Justicebork
Registered User
- Jul 13, 2022
- 433
- 1,293
They are laughing at you, not with you.
They are laughing at you, not with you.
The only one who knew a trade was coming up was Hall
True. It's kind a wild that Rantanen and Necas, both said they were shocked. Sort of implies that they also aren't paying too much attention to the rumor mill. I guess JR and KK's names were out there more than others.Which is kind of nuts, considering they’ve apparently been talking about the outline of this trade since the draft. Obviously, you don’t want to inform the player too early, because then it’ll be in their head and they won’t perform on the ice. But I’d think somewhere between “theoretical” and “actually sending the paperwork to the league”, you’d give the players a heads up.
in the press conference, tulsky was directly asked about kk and rumors initially that he was part of it. tulsky's reply was basically (after saying he wasn't going to talk about players that were not part of the deal), 'we have been in discussions for six months with no leaks, so when it started to break there were a lot of things that starting floating around that were wrong.'Pierre's recent article on The Athletic said that the Avs had recently contacted a very small list to see what their offers back could be. Sounds like they were all very discreet.
whether he meant it this way or not, i 100% took it as dunking on fools for knowing nothing, then trying to make an educated guess for clicks.
Welcome aboard, please leave your sanity and sensibilities at the front door and bring your Bojangles, BBQ recipes, sarcasm, and PTSD inside with you!I think I fully jump on the Canes bandwagon. I mean I have a Aho jersey already and a Canes cap but now gonna follow the team more than ever.
Welcome aboard. Please report to Lempo, Chief Petty Finn, for your orders.I think I fully jump on the Canes bandwagon. I mean I have a Aho jersey already and a Canes cap but now gonna follow the team more than ever.
I think I'm in the right place when a marketplace is mentioned.Uphold status until mentioned, then go to the market place.
I would agree he is too expensive even at Macks cap hit. Definitely for the Avs. The Canes need a guy to stick around so maybe it’s worth it.LeBruns article suggest Rants wasn’t set on 14M and would have taken less to stay than July 1st market would have given him
But Avs saw him as too expensive even at the Macks cap hit
We've seen Toronto try to navigate the Big 4 without much success.LeBruns article suggest Rants wasn’t set on 14M and would have taken less to stay than July 1st market would have given him
But Avs saw him as too expensive even at the Macks cap hit
A common false narrative (at least IMO) with Toronto. The problem with Toronto hasn't been spending big money on 4 forwards, and not being able to assemble a team around them. The problem they've had is that those 4 star players have shrunk in the playoffs. They have not performed.We've seen Toronto try to navigate the Big 4 without much success.
We've seen Toronto try to navigate the Big 4 without much success.
I think this is a case of Colorado realizing an even bigger 3 wasn't going to be possible. Makar is at $9M for 2 more years, then he's up above MacKinnon.
Even if Rantanen agrees to the same contract as MacKinnon, that's $34.2M tied up in 3 players for 2 years, and then Makar probably takes that up a few million more.
I would agree he is too expensive even at Macks cap hit. Definitely for the Avs. The Canes need a guy to stick around so maybe it’s worth it.
Jeff did a great job with the questions in the interview and Tulsky is as unruffled per usual. Informative chat..confirms some info that's out there with some new tidbits. Two pros.
Discusses why Taylor Hall as well.
Starts at 16:00 minutes
We've seen Toronto try to navigate the Big 4 without much success.
I think this is a case of Colorado realizing an even bigger 3 wasn't going to be possible. Makar is at $9M for 2 more years, then he's up above MacKinnon.
Even if Rantanen agrees to the same contract as MacKinnon, that's $34.2M tied up in 3 players for 2 years, and then Makar probably takes that up a few million more.
are they laughing when walking from the bankThey are laughing at you, not with you.
Thanks for posting.I always like to play with numbers first and then see if they support narratives such as this. The question I'm asking here is in what way would Colorado have an even bigger 3 than Toronto's big 4?
IF Rantanen agreed to the same contract as MacKinnon, they would pay their top 3 players an average of 12,34% of the cap ceiling next year. In 2019-2020, (the first full year of their contracts), Toronto paid their big 4 an average of 12,42% of the cap ceiling.
Fastforward to this season, with Toronto paying their big 4 an average of 13,25% of the current cap ceiling. IF Rantanen agreed to the same contract as MacKinnon, they could pay Makar $14,5M in two years time and still be under that percentage against a cap ceiling of $100M. And that's just a random low estimate for the cap ceiling in the future. There have been talks of a cap ceiling of even $110M in two years time, which would make the average percentage of Colorado´s big 3 smaller than Toronto´s big 4 this season even with $18M+ contract for Makar.
Now, I'm not saying that Colorado should have given Rantanen the same contract as MacKinnon or that it was a mistake to let him go. I'm just saying that the numbers were in no way impossible nor unfair ($12,5M contract for Rantanen would be the same percentage as Nylander and Pastrnak).
To me, it seems more like the Avs front office wanted either a super team-friendly deal or we're always ready to use Rantanen as a trade chip for multiple reasons: difficult contract negotiations, a possibility for a change, more leverage in the market etc.
Thanks for posting.
The elephant in the room is whether in the future at $100M & above, teams outside of Rangers, Toronto and perhaps a few other high revenue cities will continue to spend to the cap (cap may outstrip their market's revenue capability)
In all fairness he isn't bad in the d-zone, it's the o-zone turnovers with nobody behind him to stop his mistakes that are where he failed