Individual parcels are often individually different.And there’s also bidding wars
Chicago missed the playoffs 5 years in a row and drafted in the top 7 for four straight years in the mid-2000s in their rebuild that resulted in 3 Cups in 6 years.I can't say how much the Blues make or lose on good or bad years for the ownership group. Honestly I wouldn't even know what to believe regarding that because sports team owners aren't exactly transparent with their financials, but I've always been highly skeptical of the messaging that the Blues can't stomach a heavy rebuild. The franchise was at close to a hypothetical worst case scenario being a hopeless basement team coming out of a full year league lockout with virtually no young players wearing the Note to get excited for. All while the team was still competing with an in market NFL team and a Cardinals team that had just won a world series. Not only did the franchise survive, but Stillman's group bought it just a few years after that complete mess. Now I'm supposed to believe the team can't survive another rebuild ever again? Even now that we have a more resilient fanbase with the cup? Even after the Rams left? Even after how much the franchise's value has risen since these owners bought it? I just don't buy that the overall franchise health would be at all jeopardized by a full rebuild. I also roll my eyes whenever anyone from the front office frames a rebuild as 5+ years of being in the basement. That's what a failed rebuild is, but that's the same outcome for always going for it when you shouldn't and falling. For every Buffalo or pre-McDavid Edmonton, there's also a Philadelphia or Calgary who just kept going for it with diminishing returns forever.
I'm not saying I want a rip-it-all-up rebuild, but the team would survive if we went that route. Everything we had to go through in the post-lockout years was worse than any kind of full rebuild we could go through now. And if anyone bought an NHL team thinking they would never have to withstand the team being bad enough to draft in the top 5 more then once within a few years, then they didn't look at the league before buying. Not saying it's impossible to win without drafting high, but the list of Cup winners, and even just the best regular season teams, speaks for itself.
tldr: I don't believe the owners about their dire finances. We could draft in the top 5 for 5 years straight and it would be fine.
The annual salary of our current NHL roster is about $96M. That does not include the $2.5M+ we've already paid Saad, bonuses owed (or potentially already paid) to Suter, or the AHL payroll. The Blues will be paying $100M+ for hockey players this year.I was going to mention this, but you beat me to it. I think if we had the TV deals that the NFL, MLB, and Euro football teams have, then doing a full tear down rebuild would be manageable from an ownership group perspective. The health of the game is much better than it was years prior, but that doesn't change the fact that we are still like the 4th most popular sport in the US. That does have an impact on the cap, profits, improvements to arenas, etc.
Not sure if this is true, but it looks like average revenue for an NHL franchise is 225 million. I'm not sure what the total operating cost is, but let's just say that's 60 million for the Blues. That's roughly 165 million in profits? What happens when you cut down attendance from 80% to 20%? Point is I agree with you and it seems like the Blues are trying to avoid a complete rebuild either for this reason or other reasons.
That's kind of Army's thing, similar to Buchnevich, he holds a really high ask when he sells.Schenn could be on the market per Dreger on insider trading. Said "the return would have to be mammoth" which I found pretty surprising since most here don't think that contract carries much value
Is there an echo in here...Dreger on Insider Trading tonight said Blues listening on Schenn. Says would take massive offer.
Chicago missed the playoffs 5 years in a row and drafted in the top 7 for four straight years in the mid-2000s in their rebuild that resulted in 3 Cups in 6 years.
Pittsburgh missed the playoffs 4 years in a row and drafted top 5 for five straight years in their rebuild that resulted in 3 Cups and 4 Final trips in 10 years. They would have missed the playoffs 5 years in a row, but they lockout was sandwiched in their when they were terrible.
LA missed the playoffs 6 years in a row and drafted top 5 for three straight years in their rebuild that resulted in 2 Cups in 3 years.
It's definitely not just the failed rebuilds that result in long stays in the basement.
All that said, the last decade hasn't seen many teams rebuild from the basement to the Cup.
Let's look at the last 10 years of data on bottom 5 teams:
2014/15: Buffalo, Arizona, Edmonton, Toronto, Carolina
2015/16: Toronto, Edmonton, Vancouver, Columbus, Calgary
2016/17: Colorado, Vancouver, Arizona, New Jersey, Buffalo
2017/18: Buffalo, Ottawa, Arizona, Montreal, Detroit
2018/19: Ottawa, LA, New Jersey, Detroit, Buffalo
2019/20: Detroit, Ottawa, San Jose, LA, Anaheim
2020/21: Buffalo, Anaheim, New Jersey, Columbus, Detroit
2021/22: Montreal, Arizona, Seattle, Philly, New Jersey
2022/23: Anaheim, Columbus, Chicago, San Jose, Montreal
2023/24: San Jose, Chicago, Anaheim, Columbus, Montreal
That's 19 of 32 teams with at least one bottom 5 finish. Only one of those teams has turned it into a Cup. Edmonton and Montreal each got to a Cup Final. Carolina has built a great organization, although they so far haven't been able to win a game in the Conference Final.
