Don’t really see the need to trade Nemec because at the end of the day you can never have too many defensemenShouldn’t have said this.
Don’t really see the need to trade Nemec because at the end of the day you can never have too many defensemenShouldn’t have said this.
Points are not how you evaluate defensemen. I haven’t seen him play at all down there and wouldn’t be surprised if he wasn’t playing well given how awful he was in the NHL this year. The injury he had in that tournament may have wrecked his season.This is high comedy....
Remember when no other under 20 year old had as many goals per game as Holtz....
Dominating the AHL for a high pick is baseline not an accomplishment. And this kid isn't even holding baseline this season
I’m assuming this was a response to my second part that I took out and just moved to a second post.Don’t really see the need to trade Nemec because at the end of the day you can never have too many defensemen
Ya his play at the AHL level is pretty irrelevant at this point. We know he can be good there and pretty good at the NHL level and his current situation is pretty demotivating for a player.Points are not how you evaluate defensemen. I haven’t seen him play at all down there and wouldn’t be surprised if he wasn’t playing well given how awful he was in the NHL this year. The injury he had in that tournament may have wrecked his season.
We’ve already seen him play well in the NHL and put up points in the AHL, so no real reason to worry.
Regular reminder that defensemen take longer to develop than forwards. Someone like Luke Hughes is the exception to the rule. Someone like Nemec is not.
Giving up on Nemec now would be a catastrophic error barring some sort of over payment or for a superstar, impact, FRANCHISE player (which someone like Oliver Bjorkstrand is objectively not)
We also have leverage and time with Nemec and Silayev. Hamilton is most likely not gonna be on this team long term, neither is Dillion. We shouldn't be in a panic rush to trade either Nemec/Silayev. Especially for the likes of bottom six, albeit productive players like Yanni f***ing Gourde.
What leverage do we possibly have with Nemec. He loses value everyday he spends in the AHL and his development is completely stalled.Regular reminder that defensemen take longer to develop than forwards. Someone like Luke Hughes is the exception to the rule. Someone like Nemec is not.
Giving up on Nemec now would be a catastrophic error barring some sort of over payment or for a superstar, impact, FRANCHISE player (which someone like Oliver Bjorkstrand is objectively not)
We also have leverage and time with Nemec and Silayev. Hamilton is most likely not gonna be on this team long term, neither is Dillion. We shouldn't be in a panic rush to trade these assets. Especially for the likes of bottom six, albeit productive players like Yanni f***ing Gourde.
What leverage do we possibly have with Nemec. He loses value everyday he spends in the AHL and his development is completely stalled.
Defensmen often do take longer to develop. But part of developing well is continuously being challenged and progressing.
It’s not about giving up on Nemec. It’s about realizing that he may end up blocked out of the lineup apart from injuries for the next 3-4 years.
Also not sure what would make you think Hamilton won’t be around here long term.
Hamilton has a no trade close and a 9M dollar contract. Trading him will be near impossible and if done expensive.Hamilton has 9 million a year for four more years. Trade him at the deadline next year or the offseason and have Nemec play. You trade him to clear a log jam and to prevent the development stall you're talking about. If not for anything else for a package that would give us cap flexibility so we can improve in areas that we need.
Some players need more time in the minors though. Look at Larsson's first few years. He got better every year he was in the league. His development fizzled because PDB was benching him game after game for Peter Harrold.
Dillon is gonna be easier to move but if you truly believe these players should be in the NHL and are wasting away in the AHL you should move at least one of these veterans. Not do the opposite and trade away the cost controlled young guns for bottom six players. That should be off the table as an idea entirely.
Not saying he has control of it. There are different personalities, and I want the kind that digs in instead of sulkingYa ya that’s easy to say but psychologically it still has an effect. Obviously some guys are much better than others at dealing with that stuff.
But there’s a lot of science behind what motivates people and from an outside perspective I don’t think his situation is very motivating.
