OldnotDeadWings
Registered User
- Sep 18, 2013
- 572
- 710
Marco is going to make progress next season regardless of where he plays. The question of where he or any prospect should play to best advance his career has to be balanced by how much that decision affects the Wings. There's little doubt in my mind that Edvinsson playing 40-plus games last year would have made the Wings better than what they were, not by a lot but at least one point better. That's not being impatient to see a prospect, that's just seeing how effective he was when he came up and reasoning that some kind of switch wasn't flipped in late February, instantly at that point making him NHL ready after definitely not being ready until then. The way he looked at the end of the season was IMO very much how he looked in camp and preseason. And while in the long run it's not going to make any difference in Ed 's career, playing more games last season would have prepared him better to hit the ground running next season. We can blame the lack of injuries on him not being promoted earlier, but it was apparent in December that Lalonde was not happy with Holl and dissatisfaction with Walman wasn't just a late-season thing either.
Another factor is that while a general approach to development is fine, every prospect is unique. Seider's path was partly determined by Covid. Raymond's development in the SHL looked slow, at least partly because of injury. Edvinsson's need for surgery and rehab somewhat influenced off-season acquisitions that got in the way.. Kasper is not encumbered by any of those factors. The only encumbrance he has is that he didn't score enough points on one of the AHL's worst power plays to significantly boost his acceptable ES scoring. If people want to wait until he's indisputably ready to make a top six impact, they might be waiting until the GR coaching staff figure out how to run a PP.
There's also a fairly easy solution to being wrong about a prospect's readiness. If he's clearly struggling enough to not warrant regular ice time, you send him back down. Any young player scarred for life by such a humiliation is not likely to be worth the trouble of paying for his therapy. There's nothing wrong with a GM preparing for that possibility by signing guys often considered unnecessary roadblocks, but there's also nothing inherently wrong about a rookie sometimes looking like a rookie. The standard for promotion doesn't have to be, is he ready to thrive, to look like a seasoned vet right out of the gate; it can be, is he ready to compete and at least hold his own, contributing something more than an available alternative. Plenty of really good prospects are promoted or win jobs on that basis, including Soderblom. Hoglander in Vancouver won a full-time job for that reason and also went through demotion back to the AHL after more than 100 NHL games, somehow surviving that trauma to score 24 goals last season and look like a keeper.
Another factor is that while a general approach to development is fine, every prospect is unique. Seider's path was partly determined by Covid. Raymond's development in the SHL looked slow, at least partly because of injury. Edvinsson's need for surgery and rehab somewhat influenced off-season acquisitions that got in the way.. Kasper is not encumbered by any of those factors. The only encumbrance he has is that he didn't score enough points on one of the AHL's worst power plays to significantly boost his acceptable ES scoring. If people want to wait until he's indisputably ready to make a top six impact, they might be waiting until the GR coaching staff figure out how to run a PP.
There's also a fairly easy solution to being wrong about a prospect's readiness. If he's clearly struggling enough to not warrant regular ice time, you send him back down. Any young player scarred for life by such a humiliation is not likely to be worth the trouble of paying for his therapy. There's nothing wrong with a GM preparing for that possibility by signing guys often considered unnecessary roadblocks, but there's also nothing inherently wrong about a rookie sometimes looking like a rookie. The standard for promotion doesn't have to be, is he ready to thrive, to look like a seasoned vet right out of the gate; it can be, is he ready to compete and at least hold his own, contributing something more than an available alternative. Plenty of really good prospects are promoted or win jobs on that basis, including Soderblom. Hoglander in Vancouver won a full-time job for that reason and also went through demotion back to the AHL after more than 100 NHL games, somehow surviving that trauma to score 24 goals last season and look like a keeper.
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