F Brayden Yager - Moose Jaw Warriors, WHL (2023, 14th, PIT; traded to WPG)

Just Linda

Registered User
Feb 24, 2018
6,850
6,841
How will he fit in there?
He'll fit in well, they really need high end forwards. Arguably Unger is going to be a bigger difference maker for them, he's quite a bit better than what they have in net right now.

That being said, I can't see them getting past the first round this year. It's not a bad team but its really not a great team, they are still a couple major pieces away from being a threat.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kylbaz

DearDiary

🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷🐷
Aug 29, 2010
15,236
12,613
Moose Jaw gives away the farm to get 1 playoff run in, then the very next season they're sellers.
 

lanky

Feeling Spicy
Jun 23, 2007
9,490
7,034
Winnipeg
Welcome to Junior Hockey. NHL could learn a lil bit from it.
I agree with your first sentence. I'm perplexed by your second sentence.

Junior players have very short junior careers and managers need to try to catch lightning in a bottle. Then they need to pivot when it doesn't happen. Management in the NHL is an entirely different beast. One that rewards patience.
 

Gurglesons

Registered User
Dec 18, 2009
96,700
78,636
Joshua Tree, CA
last-train-tocool.blogspot.com
I agree with your first sentence. I'm perplexed by your second sentence.

Junior players have very short junior careers and managers need to try to catch lightning in a bottle. Then they need to pivot when it doesn't happen. Management in the NHL is an entirely different beast. One that rewards patience.

Too many teams focus on "long term plans" versus winning.

Largely because GMs can lengthen their careers by saying they are "rebuilding".
 

SEALBound

Fancy Gina Carano
Sponsor
Jun 13, 2010
42,965
21,852
Too many teams focus on "long term plans" versus winning.

Largely because GMs can lengthen their careers by saying they are "rebuilding".
It's a little bit different in the NHL given the salary cap, contract terms, and mere fact that the talent pool is less and it takes a lot to build a stanley cup capable team. The NHL cycles differently than the CHL.
 
  • Like
Reactions: theVladiator

theVladiator

Registered User
May 26, 2018
1,181
1,327
It's a little bit different in the NHL given the salary cap, contract terms, and mere fact that the talent pool is less and it takes a lot to build a stanley cup capable team. The NHL cycles differently than the CHL.

You have made a pretty good argument that it's A LOT different. Should be pretty obvious to anyone willing to read your post and spend 30 seconds thinking about it.
 

SEALBound

Fancy Gina Carano
Sponsor
Jun 13, 2010
42,965
21,852
You have made a pretty good argument that it's A LOT different. Should be pretty obvious to anyone willing to read your post and spend 30 seconds thinking about it.
Indeed. It's why it's relatively easy to find a manager for your local McDonalds vs the CEO of a Fortune 500 company. From each position down, there is a different talent pool and different availability of such talent. That doesn't even begin to discuss revenue differences for each organization in each respective league.
 

thebestnic

Registered User
Jun 29, 2022
387
636
Indeed. It's why it's relatively easy to find a manager for your local McDonalds vs the CEO of a Fortune 500 company. From each position down, there is a different talent pool and different availability of such talent. That doesn't even begin to discuss revenue differences for each organization in each respective league.
Being an NHL GM is closer to being a local McDonald's manager yes
 

Boonk

Registered User
Oct 10, 2017
2,949
3,998
Welcome to Junior Hockey. NHL could learn a lil bit from it.
Junior hockey players dont carry millions of dollars in salary and cap space nor have NMCs or NTCs or whatever in their contracts preventing them from going anywhere. Almost like you forgot that fact or something.
 

Gurglesons

Registered User
Dec 18, 2009
96,700
78,636
Joshua Tree, CA
last-train-tocool.blogspot.com
Junior hockey players dont carry millions of dollars in salary and cap space nor have NMCs or NTCs or whatever in their contracts preventing them from going anywhere. Almost like you forgot that fact or something.

Weird how a junior GM came into the NHL with the Knights and has been crushing it regularly while largely employing the same tactics he did at his previous gig.

I'm sure it's just a coincidence!
 

