In my thoughts, I use the technique of positive visualizationWhy would the Flyers be interested in trading him?
In my thoughts, I use the technique of positive visualizationWhy would the Flyers be interested in trading him?
I understand.Not everyone is salivating over Cozens, but point taken. Boeser is an enigma in that he's not so much a streaky player, as one who can look so removed from the game with his style of play.
His positioning and play away from the puck doesn't get enough credit and yet we're all aware of how lethal his shot once was.
He's not exactly a play driver, but I think he does make some of his linemates better with his cerebral approach to the game.
For whatever reason, he does seem to dog it sometimes as well, but that certainly could be attributed to his odd injury history.
I'd like to see him back, but would be careful of the cap hit and length of the contract. The Canucks org has always stood by him, through lengthy periods of unproductive play. Curious to see if that affects what he's willing to sign for.
This is my take also.My preference is to sign Boeser to an extension, assuming it is at a reasonable price point for a reasonable length of time. I don't think it would cost much more than his current contract and the Canucks will have cap space elsewhere to make other additions. The fact is, the guy can score goals, is generally responsible defensively, has performed well in the playoffs and has been a Canuck for his entire career. Obviously if his ask is too much and a first round pick is on the table from another team, I'll drive him to the airport myself.
Yeah depending on the upgrades available, garland and Soucy are still assets we can move. Before people jump on me for mentioning Garland, just want to say this is a move we can potentially make.I understand.
Personally, I think we all have cap PTSD from the Benning era. This management group has been very good at cap management. Despite all the contracts that have been signed that haven't worked out. They've been proactive at cutting their losses and getting rid of players who become a cap burden.
The Canucks aren't in a stage where they really need to be stingy about their cap situation. The projected cap space next year is 19.6 million and that is taking into account the OEL buyout (puckpedia). This means that management has a lot of movement when it comes to where to allocate capspace.
For what it's worth there was a post on the trade board that mentioned Tuch's wife is from the Vancouver area and there's talk she would be happy to come back this way to raise their new and growing family.Friedman mentioned that if Alex Tuch was available the Lightning would go hard for him. I'd trade an extended Boeser for him
I think the problem is that Boeser wants to be paid like a 40 goal scorer, and if he had more consistently played like he did last year (including the playoffs) then I don't think it would be a problem. But the reality is, Boeser is on pace to score 28 goals this year, and before last year, scored 18, 23, 23 (this was the Covid season, so over a 70 game pace he would have had 33 goals), 16, 26, and 29, respectively.Boeser is a .8pts per game player in his career of 525 games. He has 23 points in 29 games in the playoffs. You can call him streaky but he produces.
Everybody here is salivating over Cozens who is 4 years younger than him (23 vs 27) but has 0.22pts/game less than Boeser. Boeser has 8 more points than Cozens in 7 less games this year. All while recovering from a concussion in early November!
Cozens also makes more f***ing money than Boeser does now (7.1m vs 6.65m). What the f*** are we talking about dumping Boeser for? Can Cozens even cover what the team would lose trading Boeser? (EDIT: Came off as a little heated, mb).
I haven't seen anywhere what the contract demands are for Boeser and what he and his agent value him as.I think the problem is that Boeser wants to be paid like a 40 goal scorer, and if he had more consistently played like he did last year (including the playoffs) then I don't think it would be a problem. But the reality is, Boeser is on pace to score 28 goals this year, and before last year, scored 18, 23, 23 (this was the Covid season, so over a 70 game pace he would have had 33 goals), 16, 26, and 29, respectively.
So, Boeser has scored 40 goals once, and in the Covid season, probably would have scored around 33 goals accounting for his pace and his usual injuries.
And there lies the problem. Is Boeser at 30-40 goal scorer? Or is he a 20-30 goal scorer? Probably somewhere in the middle.
And we know he's not a play driver as well.
Frankly, if the Canucks had better depth and young players and prospects who could internally replace Boeser I would easily move on from him. But we don't, so it makes it a difficult decision.
Ya, fair enough. I am inferring that he is looking for 40 goal type money. It would be surprising if he was looking for 25-30 goal type money and the Canucks weren't willing to extend him at thatI haven't seen anywhere what the contract demands are for Boeser and what he and his agent value him as.
Boeser: "I might be asking for too much"I wonder how Boeser took the news that a newly acquired player was signed so quickly when he’s expressed he’s wanted to re-sign here.
