Hartman+5th for Ejdsell+1st+4th
One of the worst deals in terms of how much was paid and for what. A young bottom sixer, Hartman's track record didn't suggest that this kind of price should have been paid for him. What's more, his production rate didn't change in Nashville either, and his playoff run was cut short by the Jets. Nashville gets bonus points for keeping him (granted that he was a RFA), but given the high cost and minimal on-ice impact he has had for his entire career, you'd have a hard time spinning this one into a win.
Verdict: fail. If you want a bottom sixer that bad, use your draft picks on big guys and have an endless supply of Hartmans.
You cannot add enough in one season to make a significant change in your odds of winning the Cup.If your teams cup window is open the GM should do anything in his power to improve the roster going into the playoffs. When Chicago was competing for cups the last thing I was worried about was picks and prospects.
Hartman is a fourth line guy.I would say a very late first for Hartman is not really that much of a stretch
Tatar for 1st+2nd+3rd
Isn't it wonderful to start with a trade which already contradicts the parameters you just put into place? This makes the list for the sole reason of Tatar being traded right after the playoff run, which technically makes him a rental..? And boy, was the trade a downright joke for the Knights. Tatar barely played for the team that eventually made the finals. Scoring just eight points in 28 combined games for Vegas, he was already pawned off to Montreal after a couple of months. Giving up three high-to-mid picks for a guy who did not contribute and who had no long-term impact on your roster is horrific, and even the trip to the SCF does not outweigh the bad.
Verdict: fail. Nothing to discuss here, aside from the comparisons of Pacioretty and Tatar with their new teams.
You cannot add enough in one season to make a significant change in your odds of winning the Cup.
And when you do add, you're gradually shortening your window.
I would say a very late first for Hartman is not really that much of a stretch
There is a horrible disconnection between what is actually significant and what you perceive it to be.Yes you can. Adding a piece and pushing players down your depth chart is the best way to increase your chances. Trading for a defenseman that ultimately pushes a worse defensemen off your roster helps the team. Same with forward depth. If your team can get an edge, do it. I don’t regret a single pick or prospect we have up in a trade for rentals. It’s a direct message to the fans that there is one goal in mind.
Don't disagree with context being important, but it doesn't turn that deal into a good one.Context can also be important. Vegas had 3 picks in the top 15 in the 2017 draft. They traded a 1st in 2018, a 2nd in 2019, and a 3rd in 2021 for Tatar, with those 3 top 15 picks in their back pocket, and riding an expansion season wave that nobody has ever seen in any sport. That 3rd rd pick is almost meaningless, since it was for 3 years in the future. It's technically an asset, but trades involving picks in future years are on the lower end of value. The further in the future you go, the less you worry about getting rid of it. Rinaldo was traded in 2015 for a 3rd in 2017.
Vegas lucked out that the 1st ended up even lower in the draft than where they finished in the regular season, and they finished 5th overall in the league in the regular season. The 2nd rd pick was from the Islanders, so Vegas still has their own 2nd this year. If all the picks had been in 2018, that's a risky deal. Because of the way the picks were staggered though, especially with one so far in the future, that's really not a bad trade.
You never want to throw picks away, but if there was a team that could trade 3 picks in one trade, Vegas was that team last year. They have 9 picks in the 2019 draft right now, and all of them come before the 6th round.
For example, there is a model that had Toronto's Cup odds for this year as 10% pre-Muzzin trade. The trade raised them to 12%. One additional Cup every fifty years, that is. That cost them a first and a pair of their top 5 prospects
For example, there is a model that had Toronto's Cup odds for this year as 10% pre-Muzzin trade. The trade raised them to 12%. One additional Cup every fifty years, that is. That cost them a first and a pair of their top 5 prospects.
If your teams cup window is open the GM should do anything in his power to improve the roster going into the playoffs. When Chicago was competing for cups the last thing I was worried about was picks and prospects.
I'm afraid that model is not publicly available. It is Dom Luszczyszyn's, and I got that bite of data from his Twitter. Earlier this year, he had Nylander's estimated impact at roughly 3% too, and I've seen other estimations which suggest similar impacts too.That’s interesting. Do you have a link to this model? I’d like to see what is used to get these odds.
Of the fifteen players I listed, three made the final four. Tatar, Stastny, and Vermette. Even that takes a lot of things to go right, and LUCK.Finally I’ll leave you with a bit of mathematics that explains why going “all-in” in a single season is a fool’s move: you could have a team that is so dominant as to be a 5-1 favorite to win the series against every team it faces in the playoffs, and it would still be more likely NOT to win the Cup than to win it. In hockey you always take the field against any individual team. So shortening your window to add a player who at best might give you another percentage or two in your favor for a single playoff run is sheer idiocy.
No, the time to do that is not if your team’s Cup window is open but rather if it is about to close. If your window is open your goal should be to keep it open for as long as possible to give yourself as many chances as possible to go all the way, not to shorten it for what may or may not be slightly increased chances in a single year.
Just look at teams like the Blackhawks and the Pens who won multiple championships over a several year period, and even the Caps who took a long time to finally win one but who wouldn’t have been able to do so had they prematurely closed their window. For an older example look at the Yzerman Red Wings who also took a long time to get over the hump before finally winning three championships; for possibly the next example look at the Lightning team he put together as a GM. Your best chance of success in the NHL comes from having a team that can be among the league’s best for a several year stretch.
Finally I’ll leave you with a bit of mathematics that explains why going “all-in” in a single season is a fool’s move: you could have a team that is so dominant as to be a 5-1 favorite to win the series against every team it faces in the playoffs, and it would still be more likely NOT to win the Cup than to win it. In hockey you always take the field against any individual team. So shortening your window to add a player who at best might give you another percentage or two in your favor for a single playoff run is sheer idiocy.
The playoffs are driven by luck more than the average fan thinks. Moneypuck, which has a public model for Cup probabilities, had Winnipeg sd last year's favourite to win coming into the playoffs. They were given a ~14% chance to win. That is just short of once every seven years, mind you.
Picks and prospects can be overrated. He uses the Ladd trade as an example. Dano isn’t even in the NHL. With reguards to the 1st round pick we gave up in 2016. None of the prospects picked at 22OA or after (where we would have picked) are making an impact. Did that trade set Chicago back? Probably not.