Bender Duster

Registered User
Sep 16, 2024
266
682
Winnipeg
Weird how a junior GM came into the NHL with the Knights and has been crushing it regularly while largely employing the same tactics he did at his previous gig.

I'm sure it's just a coincidence!
Yeah, the lopsided rules to the expansion draft had nothing to do with the Knights making it to the Finals in their first year. It was all the 'wild and wacky trades'!
 

Gurglesons

Registered User
Dec 18, 2009
96,700
78,636
Joshua Tree, CA
last-train-tocool.blogspot.com
Yeah, the lopsided rules to the expansion draft had nothing to do with the Knights making it to the Finals in their first year. It was all the 'wild and wacky trades'!

Yes, it was. Also, McCrimmon wasn't made the GM of the Knights until the following year where we began to see his philosphy of who cares about picks, prospects, or players. I want to win and I want to win now. And he did it and has consistently been a contender since he took over.
 

Boonk

Registered User
Oct 10, 2017
2,949
3,998
Weird how a junior GM came into the NHL with the Knights and has been crushing it regularly while largely employing the same tactics he did at his previous gig.

I'm sure it's just a coincidence!
Youd maybe have some point to make if you werent in here in here acting like Las Vegas is some 3rd world slum city and organization with no success that players dont want to go to that somehow isnt a professional organization with professional contracts that have specific stipulations to prevent movement for some players and millions of dollars in salary and cap space. Oops :help:

By all means, please explain to me how Brandon Manitoba is a more desirable location than Las Vegas. Lol.
 

Gurglesons

Registered User
Dec 18, 2009
96,700
78,636
Joshua Tree, CA
last-train-tocool.blogspot.com
Youd maybe have some point to make if you werent in here in here acting like Las Vegas is some 3rd world slum city and organization with no success that players dont want to go to. Or that it somehow isnt a professional organization with professional contracts that have specific stipulations to prevent movement and millions of dollars in salary and cap space. Lol.

Brandon Manitoba is equal to Las Vegas Nevada apparently.

I'm not sure I get your point.

My point is that Junior teams are built with the mindset of going all in to win when they can win and tearing it down when they can't.

NHL teams are built with the mindset of "if we make the playoffs, I'll make enough money to perserve my job".

I think Zito and McCrimmon have shown the past few years that you can utilize the junior team tactics in the NHL.
 

Boonk

Registered User
Oct 10, 2017
2,949
3,998
I'm not sure I get your point.

My point is that Junior teams are built with the mindset of winning when they can win and tearing it down when they can't.

NHL teams are built with the mindset of "if we make the playoffs, I'll make enough money to perserve my job".
The point is that you are comparing two entirely different levels of hockey involving trades and player movement when its not even a valid comparison. Junior and pro hockey are not even in the same stratosphere in any regard, much less the NHL with trades and player movement when theres millions of dollars and stipulations preventing movement involved, where junior hockey doesnt have any of that and players have almost no rights to prevent their movement. Its just not a good nor logistical comparison on your part

You are also trying to bring up Las Vegas as an example as if the entire NHL and its destinations have the same pull and ability to make big name trades consistently. Las Vegas is a big market and tourist destination with the good weather and big city amenities, as well as organizational success. Its a desirable location with a winning culture and one of only a few in the league right now.
 

Gurglesons

Registered User
Dec 18, 2009
96,700
78,636
Joshua Tree, CA
last-train-tocool.blogspot.com
The point is that you are comparing two entirely different levels of hockey involving trades and player movement when its not even a valid comparison. Junior and pro hockey are not even in the same stratosphere in any regard, much less the NHL with trades and player movement when theres millions of dollars and stipulations preventing movement involved, where junior hockey doesnt have any of that and players have almost no rights to prevent their movement. Its just not a good nor logistical comparison on your part

You are also trying to bring up Las Vegas as an example as if the entire NHL and its destinations have the same pull and ability to make big name trades consistently. Las Vegas is a big market and tourist destination with the good weather and big city amenities, as well as organizational success. Its a desirable location with a winning culture and one of only a few in the league right now.

Fair enough.

I think we just disagree on the overall point here.
 

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad