hockeyball
Registered User
- Nov 10, 2007
- 21,587
- 1,061
I mean, I get what everyone is saying about Marner... but you don't pass up a player like that if they want to play here. A lot of stuff COULD happen, but what definitely will happen if you don't sign him is you will lose more games than you would have. Signing a top-end player like that for no assets means you can either keep all of your assets (on cheap contracts currently) or trade some of them for other pieces and parts you may need. Also I think regardless of anything else, Marner isn't a huge risk as he's still pretty young and likely to be in the 70+ point range for the next 5+ years. Sure there are other, better, players you could fantasize about, but that's assuming they are all clamoring to sign here and you just get your pick (which will not happen until we win a cup).
Basically, you don't trade a bird in the hand for two in the bush, were that the case. Marner is not Thornton, and Thornton's biggest problem wasn't that he didn't have "drive" or "competitiveness" or any of that stuff... it's that he relied almost entirely on passing to win games and great teams with great defenses shut that shit down because he was too predictable. Even then, Thornton was one of the premier puck possession guys of all time. They needed to build a team around Thornton that didn't rely on his passes so utterly to succeed. The Thornton era failures were more of a failure of coaching and team building. Wilson kept trying to find a goal scorer for Thornton when what he needed was two guys on his line who could create offense on their own and be boosted by Thornton. You know... guys like Marner lol.
Basically, you don't trade a bird in the hand for two in the bush, were that the case. Marner is not Thornton, and Thornton's biggest problem wasn't that he didn't have "drive" or "competitiveness" or any of that stuff... it's that he relied almost entirely on passing to win games and great teams with great defenses shut that shit down because he was too predictable. Even then, Thornton was one of the premier puck possession guys of all time. They needed to build a team around Thornton that didn't rely on his passes so utterly to succeed. The Thornton era failures were more of a failure of coaching and team building. Wilson kept trying to find a goal scorer for Thornton when what he needed was two guys on his line who could create offense on their own and be boosted by Thornton. You know... guys like Marner lol.