News Article: Agents Poll: Dubas voted the best GM to get client a good deal from

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So earlier in the thread there was a lot of talk about Tavares, the potential for decline etc.

I remembered a couple of articles from a few years ago that allow us to actually make a rough model for how that would look rather than relying on anecdotal examples.

How scoring rates change as players age
Old guys on the power play

There's two main take aways from these, that his power play scoring should remain constantish for the remainder of the contract, and that 5v5 "On average, players retain about 90% of their scoring through age 29, but the drop from there is pretty sharp -- they hit 80% at age 31, 70% at age 32-33, and 60% at age 35"

This past year Tavares was 29, so we can use that as a new baseline rather than his peak. 80/90 = 89% of Baseline at 31, 70/90 = 79% of Base at 32-33. There were no numbers given for 3o and 34 so I'll assume a midpoint for each, 85/90 = 94% of baseline at 30, 65/90 = 72% of baseline at 34.

Now, communicating in per 60 rates can get a little convoluted, so let's assume because it's unlikely that he'll be supplanted at C that his minutes will remain relatively constant, and just look at his raw 29 yo output.
39 even strength and 21 pp points in 63 games 2019‑2020 NHL Scoring Leaders or a baseline per 82 games of 51 even strength, 27 PP, 78 total points.

How that looks moving forward
20-21 (30) -> 51 * .94 + 27 = 75
21-22 (31) -> 51 *.89 +27 = 72
22-23 (32) ->51 *.89 + 27 = 72
23-24 (33) ->51 *.79 +27 = 67
24-25 (34) -> 51* .72 +27 = 64


Of course life isn't as clean as exact as this, but that's the curve we would expect the average player to follow based on where Tavares was at 29, so it's a good idea of what we could generally expect.

Then food for thought- Tavares is primarily a mind/ hands player, not a body player. He's never excelled based on physical tools, so a slight age related athletic degradation is not going to rob him of an advantage he relied on. The counter point to that is that with too much degradation he won't physically belong in the league. There's anecdotal examples that go both ways

Food for thought 2.0- the average player in the model peaks at 24, and then by 29 (the base year used in this post) has declined to 90% of peak production. Tavares has not yet had such a decline, which arguably lends credence to him declining slower than the average player.
 
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So earlier in the thread there was a lot of talk about Tavares, the potential for decline etc.

I remembered a couple of articles from a few years ago that allow us to actually make a rough model for how that would look rather than relying on anecdotal examples.

How scoring rates change as players age
Old guys on the power play

There's two main take aways from these, that his power play scoring should remain constantish for the remainder of the contract, and that 5v5 "On average, players retain about 90% of their scoring through age 29, but the drop from there is pretty sharp -- they hit 80% at age 31, 70% at age 32-33, and 60% at age 35"

This past year Tavares was 29, so we can use that as a new baseline rather than his peak. 80/90 = 89% of Baseline at 31, 70/90 = 79% of Base at 32-33. There were no numbers given for 3o and 34 so I'll assume a midpoint for each, 85/90 = 94% of baseline at 30, 65/90 = 72% of baseline at 34.

Now, communicating in per 60 rates can get a little convoluted, so let's assume because it's unlikely that he'll be supplanted at C that his minutes will remain relatively constant, and just look at his raw 29 yo output.
39 even strength and 21 pp points in 63 games 2019‑2020 NHL Scoring Leaders or a baseline per 82 games of 51 even strength, 27 PP, 78 total points.

How that looks moving forward
20-21 (30) -> 51 * .94 + 27 = 75
21-22 (31) -> 51 *.89 +27 = 72
22-23 (32) ->51 *.89 + 27 = 72
23-24 (33) ->51 *.79 +27 = 67
24-25 (34) -> 51* .72 +27 = 64


Of course life isn't as clean as exact as this, but that's the curve we would expect the average player to follow based on where Tavares was at 29, so it's a good idea of what we could generally expect.

Then food for thought- Tavares is primarily a mind/ hands player, not a body player. He's never excelled based on physical tools, so a slight age related athletic degradation is going to rob him of an advantage he relied on. The counter point to that is that with too much degradation he won't physically belong in the league. There's anecdotal examples that go both ways

Food for thought 2.0- the average player in the model peaks at 24, and then by 29 (the base year used in this post) has declined to 90% of peak production. Tavares has not yet had such a decline, which arguably lends credence to him declining slower than the average player.
He has 1-2 maybe maybe 3 years left as a centre. Then he will shift to left wing. He will always produce points. The issue is his speed. Once he can't stay reasonably close to his opposing centre that will be it.
 
