I’m not saying he should get the job but I think Yannetti would be an interesting choice. I’ve listened to a couple of interviews where, if you listened to him enough and reading between the lines, he hasn’t agreed with various development decisions.
BTW, his infamous statement about only McDavids play at 18 wasn’t a lie IMO. He was trying to explain a decision (I never felt he agreed with) and just did it in fairly poor fashion. The fact he explained it poorly, given how well he explains things, is part of my opinion on this one. He’s usually very precise and accurate, so I think he was toeing the company line which is what he’s employed to do. Listening to subsequent interviews reinforced my view.
So I hold none of that against him. I listen to his interviews any time I can find them and sometimes I pick up on things he’s doesn’t say (consistently). I think he’s the internal candidate that would do it differently.
Yannetti would absolutely have a plan and I think he’d probably have one ready to go already. Whether that’s the right plan I have no idea. However the plan won’t matter, I suspect it’ll be more important who his agent it. He’s also not Bergevin which is a huge plus.
I’m not sure about Futa, simply because I don’t know why nobody has given him a shot. There must be a reason. He was great in his previous role so why has he not made the next step? There may be good reasons but it makes me question some seeing him as an automatic choice.
(Sigh…) none of it matters because of Luc.
I'm pretty sure it was not Yannetti who made that statement. His whopper was the claim to Hoven that the Kings have slow cooked every prospect for the entire time he has been with the organization, which can be proven false with just a few clicks on Elite Prospects or HockeyDB. But hey, honestly has been optional for these guys for the last eight years, we all know that.
He also heavily implied that teams like Ottawa and Detroit are handling prospect development incorrectly by following a faster model that directly contradicts his belief in a slow cooking approach. Yet Ottawa has built a rising playoff roster composed almost entirely of players drafted since Rob Blake took over the Kings.
First line center: Tim Stutzle, zero AHL games, first round pick in 2020
First pair defenseman: Jake Sanderson, zero AHL games, first round pick in 2020
First line left wing: Brady Tkachuk, zero AHL games, first round pick in 2018
Second line right wing: Drake Batherson, 103 AHL games, fourth round pick in 2017
Second line center: Josh Norris, 56 AHL games, first round pick in 2017 (flipped for current second line center Dylan Cozens)
Third line center: Shane Pinto, zero AHL games, second round pick in 2019
Third line left wing: Ridly Greig, 39 AHL games, first round pick in 2020
Fifth defenseman: Tyler Kleven, 53 AHL games, second round pick in 2020
Do you think many of these players are handled the same way by the LA Kings? History would say no.
But do not worry. The person who made the comment "Only the McDavids of the world can jump to the NHL without AHL time" is apparently also under consideration for the job. Despite poor results in prospect development that would have earned most people a pink slip, he is being talked about as a candidate for promotion, his qualifications apparently being a player for the Kings in the late 90's. Welcome to the wonderful world of Luc Robitaille!
Given what lies ahead for this team, likely starting next offseason when Anze Kopitar retires, the Kings must hire a general manager who understands modern prospect development. This means someone who is more open to allowing players to jump directly to the NHL and produce on entry level contracts, instead of continuing with the outdated AHL heavy approach that has significantly harmed our draft classes from 2017 to 2021.
Perhaps Yannetti was simply being a good soldier and toeing the company line, but it is hard to feel optimistic if the Kings are planning to hire someone who thinks Ottawa’s approach is wrong and the Kings is right.