- May 2, 2018
- 18,569
- 11,634
Finally figured out which username was saved from like a year and a half ago on HFBoards, lol. Haven’t had much time to post recently, but I’ve still been watching a ton of games — Wild and league-wide — and I’ve got some thoughts about where we’re at.
This season is what it is. I think most of us know we’re not seriously contending this year, so I’m already thinking ahead — big picture. Just wanted to drop some notes on a few players and what I think the future blueprint needs to look like.
Faber
I’ve been a little disappointed with Faber this year — not in a “he's been a trainwreck” kind of way, but in the sense that the ceiling might not be quite what we hoped. Last year, he looked like a potential elite shutdown D who could log huge minutes, drive play, and chip in on offense. But this year, I’m starting to wonder if he’s more of a very solid top-4 guy rather than a star.
He’s still playing big minutes (top 5 in the NHL in TOI per game among defensemen), which in itself is valuable. But the underlying numbers have dipped — his xGA/60 has climbed, and he’s making more mental mistakes in the D-zone than we saw last year. Offensively, the drop-off has been significant. Some of his points last year came from being stapled to a top PP unit — soon that role shifting to Zeev Buium (and it will), I don’t know how much production he’ll bring. He’s a great skater and he can transport the puck, but I don’t see much real offense with this player.
Still not worried about the contract — in a rising cap world, a 8.5M AAV will be completely manageable. But I do think we might need to adjust the projection here: strong top-4 guy, not franchise cornerstone 1D type most likely.
Spurgeon
I think Spurgeon has been incredibly underrated this season. In the games he’s played, he’s been the steadiest guy on the back end. Still excellent at denying entries, breaking up plays with his stick, and making quick first passes. He's been our most productive d on a per game basis.
That said, I still believe he’s probably going to get moved this summer. We need the cap space to revamp the bottom of the roster (and maybe top) and the captaincy has to be a big part of Guerin's sales pitch to Kaprizov.
Rossi
Man, I’ve got so much respect for what Rossi has done. After all the challenges he's faced, he’s clawed his way into being a legit top-6 NHL forward. That’s not easy. The compete level, IQ, and off-puck game are real strengths.
But here’s the honest assessment: when we drafted him, we were hoping for a Brayden Point or Mat Barzal-type ceiling — dynamic, undersized offensive creator who can run a line. That’s just not who Rossi is. He’s more in the Yanni Gourde mold than Barzal, and I don’t think that’s an insult. Gourde’s an effective two-way player who helps you win, but he’s not a guy you build your top line around.
His skating is good, not great — especially for his size — and the puck skills, while solid, aren’t elite. At this point, I think it’s fair to say he projects more as a middle-six center, maybe your 2C on a deep team. You can absolutely win with that, but you have to build around it properly. If you can get him locked up in the $7–7.5M range long-term, I’d be okay with that. If he prices out above that you have to look to move him, unfortunately. Not to mention he's your biggest trade chip for a true number one center, which I'll touch on more later.
Trenin
Just a complete whiff of a signing. He’s producing at below replacement level, the analytics are brutal, and he’s signed for three more years at nearly $3.5M. No impact, no upside. That’s a dead roster spot. Looked bad at the time, looks worse now. Can’t afford these types of mistakes if you’re trying to build a contender.
Boldy
Still bullish on Boldy. He’s such a smart player — strong puck protection, excellent passing touch, great shot (when on net) and the ability to find soft spots in coverage makes him dangerous. What he needs is his version of what Fiala got with him— a play driving running mate.
Once that happens? I think an 80–90 point season is absolutely in reach. The tools are there, the hockey sense is elite. Just needs the right partner.
Ek
Love this guy. He’s the heartbeat of the team, plays through everything, takes every tough matchup, and never cheats the game. The contract is a steal. Every contender wants a guy like him.
But… I think his offensive production in recent years was a bit inflated due to necessity — injuries, lack of depth, and his deployment on the top line / top PP unit. On a real contender, I think he’s a 45–55 point player who anchors your shutdown line and gives you elite defensive value. That’s not a 1C — it’s the best 3C in the league or a very good 2C. I’d be happy to have him on any roster… just not as the offensive centerpiece.
On the 1C Problem
This brings me to the big point — and one I’ve made before: we still don’t have that number one center you need to win a Cup.
