Why are people mentioning Willander/Lekkerimaki??? If you don't know other teams prospects outside their top 2 maybe don't propose hypothetical trades.
These type of players don't get traded.
Debrincat got Sebrango as an add on..
JT Miller got Mancini lol.
HFBoards doesn't even recognize normal patterns or how trade packages work in this league.
Fans proposing preposterous offers means nothing in real life. About as real as playing NHL on PlayStation.
Players within everything the Canucks have available are within the category of assets that typically get traded.
What matters is whether a team is buying a player or whether a team is selling a player.
If you’re going to incentivize somebody to give you something that they do not have to give you, you’re a buyer, then you’re possibly going to spend the type of assets you do not want to spend if that is what it takes to beat your peer to the same goal.
Alternatively; if a team is in a position that they, more or less, have to move a player and are selling them, then they will receive what the market will bear and not one penny more.
To attempt to describe all scenarios or trades as falling under some common structure is absolute nonsense. Every market has a bid ask spread and the less liquid the market the larger the gap. Pro hockey athletes are an extremely illiquid market with tremendously large gaps between bids and asks.
Jt miller was sold. He didn’t return full value. It’s fine, but it’s true. It’s likely Vancouver will be buying a winger in the next 12 months. They will likely pay more than full value to do so. The tax of transactions is the bid ask spread; the baked in cost that exists based on the circumstances which are easy to simplify into just buying versus selling, but are much more nuanced due to the cba.
Every trade incident is some puzzle of leverage. To use a Miller trade as an example of how all prospects should work in trade proposals is really shallow and unfortunate. Giant publicized dispute aside…The best type of deals to use as examples are off-season deals whereby the cap has the least impact. Mid season deals have extremely limited buyer pools due to cap restrictions and therefore are poor representations of player value.