! Maybe even play banker with that IR money and load up the picks this year. Take some physical D prospects if you can and we will be fine taking a high pick.

     

    47 minutes ago, TheGoosesAreLooses said:

    It irks me that our owner and management can't seem to see the forest for the trees. We had every excuse to take a step back and really have something solid moving into a time without cap hits. To give some experience to the up and coming youth, get younger and collect picks using the cap space we did have instead of loading up for a run. With Judd here, we should not have stocked the cupboards with our excess cap space last year and instead compiled picks by playing banker for other deals. Every single pickup that exhausted our salary cap last year was a dead end. Reaves, Kilngberg, Johansson, Sundquist and Nyquist really didn't move the needle past the reg season. Nyquist would have been excellent to retain but was moved due the cap constraints.

    Now, this season we double down on the core prematurely and get bit. It leaves us looking in worse shape for the time when the cap its come off. We are handcuffed to Gaudreau and Foligno for the foreseeable future and still waiting ever so patiently to offload the boat anchors that are Merrill and Goli. 

    The bright spots of this season are some young folks are getting play time. Rossi, Faber and Hunt have all had significant time with the club and are all developing. Some better than we could have ever hoped. 

    So far, the moves in free agency have looked good. A couple low cost defensemen to shore up our bleeding blue line without the captain. Things are looking brighter with Dino and Yurov possibly coming over his year or next and our youngest prospects getting a taste for professional hockey down in Iowa.

    Stay the course Guerin. No big splashes in an attempt to bring us in contention! Maybe even play banker with that IR money and load up the picks this year. Take some physical D prospects if you can and we will be fine taking a high pick.

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The main problem is - the prospects need to play. And for the next year as an example Wild will have only 3 spots available for forwards if they decide not sign anyone from the fourth line. And this is what article is indicating - over commitment to average veteran players, holding development of the young players (Rossi) 

    • Like 4
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Quote

    Parise is expected to play on the second line with center Ryan Johansen and forward Artturi Lehkonen when he makes his debut at the New York Rangers on Monday (7 p.m. ET; MSG, ALT). It is the first game of a season-long six-game road trip for the Avalanche.

    I was a little surprised to read 2nd line for Parise, but they do lack depth in the Colorado lineup. Johansen only plays 14 minutes per game, so it may not be as large of a role as 2nd line can sometimes suggest.

    As for the Wild, I think many are fine with a bottom 10 finish at this point, after missing a crucial 4 points right before the all-star break.

    Maybe trade out Maroon, Duhaime, and Fleury if he would like to go. If decent offers come in for players with limited or full no movement clauses, consider asking if the players want an opportunity with the other team. I wouldn't give up future assets trying to compete this season, but I'm not sure Guerin is comfortable doing that now that they have Spurgeon's cap space to work with.

    I likely would bring Shaw up late in the year to play with Dewar, and see if they can rekindle the connection they showed last season.

    Edited by Imyourhuckleberry
    • Like 5
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The Firebird is definitely broken down on the side of the freeway being pushed by a couple rookies.

    I do think that somebody who speaks Russian is going to drop the clutch in 2nd gear and use the momentum to fire things up and get things rolling, but let's not pretend we are in contention in this race.

    I think BG knows it's time to prepare for the next race and he is doing this by bringing in a couple green Russians and helping them become red Russians.  (hehe)

    BG knows it's time otherwise we wouldn't have all this chatter, right? 

    • Like 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I simply disagree with Tom's take here. Pretty much, the whole thing.

    1. It is very important for owner Leipold to make the playoffs. That is a starting point for anyone he hired as a GM.
    2. Guerin promised us from the start that his team would be competitive. There is quite a difference between being competitive and being a contender. 
    3. Competitive play is something I have defined as having meaningful games with a chance at playoffs with 10 games to go. Not a mathematical chance, a real bonafide chance. This box has been checked every year he's been GM except for this year.
    4. The word "rebuild" was not to be uttered. Retool, fine. It is possible to do this and build a contender, however, to do this and be competitive, it would require not missing on 1sts (in the late teens/early 20s) and getting some luck in later picks. It is understood that these players would take the full 5 years to develop.
    5. Guerin has bought time by having a competitive roster while at the same time rebuilding a cupboard of prospects that is the envy of most teams. 
    6. A competitive team is one who makes the playoffs. This team has overperformed and even achieved home ice advantage once. However, being competitive likely means you are 1/8 teams to exit the playoffs after the 1st round. Essentially, luck would be needed to advance, and some teams get that, we didn't.
    7. Selling off all of our parts on the firebird that weren't glued down is not the direction to go. Selling off the parts that are not part of the future (not the future core) is the way to go. Specifically, this targets a guy like Middleton who is useful for the future but probably not the core. I've come to grips with probably selling off Duhaime and Dewar, even though they are good, cheap pieces, but they can be backfilled. 
    8. What makes anyone think that Guerin/Brackett haven't reloaded? The main issue here is that we haven't been back in the garage to see what is soon to be placed under the hood, a completely rebuilt 420 hp v-8 along with new nimble handling. Unfortunately, it is still under construction as those custom parts take awhile to be manufactured. Will they be ready next season? Probably not all of them, and the setup will need some tweaking.
    9. I don't know why we have to keep rehashing this. Nobody "botched" Rossi's development. It was obvious that myocarditis did far more developmental damage to this player than anyone realized. Prospects are supposed to gain strength in the A, Rossi lost weight compared to jrs. If he doesn't add 15 lbs. this offseason, he likely is still playing in the A, and dropping as a prospect. This wasn't a team issue, this was a Rossi issue, as it was his health that created the problem. (though I do think with the track record of our strength and conditioning coaches on other players, not putting an emphasis on strength/weight gain probably also contributed)
    10. And, the injuries. For the last 3 seasons, we have been pretty fortunate when it came to injuries. This season, we were not. It's not just man hours down, it's the who the man hours were, and when they happened. You can make the case that it is in aging roster, but young players got hit too. This was simply an unlucky year in this regard. When you couple $15m in lost cap space + injuries to your most important players mainly at once, you're going to get a lot of losses. 

