Not sure that would be enough for them. And while some folks are down on Neighbours, I really want to keep him. If we can get the skill needed for our top 6 over the next 2 years through our own prospects, trades or UFA, then Jake is the perfect 3rd line winger who can slide up in a pinch. And he has the heart and grit that this team needs more of, not less. Just my opinion.Ship Neighbors to NJ for Nemec
I would be shocked as well. To me, it seems like more smoke than fire and is similar to the Buch situation last year. The rumors were flying and a lot of pundits kept waiting for him to get moved and then nothing. I suspect we will see the same this year, with just a couple minor moves like Suter and Faksa.I would be pretty shocked if either got moved even with all the smoke out there. Not saying I am against it I just don't think it will actually happen.
That is obvious.Which Toronto does not have. There is no one on the Leafs I would trade for Parayko.
Matthews?Which Toronto does not have. There is no one on the Leafs I would trade for Parayko.
In theory I understand it, but Cozens scares me like Zegras does. I'd be ok trading for him, but it would have to be at a massive discount, I wouldn't move Kyrou for him.On Feb. 18, The Athletic's Matthew Fairburn was asked if an offer of Dylan Cozens, prospect Konsta Helenius, and a 2026 second-rounder would land Jordan Kyrou. His colleague, Blues beat writer Jeremy Rutherford, felt that would be a fair trade.
I saw that a week or two ago when it was first published, I wouldn't make that tradeOn Feb. 18, The Athletic's Matthew Fairburn was asked if an offer of Dylan Cozens, prospect Konsta Helenius, and a 2026 second-rounder would land Jordan Kyrou. His colleague, Blues beat writer Jeremy Rutherford, felt that would be a fair trade.
Man, just not sure I do that. Really like Helenius as a prospect, but if he doesn’t pan out, seems pretty lopsided for Kyrou. Maybe Cozens, Benson and a 2nd would sway me.On Feb. 18, The Athletic's Matthew Fairburn was asked if an offer of Dylan Cozens, prospect Konsta Helenius, and a 2026 second-rounder would land Jordan Kyrou. His colleague, Blues beat writer Jeremy Rutherford, felt that would be a fair trade.
I like Cozens as an idea, but man his inconsistency and already locked in term scares the heck out of me.
He looked like he was tracking towards budding into a good top 6 center and then dropped back off and is continuing the drop off from last year this year. Just an odd odd situation.
However we don't really need to be trading Kyrou for less offense in the hopes that Cozens rebounds and a prospect turns out. Seems like a recipe for disaster considering how under the microscope guys get here once they get paid.
Yeah, that deal doesn't fix a problem for the Blues. It gives you three chances to hopefully fix the problem that you've exacerbated by making the trade in the first place.Yep, this is where I am at. The value is fair, but that isn't always a reason to do a trade. The team who gets the best player usually wins. And Kyrou is most likely the best player. Plus Cozens has 3 years before going to UFA, which could mean losing him. Even if we consider our window a few years out, Kyrou is still better for that than Cozens due to contract.
I don't love the value of the return, because Cozens scares me. But let's call it perfectly even value for the sake of argument. I don't understand the logic behind targeting two centers as the primary 2 pieces. Assuming Cozens turns his game around the way you need for this trade to be worth it, we would then have 2 of our 3 top 9 centers locked up for 5 years. Suddenly Dvorsky and Helenius are competing for just 1 remaining center spot through the 2029/30 season. Obviously you could slide one (likely Helenius) to RW and 'too many' centers is a good problem. But you are essentially off the bat conceding that you're trading Kyrou for a reclamation project at C and a guy who is a wing prospect in your organization.On Feb. 18, The Athletic's Matthew Fairburn was asked if an offer of Dylan Cozens, prospect Konsta Helenius, and a 2026 second-rounder would land Jordan Kyrou. His colleague, Blues beat writer Jeremy Rutherford, felt that would be a fair trade.
Cozens has 5 years (after this one) before going UFA. This is year 2 of a 7 year deal for him, so having him walk isn't much of a concern.Yep, this is where I am at. The value is fair, but that isn't always a reason to do a trade. The team who gets the best player usually wins. And Kyrou is most likely the best player. Plus Cozens has 3 years before going to UFA, which could mean losing him. Even if we consider our window a few years out, Kyrou is still better for that than Cozens due to contract.