He has 1-2 maybe maybe 3 years left as a centre. Then he will shift to left wing. He will always produce points. The issue is his speed. Once he can't stay reasonably close to his opposing centre that will be it.

He looks after himself well and is a consummate professional so he may hold onto the legs for a decent amount of time. But it's possible, and i could definitely see Willy gradually move to C, JT to the left, KK up to line 2, and the line absolutely killing it.
 
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Tavares is not moving to the wing. He's never been a burner or particularly good skater. He's always gotten by on his hockey IQ. That wont fail him anytime soon.

Where do people come up with these ideas? It's like the poster who said Tyson Barrie wouldn't dress for the playoff series vs. Columbus.

Just ridiculous.
 
So earlier in the thread there was a lot of talk about Tavares, the potential for decline etc.

I remembered a couple of articles from a few years ago that allow us to actually make a rough model for how that would look rather than relying on anecdotal examples.

How scoring rates change as players age
Old guys on the power play

There's two main take aways from these, that his power play scoring should remain constantish for the remainder of the contract, and that 5v5 "On average, players retain about 90% of their scoring through age 29, but the drop from there is pretty sharp -- they hit 80% at age 31, 70% at age 32-33, and 60% at age 35"

This past year Tavares was 29, so we can use that as a new baseline rather than his peak. 80/90 = 89% of Baseline at 31, 70/90 = 79% of Base at 32-33. There were no numbers given for 3o and 34 so I'll assume a midpoint for each, 85/90 = 94% of baseline at 30, 65/90 = 72% of baseline at 34.

Now, communicating in per 60 rates can get a little convoluted, so let's assume because it's unlikely that he'll be supplanted at C that his minutes will remain relatively constant, and just look at his raw 29 yo output.
39 even strength and 21 pp points in 63 games 2019‑2020 NHL Scoring Leaders or a baseline per 82 games of 51 even strength, 27 PP, 78 total points.

How that looks moving forward
20-21 (30) -> 51 * .94 + 27 = 75
21-22 (31) -> 51 *.89 +27 = 72
22-23 (32) ->51 *.89 + 27 = 72
23-24 (33) ->51 *.79 +27 = 67
24-25 (34) -> 51* .72 +27 = 64


Of course life isn't as clean as exact as this, but that's the curve we would expect the average player to follow based on where Tavares was at 29, so it's a good idea of what we could generally expect.

Then food for thought- Tavares is primarily a mind/ hands player, not a body player. He's never excelled based on physical tools, so a slight age related athletic degradation is going to rob him of an advantage he relied on. The counter point to that is that with too much degradation he won't physically belong in the league. There's anecdotal examples that go both ways

Food for thought 2.0- the average player in the model peaks at 24, and then by 29 (the base year used in this post) has declined to 90% of peak production. Tavares has not yet had such a decline, which arguably lends credence to him declining slower than the average player.

Good post.

Guys like Tavares isnt relying on bursts of speed to scire amd ao that drop in physical ability will hamper him less. Not to mention star guys with high hockey iqs can continue to reinvent their games as their skating slows.

Plus he plays and thrives alongside younger high skilled giys.

This belief that he is guaranteed to see a huge drop in production is nothing more than (pessimistic) wishful thinking
 
He has 1-2 maybe maybe 3 years left as a centre. Then he will shift to left wing. He will always produce points. The issue is his speed. Once he can't stay reasonably close to his opposing centre that will be it.
It’s inevitable he’ll move to the wing. He’ll always be a beast on the cycle and put up points. I for one am not worried about his contract.
 
Good post.

Guys like Tavares isnt relying on bursts of speed to scire amd ao that drop in physical ability will hamper him less. Not to mention star guys with high hockey iqs can continue to reinvent their games as their skating slows.

Plus he plays and thrives alongside younger high skilled giys.