And then you have a ton of perpetual basement dwelling and mediocrity. 7 teams on this list have 4+ finishes in the bottom 5 (Buffalo, Arizona, Montreal, Detroit, Columbus, Anaheim, and New Jersey). I see maybe 1 contender in there (and I have to squint a bit). Buffalo's playoff drought is 13 years. Detroit's is 8. Anaheim is at 6.
Another two teams have 3 visits to the bottom 5 (Ottawa and San Jose). Ottawa has missed the playoffs for 7 straight seasons. San Jose is only at 5 straight, but they aren't close to being a good team again.
There are way more teams getting stuck in the basement than there are teams that successfully rebuild out of the basement. My theory is that the McDavid/Eichel draft somewhat ruined tanking as a strategy. More teams are aggressively tanking, which means that the race to the bottom got more and more competitive. Teams have to dig the hole deeper than ever to reach the bottom, which means that the climb back up is longer than ever.
In the 8 full seasons between 2005/06 to 2013/14, there were only 7 instances of a team finishing below 65 points and just 4 instances of a team finishing below 60 points.
In the 8 full seasons from 2014/15 to 2023/24, there were 18 instances of a team finishing below 65 points and 11 instances of a team finishing below 60 points.
Ha. I mean we’re not getting a “massive” offer for Schenn. I want to keep him anyway. He’s a True Blue.Dreger on Insider Trading tonight said Blues listening on Schenn. Says would take massive offer.
He won’t get a massive return. He might get a decent return if the Blues retain salary, but he has 3 years left on his contract, and Army hasn’t been known to retain long term yet in his deals.Schenn could be on the market per Dreger on insider trading. Said "the return would have to be mammoth" which I found pretty surprising since most here don't think that contract carries much value
Schenn could be on the market per Dreger on insider trading. Said "the return would have to be mammoth" which I found pretty surprising since most here don't think that contract carries much value
I must have missed it. I have found this place to be more enjoyable when I limit what/who I read.Is there an echo in here...
Jk
Love the talk on the Blues’ financials.
I always keep in mind that valuation and selling price are not the same thing.
Same with houses. There’s the appraised value and then the price that people will actually pay.
I'm going to assume this post is not sarcasm.haven't you heard? if you value your property higher than an AG and Judge thinks it's worth that's a felony and you can be charged.
This.The annual salary of our current NHL roster is about $96M. That does not include the $2.5M+ we've already paid Saad, bonuses owed (or potentially already paid) to Suter, or the AHL payroll. The Blues will be paying $100M+ for hockey players this year.
Then you also have salaries for coaches, executives, scouts, accounting, marketing, medical staff, etc.
Then you have utilities, hockey gear, meals, workout equipment, rent/ice fees at Centene, etc.
Then you also foot the bill for road trips. Hotels, chartered flights, per diem, meals, etc.
You are wildly underestimating the operating cost of an NHL team.
If you or I tell a bank our home is worth $3,000,000 when it’s really only worth $300,000 it is a also felony. But a bank won’t loan us regular people money without an independent appraisal, which is why it rarely happens. It’s not about what the justice system thinks it’s worth, it’s about making knowingly false statements to a lender to induce them to loan you money. If you can independently prove the value there is no crime. Next time, bring proof to court.haven't you heard? if you value your property higher than an AG and Judge thinks it's worth that's a felony and you can be charged.
I'm going to assume this post is not sarcasm.
In home sales, there are two general steps: 1. approve the purchaser & 2. approve the home.
A licensed and registered appraiser does their thing toward approving the home for sale. It's all, like, official n stuff.
With that said, having your home reappraised after several years is a good thing to do, especially if you've added living space. In that case, the property needs to be re-titlled and re-recorded to reflect accuracy.
You're in my wheelhouse, bro. And I have playing cards stuck in my spokes.
There will be analog processes in the NHL.
We apparently have the 5th most hits in the NHL. How physical do we need to be to actually be good?You need a balance. More talent is always better IMO, but that Sunny/Barbie bash brothers combo in the Cup run played a major role. But, they were just physical, they with Steen played genuine good defense too. That Sharks series though, we just beat the crap out of them.