TheOrganist
Don't Call Him Alex
- Feb 21, 2006
- 4,244
- 1,777
Pretty dumb signing to begin with as most of us said at the time...good riddance.
Pretty dumb signing to begin with as most of us said at the time...good riddance.
Exactly. There was no opportunity cost. He literally didn't prevent us from acquiring better players.To add onto what @Majorityof1 said, he was signed before we got deals done with Holloway, Texier, Joseph, and Faksa as well.
I don't think anyone really needs to be. When a player is injured, there is a process where the team physician re-evaluates the player and clears him to play again. Often times, the initial timeline is very conservative so players do come back sooner, but they have to pass certain tests before they can be allowed to return to full activity.If Thomas is ready I'm very very very worried he was rushed
Vitriol? Nothing about this season would rise to the level of vitriol. He's a useless player who brings nothing of substance to a hockey team but vitriol? No.Eh, it's a completely buriable contract. We are able to send him down with zero cap cost. We actually needed him. With Saad, Texier, Joseph and Thomas all missing time at various points. He's better than our call up options at the time.
I don't get the vitriol about a $1m 13th-15th forward when healthy. I get it from @Memento standpoint, re: his personal history. But from a pure hockey management view, what he brings vs what he costs, its in line with expectations. I don't think you can make an argument that not signing him would have materially affected our season for the better.
GMs don't set the lineups, but they can certainly try a force a coach's hand into playing certain players more. I do wonder if that was part of Army's rationale here other than, you know, Kapanen not being a very good hockey player.
And Hockey players are known to force themselves to play through injuries they shouldnt play through.I don't think anyone really needs to be. When a player is injured, there is a process where the team physician re-evaluates the player and clears him to play again. Often times, the initial timeline is very conservative so players do come back sooner, but they have to pass certain tests before they can be allowed to return to full activity.
Bortuzzo last year to the Isles is another good example of this.Armstrong will try to work for deals that help players - Fabbri comes to mind. Kap wasn't getting any playing time and that really isn't good for a guy on a 1 year contract. There was no market for him via trade, and the Blues wouldn't have wanted to add an asset to help him move - so. Waiver makes sense.
If he isn't claim, he plays in the AHL and hopefully is able to add some scoring to the Tbirds.
Nobody is saying that not bringing him back means we would have been a playoff team or something.Eh, it's a completely buriable contract. We are able to send him down with zero cap cost. We actually needed him. With Saad, Texier, Joseph and Thomas all missing time at various points. He's better than our call up options at the time.
I don't get the vitriol about a $1m 13th-15th forward when healthy. I get it from @Memento standpoint, re: his personal history. But from a pure hockey management view, what he brings vs what he costs, its in line with expectations. I don't think you can make an argument that not signing him would have materially affected our season for the better.
Vitriol? Nothing about this season would rise to the level of vitriol. He's a useless player who brings nothing of substance to a hockey team but vitriol? No.
Nobody is saying that not bringing him back means we would have been a playoff team or something.
People just don’t like him because he’s a useless player that does not provide anything more than an AHL player at this point (so no, we didn’t need him), and bringing him back was stupid because we already knew he sucked. Could have just tried someone new with that contract spot.
This is rich coming from you.Vitriol may have been overstating it. But multiple people saying good riddance for a guy who has played in half our games and averaged 11 minutes seems excessive. Saying it was dumb to sign him for a nothing contract as a 13th forward seems excessive.
He was a depth signing. We were able to add other, better depth players. It pushed him down the chart, and now we are waiving him. I hope he clears so we have cheap depth fo rmore injuries, just in case, and aren't forced to call up young guys who aren't ready.
This is rich coming from you.
You’d be jumping up and down if the Blues put Binnington on waivers, and he actually helps the team unlike Kapanen.
You hate players for plenty of dumb reasons, yet now you want to come police how people react to Kapanen being put on waivers. Like why do you care so much what other posters say? Sit this one out.
So one minute we are talking about the Blues front office rushing Thomas back and the next minute we're talking about Robert Thomas forcing himself to play through an injury that hasn't fully healed? Those are two different things. Maybe have some faith in the professionals here.And Hockey players are known to force themselves to play through injuries they shouldnt play through.