It’s really not a sulking thing though. I’m talking about the external factors that affect his motivation to dig in and right now he couldn’t be in a more demotivating situation. While some people handle it better it’s gonna affect anyone.Not saying he has control of it. There are different personalities, and I want the kind that digs in instead of sulking
It's crazy and awesome to be in a situation in which you could trade a guy like dougie hamilton because you have the prospect depth to do so.Hamilton has 9 million a year for four more years. Trade him at the deadline next year or the offseason and have Nemec play. You trade him to clear a log jam and to prevent the development stall you're talking about. If not for anything else for a package that would give us cap flexibility so we can improve in areas that we need.
Some players need more time in the minors though. Look at Larsson's first few years. He got better every year he was in the league. His development fizzled because PDB was benching him game after game for Peter Harrold.
Dillon is gonna be easier to move but if you truly believe these players should be in the NHL and are wasting away in the AHL you should move at least one of these veterans. Not do the opposite and trade away the cost controlled young guns for bottom six players. That should be off the table as an idea entirely.
It would be if it was actually a plausible thing. He has a huge contract and a no trade clause. We would also not likely score a return. If anything we’re probably paying someone to take on his cap hit.It's crazy and awesome to be in a situation in which you could trade a guy like dougie hamilton because you have the prospect depth to do so.
to me it seems very reasonable on paper. he would score a decent return. but somehow i feel, he's an importabt part of that core and it might hurt team dynamics.
i m pretty happy about being in that dilema. devils D pool is a beauty.
Probably one of the stupidest ideas I've heard yet ... trading Nemec hilariousDon’t really see the need to trade Nemec because at the end of the day you can never have too many defensemen
Turns to a 10 team trade list I believe. As in there’s only 10 teams we could trade him to. And I’d imagine most of the teams on that list will be good teams that don’t have excess cap space to be trading for a 9M dman.Hamilton's contract turns to a limited NTC on July 1st
I don't think it would be that hard to trade him. I know his points have cooled recently, but yeah.
Sure man. At what point is it worth discussing to you?Probably one of the stupidest ideas I've heard yet ... trading Nemec hilarious
I mean, I’ll be honest I haven’t really been impressed with Nemec’s tools at the NHL level either, but I’m not ready to jettison him. If there’s a good hockey deal out there I’d listen - I’d choose Casey between the two of them. At the same time, I don’t think anything about his career so far has me doubting he still has good potential.
I disagree with him but he’s talking about his tools. Not his overall level of play. His skating, puck skills, shot, etc. I would imagine he’s mostly talking about.Not impressed with his tools? I think it's completely unfair to judge a D who was thrown into high leverage situations at 19 years old due to injuries with a coach who is quite frankly terrible when it comes to a structured system that helps young D grow. Ruff's system was overly complicated in their own zone and freewheeling in the offensive zone.
I mean, I’ll be honest I haven’t really been impressed with Nemec’s tools at the NHL level either, but I’m not ready to jettison him. If there’s a good hockey deal out there I’d listen - I’d choose Casey between the two of them. At the same time, I don’t think anything about his career so far has me doubting he still has good potential.
Points are not how you evaluate defensemen. I haven’t seen him play at all down there and wouldn’t be surprised if he wasn’t playing well given how awful he was in the NHL this year. The injury he had in that tournament may have wrecked his season.
We’ve already seen him play well in the NHL and put up points in the AHL, so no real reason to worry.
I’m not sure he’s a good enough skater first and foremost. And if you’re going to be like that (a la Adam Fox), you’d better have an elite processor to make up for it and I haven’t seen that. That doesn’t mean he’ll never have it and it doesn’t mean Ruff’s system wasn’t primarily responsible for that (I don’t particularly think it was though), I just haven’t seen it at the NHL level.Not impressed with his tools? I think it's completely unfair to judge a D who was thrown into high leverage situations at 19 years old due to injuries with a coach who is quite frankly terrible when it comes to a structured system that helps young D grow. Ruff's system was overly complicated in their own zone and freewheeling in the offensive zone.