Even if you lock up Rossi at a good number and keep Ek, neither guy projects to be a true 1C in the mold of a Point, Barkov, Eichel, or even a Robert Thomas. You can win a Stanley Cup with Ek and Rossi in the middle six — no question — but you’re not going deep without that true great centerpiece down the middle.
And history backs that up. Look at the last 10 Cup winners — They all had a clear-cut top-line center.
We need to fix this. And if that means packaging Rossi + 1st + Ohgren for Barzal or Thompson or whoever the target is, then so be it. You can’t cling to prospects forever if they’re not solving your biggest hole.
Kaprizov
We all know where this is going — it’s going to be expensive. Panarin got ~$11.6M AAV when the cap was $81.5M. That’d be nearly $14.8M on a $104M cap (which is the projected number for 2026–27). And the year after that? We’re probably looking at $114M+, conservatively. So yeah — the numbers are going to be crazy. Even with the projected cap increases over the next three years — jumping to $92M, then $104M, and potentially $114M — we’re still not hitting a true 50/50 revenue split between players and owners. That means the cap is actually understated relative to league earnings, and there’s still room for significant upward correction. In other words, these jumps we’re seeing now aren’t the end — they’re just the beginning. The cap is going to keep rising rapidly beyond the next three years, which only makes long-term deals for elite players like Kaprizov more palatable as time goes on.
Kaprizov’s agent definitely knows this. The league knows this. So when we talk about potentially paying him $15–16M AAV, you take that and run. Realistically his agent is going to start at or near 20M per year based on the cap inflation argument I just laid out. The number isn't going to be that high, but even if it's 17M you pay it. You have to keep players like this. If he walks, you’re back to square one — looking for that franchise forward for the next 15–20 years. You don't win a Stanley cup without a player like him. The only example I can really think of is St. Louis and even then Tarasenko was still in his prime. Florida has Barkov, Tkachkuk and Reinhart. Vegas had Eichel and Stone. Colorado had Mackinnon, Rantanen, Landeskog, and a career year Kadri. Tampa had Point, Kucherov, and Stakmos. Hell, I could make the argument that in this era oyu need 2 or 3 elite forwards to win the cup.
The Blueprint
The blueprint is simple:
This season is what it is. I think most of us know we’re not seriously contending this year, so I’m already thinking ahead — big picture. Just wanted to drop some notes on a few players and what I think the future blueprint needs to look like.
Faber
I’ve been a little disappointed with Faber this year — not in a “he's been a trainwreck” kind of way, but in the sense that the ceiling might not be quite what we hoped. Last year, he looked like a potential elite shutdown D who could log huge minutes, drive play, and chip in on offense. But this year, I’m starting to wonder if he’s more of a very solid top-4 guy rather than a star.
He’s still playing big minutes (top 5 in the NHL in TOI per game among defensemen), which in itself is valuable. But the underlying numbers have dipped — his xGA/60 has climbed, and he’s making more mental mistakes in the D-zone than we saw last year. Offensively, the drop-off has been significant. Some of his points last year came from being stapled to a top PP unit — soon that role shifting to Zeev Buium (and it will), I don’t know how much production he’ll bring. He’s a great skater and he can transport the puck, but I don’t see much real offense with this player.
Still not worried about the contract — in a rising cap world, a 8.5M AAV will be completely manageable. But I do think we might need to adjust the projection here: strong top-4 guy, not franchise cornerstone 1D type most likely.
Spurgeon
I think Spurgeon has been incredibly underrated this season. In the games he’s played, he’s been the steadiest guy on the back end. Still excellent at denying entries, breaking up plays with his stick, and making quick first passes. He's been our most productive d on a per game basis.
That said, I still believe he’s probably going to get moved this summer. We need the cap space to revamp the bottom of the roster (and maybe top) and the captaincy has to be a big part of Guerin's sales pitch to Kaprizov.
Rossi
Man, I’ve got so much respect for what Rossi has done. After all the challenges he's faced, he’s clawed his way into being a legit top-6 NHL forward. That’s not easy. The compete level, IQ, and off-puck game are real strengths.
But here’s the honest assessment: when we drafted him, we were hoping for a Brayden Point or Mat Barzal-type ceiling — dynamic, undersized offensive creator who can run a line. That’s just not who Rossi is. He’s more in the Yanni Gourde mold than Barzal, and I don’t think that’s an insult. Gourde’s an effective two-way player who helps you win, but he’s not a guy you build your top line around.
