Hockey4Lyfe
Registered User
- Feb 26, 2018
- 6,980
- 4,487
Truthfully, the Caps and Penguins situation is drastically different looking at it today.
The Caps were nowhere near as aggressive as the Penguins were when it came to giving up the future for the present/winning.
Hell the Blackhawks didn't even go as deep into the well as the Penguins and look what happened to them.
I guess I am failing to see what the Penguins could have actually done to right the ship here this quickly.
Yes, hindsight, never make the Karlsson trade. (easy as hell to sit here and make that claim now)
Don't sign Jarry and Graves (both dollar amounts okay but term way too long, but other teams survive these contracts)
Have some sort of magical ball to stop trading first rounders post 2020. (this is probably the easiest one to sit back and deduce)
I mean outside of the above, they weren't lucky like the Capitals in the sense that aging players who were on the downside of their careers with very healthy contracts getting injured to become much younger.
They had nowhere near the draft picks to find talented young players. Lets be honest, to stop what is going on with the Penguins team as they all age would have taken a f***ing miracle to begin with. That miracle being hitting on almost every trade/draft pick.
Its honestly just an unintelligent idea to sit and try to say these teams are in the same position. There are very massive differences in how things played out.
Give the Penghins a few years to also shed deadweight and large amounts of money while stacking young talent and we can compare then.
The Caps were nowhere near as aggressive as the Penguins were when it came to giving up the future for the present/winning.
Hell the Blackhawks didn't even go as deep into the well as the Penguins and look what happened to them.
I guess I am failing to see what the Penguins could have actually done to right the ship here this quickly.
Yes, hindsight, never make the Karlsson trade. (easy as hell to sit here and make that claim now)
Don't sign Jarry and Graves (both dollar amounts okay but term way too long, but other teams survive these contracts)
Have some sort of magical ball to stop trading first rounders post 2020. (this is probably the easiest one to sit back and deduce)
I mean outside of the above, they weren't lucky like the Capitals in the sense that aging players who were on the downside of their careers with very healthy contracts getting injured to become much younger.
They had nowhere near the draft picks to find talented young players. Lets be honest, to stop what is going on with the Penguins team as they all age would have taken a f***ing miracle to begin with. That miracle being hitting on almost every trade/draft pick.
Its honestly just an unintelligent idea to sit and try to say these teams are in the same position. There are very massive differences in how things played out.
Give the Penghins a few years to also shed deadweight and large amounts of money while stacking young talent and we can compare then.