Value of: Marcus Pettersson.

Zbynek

Jarry friggin sucks dude
Jun 6, 2011
3,933
3,747
Madrid, Spain
Koivunen is a boom-or-bust player, and that's due to his skating. If he brings his skating up enough, his ceiling is a top-line forward. He has all the other relevant skills.
Jake Guentzel is the best winger Sidney Crosby ever played with (not including 20 games of Marian Hossa). He's the best homegrown product the Penguins have pumped out in 20 years.

Jake is a bonified ppg 1LW and has continued to prove that with 2 other teams. Crazy tenacity, hockey IQ, plays bigger than his size, and reads the game about as fast as a Crosby or Kucherov.

Koivunen is the most valuable piece in the Guentzel trade (if you can even use that word here, valuable). Your description of Koivunen is not the return you expect for a player of Guentzel's caliber.
 
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Empoleon8771

Registered User
Aug 25, 2015
85,739
86,344
Redmond, WA
Jake Guentzel is the best winger Sidney Crosby ever played with (not including 20 games of Marian Hossa). He's the best homegrown product the Penguins have pumped out in 20 years.

Jake is a bonified ppg 1LW and has continued to prove that with 2 other teams. Crazy tenacity, hockey IQ, plays bigger than his size, and reads the game about as fast as a Crosby or Kucherov.

Koivunen is the most valuable piece in the Guentzel trade (if you can even use that word here, valuable). Your description of Koivunen is not the return you expect for a player of Guentzel's caliber.

How does this have anything to do with Koivunen's upside? You said he had no better than bottom-6 upside and then shifted it to "he's not good enough to be the centerpiece of a Guentzel trade".

The Penguins went for quantity over quality in the Guentzel trade. Everyone knows that. Beating the dead horse about it doesn't change anything.
 

biturbo19

Registered User
Jul 13, 2010
27,254
12,393
Bunting wasn't a major part of the value in that deal, though. I totally believe Dubas would take back a NHL player to "stay competitive" in a deal, but taking back Hoglander as a big chip doesn't seem to line up with that. If Hoglander would be in the deal, I'd still expect a 2nd and a prospect to be included on top of him.

I could see something like Hoglander, Mynio and a 2nd for Pettersson and Beauvillier making some sense, and I don't really mind that deal on paper.

The "value" on this probably isn't too far off of what i'd expect it to cost for Pettersson, given the dearth of other steady, reliable Top-4D likely to be "on the market" this year. I actually like Mynio's trajectory and would push for that be maybe be a different guy...but realistically, he's still probably a B prospect at best and likely quite far away (if ever). So on "value", that's not unreasonable.

And Hoglander's value is tough to assess. He's such a weird player...in that he'll probably get you ~15G+ and ~35pts whether he's playing on your top line or your 4th line with scrubs. Like a Brandon Sutter...or Kasperi Kapanen type. Decent production "floor" but a very low "ceiling". Even the contract he just signed is ambiguous. It's either decent value in a rising cap world, for a very "self-sufficient 35pt - goal skewed" sort of 3rd/4th line player. Or it's too much for a "tweener". But i can also see where that may...or may not appeal to the Penguins, depending on what Dubas prioritizes.



Also, as mentioned, the Canucks really have no want or need for Beauvillier back. They just finished getting rid of him. Even at a lower salary, he really wasn't a Tocchet player, and the Canucks are pretty full up on "filler" utility players better than Beauvillier. Even moving Hoglander, they're probably fine...but even if not, i'd reckon they'd rather just go out and backfill that spot with a separate deal for someone who fits a "role" better.
 

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