This belief that he is guaranteed to see a huge drop in production is nothing more than (pessimistic) wishful thinking
Guys like Spezza and Thornton have never been burners but have managed to have long successful careers because of their hands, passing ability and IQ. JT has never been known for his skating ability, so I don't see him having a huge decline any time soon unless he ends up having some kind of nagging injury. He has always been a player that makes his linemates better.
Guys like Moulson, Parenteau, Okposo had their best seasons playing with him and weren't able to keep the production going away from him.
 
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Agent poll: Lucic's contract the worst, MacKinnon's most team-friendly


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Clarkson got a vote for the worst deal. That’s an X against Nonis.
Yup. Pretty much. :laugh:
 
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Dubas DID get completely f***ed on the Matthews and Marner deals. These were RFAs, they had very little leverage. Star RFAs either get good term (5-6 years) but poor $$, or they get poor term (7-8 years) but good $$. Matthews and Marner both got good term and GREAT $$ (2nd highest paid C and W in the league), that’s basically unheard of for RFAs. Dubas did a terrible job on these deals, and deserves to be considered the biggest pushover of all GMs on contract negotiations, which is clearly the case from this survey.

I actually think Dubas is a decent GM overall, but he’s clearly a terrible negotiator, and I don’t see how anyone can disagree with this. Marner has the 2nd highest cap hit of any winger, despite being an RFA, nowhere remotely close to the 2nd best winger in the league, AND he got player friendly term. Matthews and Tavares are 2nd and 3rd in the league for centre cap hit - at least JT was a UFA, but Matthews was an RFA and got extremely player friendly term. No other GM is close to Dubas in terms of weak negotiation.
As a Raptor fan it reminds me of the old "In BC we trust" stans for whom he could never do anything wrong. Now looking back they look pretty silly worshiping the water he supposedly walked on.
 
yes we were and you blamed the goalies for Johnny's failures , well Johnny has been a failure for 11 years , 9 with NY and 2 with us so that makes 11 years the goalies let him down
This is a pretty harsh and unfair comment.
 
People need to get over the signings. Whether your a believer that they are fair(vocal minority), overpayments and undertermed(vast majority) or think they are gross unprecedented overpayments (waffles) it's time to move on. I dont see matthews/marner/nylander plateauing. They will improve there compete and two way play. The first two will give 95-110 points over the next 4-5 seasons if healthy and nylander will give 70-85 if healthy. We have a string core almost fully built. Just need one RHD that fits in long term plans.

If Robertson is as good as the vibes I'm getting ( max potential in seeing is him challenging matthews as the teams best goal scorer which is insane) Dubas needs threads talking about his strong drafting (sandin looks like an stud as well). Dubas and his team so far have looked like high end drafting team. If you combine UFA developmental options than mik, barbanov, and Lehtonen all could further boost dubas in this area.

He is also pretty good at trades with the exception of the kadri debacle. The muzzin trade looks better know with us seeing durzi not taking a big step and grundstrom still not an NHLer. Plus muzzin is a quality 2/3 signed for 4 more years and should continue that performance for atleast another 2 seasons.

Dubas is an A drafter and developer, a B+ trader, and a C- negotiator. He is still new to the job with only 2 years as GM. I'm hoping he can improve in negotiations over the next while with rielly, andersen/new goalie deals required.
 
People need to get over the signings. Whether your a believer that they are fair(vocal minority), overpayments and undertermed(vast majority) or think they are gross unprecedented overpayments (waffles) it's time to move on. I dont see matthews/marner/nylander plateauing. They will improve there compete and two way play. The first two will give 95-110 points over the next 4-5 seasons if healthy and nylander will give 70-85 if healthy. We have a string core almost fully built. Just need one RHD that fits in long term plans.

If Robertson is as good as the vibes I'm getting ( max potential in seeing is him challenging matthews as the teams best goal scorer which is insane) Dubas needs threads talking about his strong drafting (sandin looks like an stud as well). Dubas and his team so far have looked like high end drafting team. If you combine UFA developmental options than mik, barbanov, and Lehtonen all could further boost dubas in this area.

He is also pretty good at trades with the exception of the kadri debacle. The muzzin trade looks better know with us seeing durzi not taking a big step and grundstrom still not an NHLer. Plus muzzin is a quality 2/3 signed for 4 more years and should continue that performance for atleast another 2 seasons.

