Micklebot
Moderator
- Apr 27, 2010
- 56,756
- 34,567
I think this will he interesting to watch. At the conclusion of 3 seasons from now, Stone will have 5 years left on his deal. And I think Brannstrom will have established himself firmly as a point producing D man and Stone will be declining. It'll be interesting to see when / if Brannstrom establishes himself as the more valuable player
When Stone will start to decline is an interesting question in and of itself; he's not a guy that relies on speed, so how much of an impact with a decline in his skating and such actually have? Will he be like Alfredsson, and have his best years from 29-36? Or will he be like Heatley who's production rapidly declined from 29 onward.
My personal belief is guys who rely on hockey sense are typically the guys that have slower declines. Sakic, Alfredsson, Thornton all come to mind as guys who's decline was gradual because of their ability to use their hockey sense to adapt to changing physical abilities. I think Stone should be like that.
Obviously, injuries/health can throw a monkey wrench into things; Spezza's back as an example.
In Brannstrom, I have what I consider to be high hopes, but I see him as a Krug level player. I think Stone has a fair bit of buffer zone above Krug, so if he starts regressing in year 3, there's some leeway.
Time will tell, and as you say, it will be interesting to watch.