His skating is good, not great — especially for his size — and the puck skills, while solid, aren’t elite. At this point, I think it’s fair to say he projects more as a middle-six center, maybe your 2C on a deep team. You can absolutely win with that, but you have to build around it properly. If you can get him locked up in the $7–7.5M range long-term, I’d be okay with that. If he prices out above that you have to look to move him, unfortunately. Not to mention he's your biggest trade chip for a true number one center, which I'll touch on more later.
Trenin
Just a complete whiff of a signing. He’s producing at below replacement level, the analytics are brutal, and he’s signed for three more years at nearly $3.5M. No impact, no upside. That’s a dead roster spot. Looked bad at the time, looks worse now. Can’t afford these types of mistakes if you’re trying to build a contender.
Boldy
Still bullish on Boldy. He’s such a smart player — strong puck protection, excellent passing touch, great shot (when on net) and the ability to find soft spots in coverage makes him dangerous. What he needs is his version of what Fiala got with him— a play driving running mate.
Once that happens? I think an 80–90 point season is absolutely in reach. The tools are there, the hockey sense is elite. Just needs the right partner.
Ek
Love this guy. He’s the heartbeat of the team, plays through everything, takes every tough matchup, and never cheats the game. The contract is a steal. Every contender wants a guy like him.
But… I think his offensive production in recent years was a bit inflated due to necessity — injuries, lack of depth, and his deployment on the top line / top PP unit. On a real contender, I think he’s a 45–55 point player who anchors your shutdown line and gives you elite defensive value. That’s not a 1C — it’s the best 3C in the league or a very good 2C. I’d be happy to have him on any roster… just not as the offensive centerpiece.
On the 1C Problem
This brings me to the big point — and one I’ve made before: we still don’t have that number one center you need to win a Cup.
Even if you lock up Rossi at a good number and keep Ek, neither guy projects to be a true 1C in the mold of a Point, Barkov, Eichel, or even a Robert Thomas. You can win a Stanley Cup with Ek and Rossi in the middle six — no question — but you’re not going deep without that true great centerpiece down the middle.
And history backs that up. Look at the last 10 Cup winners — They all had a clear-cut top-line center.
We need to fix this. And if that means packaging Rossi + 1st + Ohgren for Barzal or Thompson or whoever the target is, then so be it. You can’t cling to prospects forever if they’re not solving your biggest hole.
Kaprizov
We all know where this is going — it’s going to be expensive. Panarin got ~$11.6M AAV when the cap was $81.5M. That’d be nearly $14.8M on a $104M cap (which is the projected number for 2026–27). And the year after that? We’re probably looking at $114M+, conservatively. So yeah — the numbers are going to be crazy. Even with the projected cap increases over the next three years — jumping to $92M, then $104M, and potentially $114M — we’re still not hitting a true 50/50 revenue split between players and owners. That means the cap is actually understated relative to league earnings, and there’s still room for significant upward correction. In other words, these jumps we’re seeing now aren’t the end — they’re just the beginning. The cap is going to keep rising rapidly beyond the next three years, which only makes long-term deals for elite players like Kaprizov more palatable as time goes on.
Kaprizov’s agent definitely knows this. The league knows this. So when we talk about potentially paying him $15–16M AAV, you take that and run. Realistically his agent is going to start at or near 20M per year based on the cap inflation argument I just laid out. The number isn't going to be that high, but even if it's 17M you pay it. You have to keep players like this. If he walks, you’re back to square one — looking for that franchise forward for the next 15–20 years. You don't win a Stanley cup without a player like him. The only example I can really think of is St. Louis and even then Tarasenko was still in his prime. Florida has Barkov, Tkachkuk and Reinhart. Vegas had Eichel and Stone. Colorado had Mackinnon, Rantanen, Landeskog, and a career year Kadri. Tampa had Point, Kucherov, and Stakmos. Hell, I could make the argument that in this era oyu need 2 or 3 elite forwards to win the cup.
The Blueprint
The blueprint is simple:
- Sign Kaprizov no matter what
- Find a true 1C — pay whatever it takes
- Build smart around them with guys like Boldy, Ek, Faber, Buium, Rossi (if kept), Yurov, and Jiricek
- Avoid anchor contracts like Trenin
- Be hyper-efficient with cap space and asset management
- Be thoughtful in how you use draft capital. Leverage draft picks and prospects to acquire good players on good contracts.