It also doesn't help that the centre he had great chemistry with last season is gone, and Boeser has looked terrible next to Petey this season.I think the problem is that Boeser wants to be paid like a 40 goal scorer, and if he had more consistently played like he did last year (including the playoffs) then I don't think it would be a problem. But the reality is, Boeser is on pace to score 28 goals this year, and before last year, scored 18, 23, 23 (this was the Covid season, so over a 70 game pace he would have had 33 goals), 16, 26, and 29, respectively.
So, Boeser has scored 40 goals once, and in the Covid season, probably would have scored around 33 goals accounting for his pace and his usual injuries.
And there lies the problem. Is Boeser at 30-40 goal scorer? Or is he a 20-30 goal scorer? Probably somewhere in the middle.
And we know he's not a play driver as well.
Frankly, if the Canucks had better depth and young players and prospects who could internally replace Boeser I would easily move on from him. But we don't, so it makes it a difficult decision.
Ya, I have said that before as well. I'd hate to be Allvin trying to decide to extend Boeser, to a long term contract, when he is currently not producing with any of our current centres, and had his best years with a centre that is no longer on our team. I think there was always going to be a fair bit of risk with any Boeser extension. He was quite inconsistent under his last contract, and I think its pretty doubtful whether he ultimately provided value given his cap hit under that contract. So you've got that inconsistency you need to deal with, and now you don't even have any comfort that he can play well with either of your top two centres. Kind of like extending a player you acquire via trade before seeing how that player will play.It also doesn't help that the centre he had great chemistry with last season is gone, and Boeser has looked terrible next to Petey this season.
Rumor was, I think, that Boeser was looking at something in the range of $8x8? With the new cap increases, that is no longer a 40 goal scorer money, most likely a 25-30 goal scorer money in a couple years. The cap hit doesn't scare me, its the term. He will want a long term contract but I just don't see him being an effective player in a couple years, and carrying a $8m cap hit on an ineffective player is going to sting.I think the problem is that Boeser wants to be paid like a 40 goal scorer, and if he had more consistently played like he did last year (including the playoffs) then I don't think it would be a problem. But the reality is, Boeser is on pace to score 28 goals this year, and before last year, scored 18, 23, 23 (this was the Covid season, so over a 70 game pace he would have had 33 goals), 16, 26, and 29, respectively.
So, Boeser has scored 40 goals once, and in the Covid season, probably would have scored around 33 goals accounting for his pace and his usual injuries.
And there lies the problem. Is Boeser at 30-40 goal scorer? Or is he a 20-30 goal scorer? Probably somewhere in the middle.
And we know he's not a play driver as well.
Frankly, if the Canucks had better depth and young players and prospects who could internally replace Boeser I would easily move on from him. But we don't, so it makes it a difficult decision.
Asking not enough! Remember he asked for a trade twice before and the Canuck's (Allvin) even had his agent searching for trade partners. That is an a lot of effort and not insignificant.Boeser: "I might be asking for too much"
Generally agreed. I guess we will or may hear what his current salary demands are, but I would be surprised if it is in the 25-30 goal scorer range post salary cap inflation. Teams and agents aren't stupid, and any negotiations will already bake in the salary cap inflation. And if I am Boeser, and unless I want to take a home town discount, I would just wait until free agency and price myself in the 35-40 goal scorer market.Rumor was, I think, that Boeser was looking at something in the range of $8x8? With the new cap increases, that is no longer a 40 goal scorer money, most likely a 25-30 goal scorer money in a couple years. The cap hit doesn't scare me, its the term. He will want a long term contract but I just don't see him being an effective player in a couple years, and carrying a $8m cap hit on an ineffective player is going to sting.
I also feel Boeser's past numbers are deceiving. On talent, I don't think he is a 40 goal player, but he was put in a good situation the last 5 years playing with either Petey, JT or both, and almost all the PP1 time. He has probably one of the best deployment for a winger in the league. It doesn't look likely that he will be lining up with another 100 pt center here again, so his offensive projection needs to be adjusted accordingly.
I would do $8m for 4 years, but I doubt he will take that.
