STL Shark
Registered User
- Mar 6, 2013
- 4,408
- 5,476
I acknowledged that he was bad in Detroit, but also incredibly misused by a poorly run team/organization. He did well in an almost full season with Edmonton and then did well in his short stint in San Jose (comparable to his time with Edmonton the year prior which depicts his Detroit time as the significant outlier). If you add his time in STL, Edmonton, and San Jose, he's a 1.85 ES points per 60 compared to 0.8 over a 33 game stretch in Detroit. Pretty easy to see what's the real and what's the outlier.You're talking about a guy who was dumped for a 7th round pick (with the Wings forced to eat the rest of Simek's salary) a few months ago. He's not getting claimed on waivers at that cap hit.
Bizarre cherrypicking of his ES scoring numbers. Since the start of the 21-22 season, which encompasses 149 of his 155 career NHL games, Kostin has scored 1.65 points per 60. Which happens to be identical to Mathieu Joseph who the Sens just had to attach a 3rd to dump on the Blues.
Kostin is the least useful forward among our one-way contracts (Couture, Toffoli, Granlund, Wennberg, Goodrow, Kunin, Sturm, Grundstrom, Zetterlund, Dellandrea, G. Smith) because he doesn't have a track record of filling a defined role in the NHL. That said, this is a massive credit to Grier considering Kostin is still a huge upgrade over some of the garbage we were trotting out up front last season like Hoffman, Barabanov, Labanc and Zadina.
To the Mathieu Joseph point, if Kostin was 2 years older, making 50% more money per year for double the term, maybe there's a comparison to be drawn. Because quite literally none of those factors are in play (and he's 6'4 rather than 6'1), that comparison falls woefully flat. Kostin for 1 year at $2M would be claimed even if he was just a 4th liner because he's 6'4 and can skate.
There is also the fact that Detroit acquired him as the sweetener for taking on Yamamoto's contract from Edmonton literally a year ago that proves that he has real value.