How much of prospects busting is "their fault"?

Poppy Whoa Sonnet

J'Accuse!
Jan 24, 2007
7,640
8,333
I don't blame Kakko for not making it work in NY, I don't even blame the Rangers, who probably should have had him spend his first year in Hartford. I blame the league for getting ridiculously fast in terms of on ice play and required processing speed.

The way that Kakko kicked ass in liiga and the world championships just doesn't work in the modern NHL, the game is too fast. Ultimately the scouts didn't see that red flag, and didn't project where the league was going well enough, and that's the story there.

The default prospect works their ass off, the guys that don't make it because it's their fault are rare ones that get over emphasized by front offices desperate to avoid blame. It's really the organization misreading / failing to project accurately who the kid is going to become and how that fits into where the league is going to go (to be fair this is nearly impossible to do).
 
  • Like
Reactions: shello

tyhee

Registered User
Feb 5, 2015
2,687
2,831
I think Lafreniere and Kakko were both sabotagedby New York. Around the same time Vancouver had 3 straight Calder trophy finalists (Boeser, Pettersson, Hughes) and I'm confident that if either was drafted by Vancouver their careers would've gone differently.
Pointing out that they had three consecutive Calder finalists doesn't say anything about the Canucks' prospect development because Boeser, Pettersson and Hughes skipped the minor leagues, went straight from the NCAA or the SHL to the NHL and were immediately successful.

Boeser went straight from North Dakota to the Canucks in the spring of 2017, suited up immediately and scored 4 goals in 9 games before the season ended. Quinn Hughes went straight from Michigan to the Canucks in the spring of 2019 and had 3 assists in 5 games before the season ended. Pettersson went from MVP in the Swedish Hockey League to starting the 2018-19 season with the Canucks, had 3 goals and 2 assists in his first 2 games and 10 goals and 6 assists in his first 10 games.

The Canucks did nothing to develop these guys. They arrived already good.

That was the Canuck way during those years. A player had to be an immediate NHL success, be a goaltender or wait until he went elsewhere to succeed or he wasn't going to make it.

Given that the Canucks had their own high first round disappointments (Virtanen and Juolevi) who turned out worse than Lafreniere and Kakko have, what is there to make one think that Lafreniere and Kakko would have done better in Vancouver?
 

MXD

Partying Hard
Oct 27, 2005
51,883
17,821
I think "fault" is to be defined.

Take... I don't know, someone like Griffin Reinhart. Who definitely busted in the common parlance, because he's a 4th OA who played 37 games of spot duties spread on 3 seasons.

It's painfully obvious that Reinhart shouldn't have been a 4th overall. He probably shouldn't even have been a first rounder.

Is that his fault he didn't become a star? .... I'd say, about as much as it's MY fault for not becoming the second coming of Bobby Orr.

Is that the team's fault on the developpment side that they couldn't make platinum out of tin ore? I think the answer to that question is obvious as well.

But there are some dimwits on the Habs board who still sweart Michel Therrien ruined Lars Eller, despite the fact there's a whole career of video evidence that his absolute upside was "2nd center in a pinch and great 3rd center".
 
  • Like
Reactions: shello

north21

Registered User
May 1, 2014
1,326
494
MN
I'd put most of it, like 90 percent on the prospect with the rest being situational or development.

Talent, brains, genetics and motivation all come from within.
 

Chainshot

Give 'em Enough Rope
Sponsor
Feb 28, 2002
157,503
112,708
Tarnation
Depends. The biggest talents will prevail no matter what imo. But for a lot players, the organization drafting you can literally make or break your career. Do you guys think it's just a coincidence that players keep leaving the Buffalo Sabres and they become completely different players?

I know this is the narrative, but the comment that they become completely different players is bullshit. Friedman should know that too. But he yet again he’s taking the very easy path on a team that he gets no information out of anymore.
 
  • Like
Reactions: shello

shello

Registered User
Sponsor
Mar 5, 2011
2,340
821
NYC
I know this is the narrative, but the comment that they become completely different players is bullshit. Friedman should know that too. But he yet again he’s taking the very easy path on a team that he gets no information out of anymore.
Friedman and most of the modern insiders are such a step down
 

adsfan

#164303
May 31, 2008
13,182
4,205
Milwaukee
I generally think that players are going to be what they're going to be, unless a team egregiously gets in their way. Teams can maybe "develop" a player into a little better (B+ player instead of a B) but it's not like a C player in Minnesota would've been an A player in Tampa Bay, or wherever.
Eeli Tolvanen for Nashville. He scored 11 goals in two consecutive seasons for the Preds. He scored 2 goals in 13 games in 2022-23. He is waived and picked up by Seattle. In 48 games with the Kraken in 2022-23, he scores 16 goals! The next season he scores 16 goals again. He is on pace for 19 goals this season.

It is because Nashville's coaches are generally IDIOTS!!!
They won't play the young players, who don't develop sitting in the press box.
They go to another NHL team and their scoring goes up 50 to 100%.

Look up Kevin Fiala's stats with Nashville versus the Wild or the Kings. He will probably score 30 goals this season.

I am sure that this isn't true for every NHL team. It might be true for last place teams.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Boss Man Hughes

Ad

Ad

Ad