    Now, that said, I still maintain that this rebuild/retool/reload is about over as far as obtaining players. We will likely get a really good piece, maybe 2 this draft, but it's more or less gravy. This was signaled by Guerin/Brackett this past draft when they went for sizeable centers with the 1st 2 picks they had. This was what was missing from the prospect pool. 

    If we stay in the position we're in now, we likely pick up a large bodied, skilled defender, or a meaningful piece at forward to add to our arsenal. Now it's about developing them and it takes pretty much the full 5 years to do this. Yurov and The Wall may take less time. Our highly touted defenders from jrs. look like they need another year, but they're on schedule. It appears that what Guerin resigned is what he wants around in veteran leadership roles. 

    Think about this, if Dino comes over in March, and plays like we think he will, we have Zuccarello's replacement on and ELC until Zuccarello's contract is over. We have Yurov's contract on an ELC until Hartman's is over. We likely don't sign Stramel until next season when his ELC coincides with Foligno's being over. Kumpulainen is the same way. And Freddy will be taking shootout position 3 chances well into his contract where his turn is 30 seconds long. When does Johansson's contract expire? When Rossi needs his extension. Faber is the Wild Card here, as his deal will eat up half of the $15m we get back from the cap penalties. Kaprizov probably eats up another $3m.

    There is a method here. There is timing. It's not gloom and doom for the future. 

    • Like 7
    • Thanks 4
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The difficult part about building through the draft is that you never really know how good the 18 or 19 year old you picked will be by the time they reach the age of 22 to 25.  So you build as big a pool as you can with the best odds that you can achieve and hope some of them pan out. 

    What I don't like is that the IA Wild is horrible.  Which means all of our best prospects are not an option unless something major happens.  It doesn't do us any good to have a good prospect pool if we do a poor job of player development in IA.  We will forever be limited to someone else developing our players.   

    • Like 3
    • Confused 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    8 minutes ago, MNCountryLife said:

    What I don't like is that the IA Wild is horrible.  Which means all of our best prospects are not an option unless something major happens.

    We have a pretty young defense back there. I don't know what Mermis can bring back down as he isn't really a defense 1st guy either. These guys are making mistakes and hopefully learning, mainly having to process quicker. The Wall has been shelled all year, but had held up pretty well until he got hurt. Look at McIntyre's stat line, it's awful.

    I think these kids who just came in from jr. got a reality check, need to get bigger and stronger, and need to take a huge leap next season. Think about Lambos, he was a + 60 something last season in jr. and is a -10 this year in the A. Caeden Bankier has 5 goals and 5 assists in 22 games, yet is a -17. 

    Guys like this are having to transition and they're rookies for that league. They will get better (though I think there will be another coaching change down in Iowa after the year is up). Also keep in mind that these kids had 1.5 years of stunted growth during the Covid years, so they are going to require a little extra development time. 

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    21 minutes ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    I was a little surprised to read 2nd line for Parise, but they do lack depth in the Colorado lineup. Johansen only plays 14 minutes per game, so it may not be as large of a role as 2nd line can sometimes suggest.

    If I'm remembering right, I think CO has been dealing with some injuries on the 2nd line. Parise may start there since he's fresh and has some skill, but I'll bet he slides down the lineup when CO gets healthier.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    24 minutes ago, Lovehockey said:

    The main problem is - the prospects need to play.

    This seems to be the main point of the argument. The prospects are playing, just in different leagues. I like having a prospect come up for a cup of coffee early on to get a taste of the bright lights and the speed/strength. I think that helps a competitor with motivation on what he needs to do to stay. 

    I don't know that I can agree with giving a prospect a full-time position for the year for experience. Meaningful minutes in the A probably help more than sheltered minutes in the N. But, for guys like Beckman who have an A track record, finishing out 20 games on the year in the N might be warranted. 

