I assume it would take a lot to trade for him. Holtby has struggled this season and last season and only has 1 more year on his contract. It is highly likely Samsonov will be taking over then.Samsonov is something else. Teams should gauge his trade value because his ceiling is enormous.
Do you think teams can get a value trade for a prospect who was a first round pick and seems to be living up to expectations?Samsonov is something else. Teams should gauge his trade value because his ceiling is enormous.
Terrible save percentage, team in front of him must dominating if somehow he hasn't lost in 15 games.
Terrible save percentage, team in front of him must dominating if somehow he hasn't lost in 15 games.
Terrible save percentage, team in front of him must dominating if somehow he hasn't lost in 15 games.
Anything else you want to add?Wow, just realized he's putting up terrible numbers in the AHL so far.
It's a 9-game run. He's 8-0-1 with two shutouts, a 0.951 save %, and 1.19 GAA.
Wonder if he's the starter in 2020.
Holtby will be 31 then, and giving a goalie of his age a long term deal isn't smart
Samsonov is fully ready to be a starter. The question is what to with Holtby. Isn't the expansion draft upcoming? The Caps should do what Tampa did.Goalies can still be good in their mid thirties, Caps can easily decide to sign Holtby to 2-4years, keep Samsonov as an AHL starter next year then backup ( or backup next season), then trade Holtby away when Samsonov is fully ready to be a starter.
Did you mean to allude to Pens situation with Fleury/Murray?Samsonov is fully ready to be a starter. Tge question is what to with Holtby. Isn't the expansion draft upcoming? The Caps should do what Tampa did.
Did you mean to allude to Pens situation with Fleury/Murray?