BigKing touched on most of it but lets add a few things about Ryan Smyth and his history.
- Ryan "Mr. Oiler" Smyth said it wasn't all about money, that he just wanted a fair contract from Edmonton and how he wanted to retire an Oiler. He ends up leaving Edmonton, a year after reaching the finals and is traded to the Islanders, one of the worst franchises over the previous 20+ years because the Oilers would not match his salary demands, which was reportedly a 100k per year difference.
- Smyth proceeds to go before the media and pull a Razzie worthy acting performance that made Hulk Hogan look like Humphrey Bogart. With tears flowing from his eyes he never once acknowledged that Mr. Oiler was leaving over a minuscule amount of money.
- Mr. Oiler then proceeds to sign with the Oilers division rival the Avalanche that summer because (surprise surprise) they offered the most money. Nothing wrong with that, well within his rights as an UFA, but if it was all about money just say it was from the start.
Ryan Smyth was traded largely as a result of an error in hard-bargaining tactics at the 11th hour. His agent should be a name that everyone recognizes, Don Meehan. Have we so quickly forgotten the BS surrounding Doughty's contract, and Doughty's eventual frustration with the situation?
Meehan wouldn't budge from whatever number he wanted for his client, and Smyth got traded to the Islanders. There was no time to amend the situation because it came right down to the wire. I do not question the sincerity of Smyth's shock immediately thereafter. Nor do I fail to comprehend why he wouldn't want to return to Edmonton after being so jarringly dealt. He was trying to move on. And he might as well squeeze the UFA market now that he's in this position, like you mentioned.
- After two seasons with the Avalanche, in which the team paid him $15 million of the actual $31 owed they were so eager to get rid of him (even at a reduced rate) they agreed to take on the contract of a minor league defenseman making $2.5 million a year to entice the Kings to take on the deal. The Avs who were largely criticized for "giving away" a star player went on to improve by 26 points the season after trading "star player" Smyth.
Why didn't you mention that when Smyth arrived they made the playoffs as the 6th seed, after finishing 9th the year before? That's about as important as speculating him leaving was the reason for the Avs return to prominence (from 15th to the 8th seed) while also denouncing Smyth's relevance to our OWN simultaneous revival, in which we finished 6th (from 14). And as for the Avs after that first year when Smyth left? They finished 14th, 11th, and 15th. That one playoff berth seems like an aberration to me, not something to draw conclusions upon.
I'm surprised Kyle Quincey is completely absent here. Back then he was thought of in a much different light than today. He was coming off a breakout season and was dirt cheap. Colorado had just finished in last place, so they rolled with the punches and picked up a cheap young defender at the cost of an expensive veteran. Quincey was a godsend for Colorado in that first year, logging over 23 minutes a night.
Smyth's departure did not turn Colorado into a powerhouse overnight. They overachieved the first year he left before sinking back into the basement. Smyth cost us a good asset; they didn't bend over to get rid of him. He was dealt as part of a rebuild in Colorado.
The beginning is the only part of the story I take umbrage with, I feel its an unnecessary attempt to reverse-engineer history because of unpleasant later events. Smyth's time in LA is what it is, he had highs and lows and you are right in vilifying him for the whole package in LA if you feel that way. He hasn't done himself any favours since the trade request, that's for certain, and I don't think much of him either way these days, but I was grateful that he was here for 2 years instead of nobody.