**Edit: also Boeser doesn't have any other utilities outside of scoring goals. He can't PK, shouldn't be relied on to be on a matchup line, doesn't drive offense, isn't an elite playmaker, nor does he bring speed or physicality. The only intangibles you can argue is that he was drafted by Vancouver and played his career here, and is a good teammate and an amazing person. On the ice, you are really paying for a one-dimensional scorer that doesn't score consistently and is no guarantee to score 35+ again. Its a risky proposition. The only reason you would do an extension with him is that you can't find anything better (or better value) than him.
Apparently Ranta is looking for 14+. Avs probably knew it and decided to nope out of it without even trying to re-sign him. There will be a bidding war and his camp will probably use Canucks as leverage, Guentzel-style.Cap super tight for 1 year but it COULD work.
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I think if Boeser provides more utilities, than even if he only projected as a 25-30 goal scorer going forward, management would've signed him to $8x8 by now. Its the fact that he doesn't do much else that is the problem. A 25-30 goal scorer that can kill penalties, or that plays hard EV minutes and winning them, or even just really good at faceoff or on the PP, or score 25 goals but put up 70 pts, etc, those players are still worth $8m+. I just don't see that with BB6.Generally agreed. I guess we will or may hear what his current salary demands are, but I would be surprised if it is in the 25-30 goal scorer range post salary cap inflation. Teams and agents aren't stupid, and any negotiations will already bake in the salary cap inflation. And if I am Boeser, and unless I want to take a home town discount, I would just wait until free agency and price myself in the 35-40 goal scorer market.
yupI think if Boeser provides more utilities, than even if he only projected as a 25-30 goal scorer going forward, management would've signed him to $8x8 by now. Its the fact that he doesn't do much else that is the problem. A 25-30 goal scorer that can kill penalties, or that plays hard EV minutes and winning them, or even just really good at faceoff or on the PP, or score 25 goals but put up 70 pts, etc, those players are still worth $8m+. I just don't see that with BB6.
There is also the opportunity cost as well. Keeping Brock means we lose out on any assets via a TDL transaction (likely a high pick and/or a prospect). It also mean we are unlikely to dole out significant money for an upgrade on F as he would be taking a chunk of the available money. He would also block a younger player from bigger role. There are a lot more that goes into this decision than just money and term.
What? Replacement level? All of his last 4 seasons have him hid him at a 20+ goal pace and 50+ point ballpark, usually doing it versus tough comp on Miller's wing.the issue with boeser isn't going to be whether the canucks can afford him it's how long he can remain effective. two of his last four seasons he's been more or less a replacement level player.
f*** off Tampa.Friedman mentioned that if Alex Tuch was available the Lightning would go hard for him. I'd trade an extended Boeser for him
Does this not apply to anyone that doesn't drive their own offense? It's really a nothing point this yearIt also doesn't help that the centre he had great chemistry with last season is gone, and Boeser has looked terrible next to Petey this season.
If after the 4 Nations break he continues to look the same, I'd move on from him. It's not worth the risk to give him a massive long-term contract with his play this season and the previous few seasons.
Who cares about the PK. Did just fine last year with Miller as a match up line. He doesn't have to drive offense it's nothing new. Speed and physicality is nothing without skill. He's an excellent playmaker and players with his scoring ability are hard to get. If it was so easy then why have we constantly been spinning our wheels here trying to add quality scoring.**Edit: also Boeser doesn't have any other utilities outside of scoring goals. He can't PK, shouldn't be relied on to be on a matchup line, doesn't drive offense, isn't an elite playmaker, nor does he bring speed or physicality. The only intangibles you can argue is that he was drafted by Vancouver and played his career here, and is a good teammate and an amazing person. On the ice, you are really paying for a one-dimensional scorer that doesn't score consistently and is no guarantee to score 35+ again. Its a risky proposition. The only reason you would do an extension with him is that you can't find anything better (or better value) than him.
2yrs of which he was going through off ice and injury issues with a team in turmoilthe issue with boeser isn't going to be whether the canucks can afford him it's how long he can remain effective. two of his last four seasons he's been more or less a replacement level player. do you really want to sign someone to an 8 year deal where when you take aging into account you might get 3 good seasons out of them? and not even necessarily three consecutive seasons up front?
i think the canucks might be backed into a corner somewhere where they have no depth on wing and not enough assets to go out and fix that and are forced into signing boeser but it's a real gamble whether you get a top line winger who can put in 30+ goals like 2020 and 2024 boeser or you get a guy making 8-9m to score 20 and look slow and poor defensively like you got in 2021-2023 boeser