Dubas is an A drafter and developer, a B+ trader, and a C- negotiator. He is still new to the job with only 2 years as GM. I'm hoping he can improve in negotiations over the next while with rielly, andersen/new goalie deals required.
This.....is very well put. You have not been a real fan of Dubas, but you are 100% right with this.

David Poile was not the David Poile of today in his first 18 months. Sam Pollock wasn't either.

No one comes in perfect. That is the issue, and that is the message. People still pining for Lou to negotiate the big 3 contracts is hilarious, given his recent track record of negotiating. Maybe the reason he bailed is because he knew his rep would be killed, and then he did even worse with the Islanders......which not many people couldn't see.
 
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So earlier in the thread there was a lot of talk about Tavares, the potential for decline etc.

I remembered a couple of articles from a few years ago that allow us to actually make a rough model for how that would look rather than relying on anecdotal examples.

How scoring rates change as players age
Old guys on the power play

There's two main take aways from these, that his power play scoring should remain constantish for the remainder of the contract, and that 5v5 "On average, players retain about 90% of their scoring through age 29, but the drop from there is pretty sharp -- they hit 80% at age 31, 70% at age 32-33, and 60% at age 35"

This past year Tavares was 29, so we can use that as a new baseline rather than his peak. 80/90 = 89% of Baseline at 31, 70/90 = 79% of Base at 32-33. There were no numbers given for 3o and 34 so I'll assume a midpoint for each, 85/90 = 94% of baseline at 30, 65/90 = 72% of baseline at 34.

Now, communicating in per 60 rates can get a little convoluted, so let's assume because it's unlikely that he'll be supplanted at C that his minutes will remain relatively constant, and just look at his raw 29 yo output.
39 even strength and 21 pp points in 63 games 2019‑2020 NHL Scoring Leaders or a baseline per 82 games of 51 even strength, 27 PP, 78 total points.

How that looks moving forward
20-21 (30) -> 51 * .94 + 27 = 75
21-22 (31) -> 51 *.89 +27 = 72
22-23 (32) ->51 *.89 + 27 = 72
23-24 (33) ->51 *.79 +27 = 67
24-25 (34) -> 51* .72 +27 = 64


Of course life isn't as clean as exact as this, but that's the curve we would expect the average player to follow based on where Tavares was at 29, so it's a good idea of what we could generally expect.

Then food for thought- Tavares is primarily a mind/ hands player, not a body player. He's never excelled based on physical tools, so a slight age related athletic degradation is not going to rob him of an advantage he relied on. The counter point to that is that with too much degradation he won't physically belong in the league. There's anecdotal examples that go both ways

Food for thought 2.0- the average player in the model peaks at 24, and then by 29 (the base year used in this post) has declined to 90% of peak production. Tavares has not yet had such a decline, which arguably lends credence to him declining slower than the average player.

Using this year as the baseline is also messy because of his broken hand/newborn situation. If it was something like a chronic groin/shoulder injury that slowed him down this year, I'd even say to keep it in because it's likely to plague him throughout his aging curve, but a broken hand/newborn are pretty one-off situations that shouldn't have long-term production impacts. The other part of it is that Marner is presumeably going to get better as he hits his peak years which might hide some of Tavares' early decline.

Personally I see him maintaining a 35 goal/PPGish pace for the majority of his contract before you have to hide him on the wing for the last year or two.
 
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People need to get over the signings. Whether your a believer that they are fair(vocal minority), overpayments and undertermed(vast majority) or think they are gross unprecedented overpayments (waffles) it's time to move on. I dont see matthews/marner/nylander plateauing. They will improve there compete and two way play. The first two will give 95-110 points over the next 4-5 seasons if healthy and nylander will give 70-85 if healthy. We have a string core almost fully built. Just need one RHD that fits in long term plans.

If Robertson is as good as the vibes I'm getting ( max potential in seeing is him challenging matthews as the teams best goal scorer which is insane) Dubas needs threads talking about his strong drafting (sandin looks like an stud as well). Dubas and his team so far have looked like high end drafting team. If you combine UFA developmental options than mik, barbanov, and Lehtonen all could further boost dubas in this area.

He is also pretty good at trades with the exception of the kadri debacle. The muzzin trade looks better know with us seeing durzi not taking a big step and grundstrom still not an NHLer. Plus muzzin is a quality 2/3 signed for 4 more years and should continue that performance for atleast another 2 seasons.

