Ziggy Stardust
Master Debater
Was there any other Kings player who was more money on breakaways than Ziggy Palffy?
Seeing stuff about Ziggy still hurts, that LAPD line was so awesome for like a year and 1/2. I remember them talking on NHL tonight which was the most dominant line in the NHL and it was Palffy, Allison, Deadmarsh vs. Naslund, Morrison, Bertuzzi
Palffy was the first player the Kings had since Gretzky that put you on the edge of your seat when he had the puck. He kind of make me forget the meat and potatoes years where giant no skilled hockey players were hoarded by Kings management. Amazes me that there are 2 King fans in this thread that have issues with it, goodness gracious!
So you're saying that Troy Crowder didn't do it for you?
Palffy was the first player the Kings had since Gretzky that put you on the edge of your seat when he had the puck. He kind of make me forget the meat and potatoes years where giant no skilled hockey players were hoarded by Kings management. Amazes me that there are 2 King fans in this thread that have issues with it, goodness gracious!
The era of Steve McKenna and Mark Visheau!!The Legion Of Doom made every GM start to target big, giant hockey players-except for the Red Wings who just went Russian. The Kings seemed to target big guys with zero skill, add in the trap and clutch and grab hockey and you had a dark age if you were a King fan at the time.
Thanks for rehashing the indignities that Milbury foist upon the Isles.
At least Palffy was traded to the Kings. That Ranger trade would have put me over the edge.
Was there any other Kings player who was more money on breakaways than Ziggy Palffy?
Butch Goring.
You can thank Gary Bettman for that as he was the one who prevented the Rangers trade from going through (thankfully).
As a Kings fan, I think a good majority of us were excited to finally see the team acquire someone who was considered to be a top tier, elite player. After Gretzky moved on in '96, it seemed like the Kings were trying desperately to fill that hole, as they supposedly made an attempt at Jagr at the 1997 draft, then made attempts at Pavel Bure (for a rumored package of Glen Murray, Aki Berg, and Jamie Storr) and Theo Fleury (for Yanic Perreault and a 1st was the rumor).
The Kings had also been pursuing Palffy for pretty much the entire 98-99 season as he had a contract dispute and was holding out at that time. When Palffy re-signed with the Islanders, the rumors were put to rest until the off-season where Taylor was finally able to complete the trade.
Why was Bettman meddling in the trade talks? Rejects the Rangers proposal and also the Kings first proposal. WTF was that all about?
Then of course the NHL allowed $5 million in the Jagr trade 2 years later.
Once dangled as trade bait, Jagr found himself in high demand with the deep-pocketed New York Rangers considered front-runners.
"I called them back," Patrick said of the Rangers. "But we were too happy with this deal.
"There was nothing they could do that would have changed our mind."
The free-spending Dallas Stars and Los Angeles Kings also expressed interest.
http://articles.latimes.com/2001/jul/12/sports/sp-21363Was cash involved in that trade? I thought it was a straight salary dump, and I do agree that it's a joke the league didn't veto the Jagr deal to Washington considering that they stepped in to do the same with the Palffy trade.
Here are the details of the Jagr trade to the Caps, which doesn't make mention of cash being included as part of the trade. It's also worth noting that the Kings were in on Jagr as well.
http://www.cbc.ca/sports/story/2001/07/11/jagr010711.html
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1023020/index.htmThe Pittsburgh Penguins completed one of the most one-sided trades in NHL history Wednesday, sending superstar winger Jaromir Jagr to the Washington Capitals for three youngsters and future considerations.
In exchange for Jagr, the league's leading scorer the last four seasons, and defenseman Frantisek Kucera, the Penguins received 20-year-olds Kris Beech, Ross Lupaschuk and Michal Sivek and about $5 million in cash.
With Leonsis's approval, McPhee completed the stunning trade that moved the Capitals into the elite rank of Eastern Conference teams but disturbingly underscored a skewed hockey economy. Washington acquired the five-time NHL scoring champion in the prime of his career for three middling prospects and $4.9 million cash.
The announcement ended a bizarre series of events that began last
week when the Islanders agreed to trade Palffy and Richie Pilon to the
Rangers for Niklas Sundstrom, Todd Harvey, prospect Patrick Leahy, the
No. 11 pick and $2.5 million - only to have it collapse when
Gluckstern and co-owner Eddie Milstein reportedly tried to coax funding
for a new arena from Cablevision, which owns the Rangers.
The current package to which the Kings agreed is a significant
upgrade over a previously proposed deal that included prospect Scott
Barney, rookie Jason Podollan and $2.5 million in cash instead of
Jokinen. Under the terms of that deal, the Islanders would have sent
rookie Mike Watt to the Kings.