    Lambos would be the defender that is probably most ready that hasn't been called up. I do not have eyes on him in the A, but his stat line suggests that he is struggling to adapt this season to the size and speed. Would it be better to give him 20 games in the N should Merrill and Goligoski be traded? Or would it be better for him to continue in the A with meaningful minutes? I'd like to see him at least get a cup of coffee, but maybe not 20 games. Hunt, on the other hand probably needs those 20 games. He has a track record in the A, so the long look is probably needed. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    2 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    This seems to be the main point of the argument. The prospects are playing, just in different leagues. I like having a prospect come up for a cup of coffee early on to get a taste of the bright lights and the speed/strength. I think that helps a competitor with motivation on what he needs to do to stay. 

    I don't know that I can agree with giving a prospect a full-time position for the year for experience. Meaningful minutes in the A probably help more than sheltered minutes in the N. But, for guys like Beckman who have an A track record, finishing out 20 games on the year in the N might be warranted. 

    Lambos would be the defender that is probably most ready that hasn't been called up. I do not have eyes on him in the A, but his stat line suggests that he is struggling to adapt this season to the size and speed. Would it be better to give him 20 games in the N should Merrill and Goligoski be traded? Or would it be better for him to continue in the A with meaningful minutes? I'd like to see him at least get a cup of coffee, but maybe not 20 games. Hunt, on the other hand probably needs those 20 games. He has a track record in the A, so the long look is probably needed. 

    The 5 year plan is great but it has some problems. The two key defenders - Brodin and Spurgen wil be 35 and 39. So replacement for them needs to be as good (or better) and there is nothing right indicating that it will be . Kaprisov will be 28 why would he want to wait?  Yrov needs to wait for Hartman 3 years? If he is good as he advertised ( and he is doing very well this year in KHL) why he needs to wait? And this list can continue. There is no success with 5 years plans in professional sport unless you are rebuilding. Otherwise people u think will be there will not be and u start again 

    • Like 4
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, Lovehockey said:

    Yrov needs to wait for Hartman 3 years? If he is good as he advertised ( and he is doing very well this year in KHL) why he needs to wait?

    No, Yurov will be on an entry level contract for 3 years. He's not waiting to play in the NHL until AFTER his entry level contract. Johansson will be gone after next season and Yurov should take his spot in the top 6 after next season, if not sooner.

    Yurov will not be paid a larger contract, however, until after his entry level contract is completed. At that time, the Wild will be beyond most of the salary cap crunch created by the buy-outs and Covid-flattened salary cap. The other extensions will be up around that time as well, leaving more money to be paid to Yurov and other quality veterans when they are up for their next contracts.

    • Like 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, FredJohnson said:

    Malpractice:

    Frederick Gaudreau’s five-year, $10 million extension

    Someone is blackmailing our GM:

    Jon Merrill and Alex Goligoski

    Freddy - Is 5 years too long for Freddy?  Maybe, but at an AAV of $2M/year if it really goes south and he's not a productive hockey player (he only has a 15 team NTC) he could be waived and can bury $1.1M of that in the AHL.  Meaning if you buy him out $900k cap hit, or bury him in the AHL (assuming he's not waived) you're only on the hook for him to the tune of $900k against the cap.  Big whoop, that should be noise in your $82M cap space.  Freddy's deal might be a couple of years too long, but it's shouldn't be a boat anchor regardless.

    Goose - The rumor (Russo reported on it) that to 'front load' gooses contract before the buyouts kicked in he'd sign a $5M (above market value) and then a second one $2M below market value making him 2x 3.5AAV, but the 2nd year of the contract would be saving the team $1.5M towards the cap.  Not sure why it ended up a 2x$2 extension instead of a 1x$2 but he the '21-22 season he was +41 with 30 points.  If you thought he'd be able to replicate any of that success and was willing to take another year at $2M why not?  Goose has also had a bout with LTIR this season for 'catching a puck to his leg in practice'  I've got to think had Spurgeon not been shutdown for the season, and the team is desperate for a warm body back on 'D' that injury might have kept him out longer.

    Merrill...i got nothing, other than that contract could be fully buried in the AHL or he'd get grabbed off waivers.  I think Merrill still being here is more of an indication of our confidence in our prospects being ready than anything else.

    I think between now and the TDL if Chisholm appears to be a serviceable NHL player, something would have to give.

     

    Edited by MrCheatachu
    • Like 4
    • Thanks 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I was also initially upset about the Foligno and Hartman signings but I think this season has also made it pretty clear that there aren't any AHLers currently on the team who are going to be taking over for those two anytime soon. 

    Foligno is overpaid but he's also the heart of the team right now, so its easy to see why the GM wanted to keep him around. They're clearly paying for intangibles with him.  Ryan Hartman is getting paid like a low-end top-6 forward, and last I checked that is exactly the kind of player he is. Freddy G at $2.1M? Paid like a low-end top-9 forward, which, again, fits. 

    These deals aren't the future backbreakers they're made out to be. 

    All it means is that, at worst, we'll be paying $10.1M for our future 3rd line once Yurov and Khusnutdinov make the transition over.. 

    • Like 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, MrCheatachu said:

    I think we need to grab Billy by the scruff of his neck, and rub his face in this season and yell 'NO! NO! BAD! NO!' until he stops shitting all over the place.

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    We hear talk about building around KK . My concern is his now short contract my not wait for us because of cap issues. Feels like we're standing in wet cement. 

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...