Dubas is an A drafter and developer, a B+ trader, and a C- negotiator. He is still new to the job with only 2 years as GM. I'm hoping he can improve in negotiations over the next while with rielly, andersen/new goalie deals required.

Drafting completely remains to be seen. Forget about grading him against 30 other GM's, how can you grade someone an "A" without a single one of his draft picks materializing into an NHL player? The jury is still out.

What we've definitely learned is that the "trading down" strategy hasn't materialized a single thing so far.
 
Drafting completely remains to be seen. Forget about grading him against 30 other GM's, how can you grade someone an "A" without a single one of his draft picks materializing into an NHL player? The jury is still out.

What we've definitely learned is that the "trading down" strategy hasn't materialized a single thing so far.

Why have your 2nd round pick score at a historic pace in the OHL and challenge for the taxi squad as a 19 year old when you can have your 2nd round pick be a double overage KHLer with bad numbers who takes 3-4 years to get a 4th line tryout.

At least our mid-round picks actually make sense now and generally would go higher in a D+1 redraft.
 
Why have your 2nd round pick score at a historic pace in the OHL and challenge for the taxi squad as a 19 year old when you can have your 2nd round pick be a double overage KHLer with bad numbers who takes 3-4 years to get a 4th line tryout.

At least our mid-round picks actually make sense now and generally would go higher in a D+1 redraft.

So again, nothing has materialized.

And with that, Dubas' patented and much-hyped "overager" and "trading down" theories have amounted to a total of nothing.
 
So again, nothing has materialized.

And with that, Dubas' patented and much-hyped "overager" and "trading down" theories have amounted to a total of nothing.

What? The overager thing was Hunter's call, he raved about Korshkov and that he was shocked he was even available with our 2nd. You think Dubas of all people wanted to draft overagers that couldn't skate just because they were 6'4 defensemen?

How is the jury still out on his picks when they've actually played in the NHL, but the jury isn't out on trading down not working? Is it too soon or is it not too soon? Of course, it's too soon for the good parts, but not too soon for anything you can criticize right?
 
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This.....is very well put. You have not been a real fan of Dubas, but you are 100% right with this.

David Poile was not the David Poile of today in his first 18 months. Sam Pollock wasn't either.

No one comes in perfect. That is the issue, and that is the message. People still pining for Lou to negotiate the big 3 contracts is hilarious, given his recent track record of negotiating. Maybe the reason he bailed is because he knew his rep would be killed, and then he did even worse with the Islanders......which not many people couldn't see.
When it comes to growing into a job, I think of John Wooden who was hired as head coach of the UCLA Bruins in 1948 and won the first of his ten NCAA basketball championships in 1964, in his 16th season as head coach of UCLA. In his first 18 years of coaching he won no national championships, and in his last 12 years he won ten, including a record seven consecutive NCAA championships.

I think sports coaches, managers and executives can continuously grow and mature in their jobs, and I seldom see the benefit of churning them in and out on short cycles.

I would much rather see a young executive like Dubas grow into the position if it is felt that he has the ability to do so.
 
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As most have written his handling of the big three were less than stellar. Having overpayment on your elite young talent is not the worst thing in the world but our growing young stars need to learn that while getting as much as you can contract wise is important this must be tempered with the understanding that this is a team game and building a SC contending team with a hard cap comes with compromises.

That said the entire brass seems to be at an elite level in regards to recruiting. From JT, Mikheyev, Barabanov and Lehtonen we seem to be a preferred destination. His handling of the Mikheyev injury really endeared himself to players. Having a players centric GM will translate to the kids coming up.

Draft wise I think he has done a great job too but he need start finding some talent with size and grit to their game. I know that this may contradict his Mondus Operandi but we have already seen him being far more flexible than previous GM’s.

He has unfortunately had to spend assets to move some bad contracts out. Hopefully with a pretty clean slate and coach of his choice in place it will be his team moving forward and success or failure pinned on him. His moves this offseason, and the success of young talent such as Sandin, Liljegren, And Robertson will play major roles. I know I am stating the obvious here but if these players can slide into everyday roles our team should be well positioned in the expansion draft and for years to come. I wouldn’t be surprised if we may need to complete a Kawhi type deal to take this team to the promised land.
 

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