Sheppy
Registered User
There was absolutely nothing wrong with what he said. He was a franchise player who left during free agency. Not one negative thing was said.Why bring up Johnny Hockey in this?
There was absolutely nothing wrong with what he said. He was a franchise player who left during free agency. Not one negative thing was said.Why bring up Johnny Hockey in this?
i was too young at the time, but curious to what the vibe was for Kariya and if it was a surprise he left Anaheim after their run, i guess same question with Selanne and SJ?
i just remember being shocked they both signed the Avs at that price that summer lol oh what could have been
Teemu Selanne declined an option to play in San Jose for $6.5 million next season, but hasn’t shut the door on a possible return. “He’s saying no thank you to the option, but not to the Sharks,” said Selanne’s agent Don Baizley. “We did discuss the fact no one is burning bridges.” The Sharks, who still own negotiating rights with the team’s leading goal-scorer each of the last two years until June 30, may be ready to move in another direction.
The deal that made the most sense for the Devils, bringing in Selanne, apparently fell apart because the Finnish winger refused to waive his no-trade clause to come to the Devils. One source said Selanne exercised that veto on several teams.
Murray said he had conversations with Don Baizley about signing Kariya to a contract for less money, but those talks became pointless. Kariya could not be reached for comment.
“We never talked numbers and we never talked terms,” Murray said. The fallout probably will be harsh with fans. The Ducks mended fences with fans last season, as Murray turned around a doormat franchise in one season.
Well could have made him an offer he couldn’t refuse.its not an opinion. Its well documented,.
From Pocklington's own mouth
"Here is the truth:I did not trade Wayne Gretzky so I could generate cash to “prop up” my other businesses, as another Edmonton sportswriter, John MacKinnon, also recently suggested. At the time, most of my other businesses were quite profitable, and it was the security they provided that allowed me to prop up the Oilers. However, I expect all my businesses to pay their own way and that included my hockey team. If the Oilers weren’t generating enough revenue, then either costs had to be cut or other sources of revenue found. I also knew that in another year, Wayne was going to become one very expensive hockey player and that I would not be able to keep him. Better to get something for him while I still could. Wayne knows this. He knew it then."
Peter Pocklington: I didn't sell Gretzky because I needed the money
By Peter Pocklingtonnationalpost.com
So excuse when i said he was broke, the oilers were broke.
I also don't care what was or wasn't tried, I was 2 at the time and didn't know what was going on.
No idea what that argument would be.He wasn't exactly a superstar or even a franchise level guy at the end of his tenure, but Paul Stastny leaving Colorado. He arguably should have won the Calder, and was almost PPG in his 4th season so there was once a chance he'd get there but then his play tapered off and the writing was on the wall. With younger guys like Duchene, ROR, and a rookie MacKinnon on the roster, it was hard to see them coming close to what he could get in UFA. They really should have traded him as a rental at the TDL, but Varly was standing on his head most games that season, making them an unexpected playoff team.