My brother in Christ, please give your head a shake.
You have been advocating for giving a player a special roster spot just to work out in NY. You are somehow fine with him being scratched (you've admitted this) just so he can work out in NY. As if there is some benefit to working out in NY while being scratched over working out in CT while playing.
There is no benefit to working out in NY over CT. I think I'm being pretty clear about that.
The Rangers should have acted differently because they had an asset worth developing and worth accommodating. Standing on principle was the wrong decision for them.
On top of that, it's not as if this player is completely incapable of playing in the NHL, ie, hence the fact that the accommodation would have been relatively minor.
This is a player who played well in the preseason and if he was "gifted," a spot (though I wouldn't call it that based on what I saw of his play), it would have been at the expense of complete JAG Dryden Hunt and a loss of about 2 minutes a night of ice time for Sammy Blais, a player who literally never scored a goal for us (while VK did).
What you're saying is absurd. If you cannot understand this, I am at a loss for how to help you.
I'm sorry you disagree, but it is not absurd, and in fact, the Rangers were wrong in how they handled the situation.
Even if the ultimate result is that the player flat busts, the prudent move at that time is to preserve the good will with the high-end prospect and to sacrifice Dryden Hunt and 2 minutes of Blais' ice time if necessary. The Rangers were wronged by Kravtsov first with his refusals, perhaps, but out of a responsibility to us fans if no one else they have the obligation to best preserve him as an asset.
What the Rangers chose was adherence to a grit-first lineup, which is a foolish decision to make in the first place since skill wins over can't-play players like Hunt and to a lesser extent even healthy Blais (a decision they are now rectifying by paying through the nose to import more skill), and then when faced with a wrongful player revolt, they chose to stick to principal instead of pragmatism, that being, it costs them basically nothing to let him have his way a tiny bit and try to keep his development on course in North America.