Prove you have a strong team with demonstrated performance on the ice before you throw away assets.
For the record, here is Ottawa’s current draft picks:
2025 | NIA 2nd | OS 3rd | PBO 4th NIA 4th | KGN 5th |
2026 | --- | --- | --- | 5th |
2027 | LDN 2nd | --- | 4th | --- |
2028 | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
Ottawa has not thrown their future away. They have some blank spots that will get filled in with some OA trades.
We can have the discussion about Ottawa not doing enough in 2023. I would agree. Mews for Wright would have worked better for Kingston than Miedema and clearly Wright added to that Ottawa team would have made a it difference.
Any team that wants to win needs to do three things:
1> Build trade capital
2> Be willing to trade that trade capital
3> Be a really good team with a lot of experienced players
I would argue that Kingston had not built the trade capital. They have now by trading Frasca and Thibodeau but they now have to replace those players production so is that draft capital built by trading those guys put them in a better position?
Weir and Hopkins will need to go. Not willing to trade them? Too bad. They gotta go. You will need the more experienced and higher performing player than Hopkins. So, are they willing to make the difficult trades? Ottawa isn’t. They lost twice because they didn’t. Learn from that.
Are the Fronts a really good team? Be honest. Underachieved last year. Barely over .500. Go out with your current roster and prove you are a good team that SHOULD be added to. I think they are a solid team and could win the division but let’s be real. Peterborough is bad. Ottawa is likely selling or should. Brantford is more likely to make moves to be good next year. Oshawa is likely to graduate too many players but if Ritchie returns, they will likely do what I am suggesting Kingston do. Ice their team. Perform. Prove they have the right core pieces. Then add at the deadline.
I don’t think Kingston has demonstrated capable to the point where they are obvious contenders enough o gobble everything up in the pre-season and expend all or most assets by the first puck drop of the regular season.