CanadienShark
Registered User
- Dec 18, 2012
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Depends on how the roster will play out too. One of Caufield, Slaf, and Demidov will have to be on the second line in the long run. Out of the three, I expect Slaf would be more likely to go on the second line, although he will probably be on PP1 because of his size/role.I could see an outcome where he is a power winger that puts up 60 points as his ceiling is a w way 80+point power winger
They could had him at 6 millions at 8 years. 7 millions at 8 years is wtf -esque
I'd imagine with his abilities you want demidov running the second line akin to how Chicago used Kane and have monster possession two way first line with slaf-suzuki-caufieldDepends on how the roster will play out too. One of Caufield, Slaf, and Demidov will have to be on the second line in the long run. Out of the three, I expect Slaf would be more likely to go on the second line,l although he will probably be on PP1 because of his size/role.
If they don't get hit by the injury bug all the time, I can see Caufield, Slafkovsky, Suzuki, and Dach being regular 65-75 points players. Demidov is the unknown. If he pans out, with his skills, he could be more of a 90+ pts player. I just won't believe that this is a possibility in Montreal until I see it with my own eyes, since it has never happened in my lifetime.
Demidov probably has the highest ceiling for production and he could hot 100 points.Depends on how the roster will play out too. One of Caufield, Slaf, and Demidov will have to be on the second line in the long run. Out of the three, I expect Slaf would be more likely to go on the second line, although he will probably be on PP1 because of his size/role.
If they don't get hit by the injury bug all the time, I can see Caufield, Slafkovsky, Suzuki, and Dach being regular 65-75 points players. Demidov is the unknown. If he pans out, with his skills, he could be more of a 90+ pts player. I just won't believe that this is a possibility in Montreal until I see it with my own eyes, since it has never happened in my lifetime.
Young 20s? He just turned lolStill young but this could be a great contract as it ages. Still in the young 20's so there's nowhere to go but up.
Salary cap is going up. Probably overpayment for only 1 year. Good deal for the next 6-7 years.Might be a good deal in year 4-5-6-7-8 but its a MASSIVE overpayment for year 1-2
I'm sure habs fan will attack me but why sign him to this deal now?
Year one he was not great, year two he had a stretch that looked better than it was because of how bad he was before.
Why not wait to see how this season goes because even if he breaks out he's still not going to get more than this based of one season.
Huge gamble on solely a good 2nd half of 1 season. Could be disastrous. But could be okay.
Seriously, People forget that his next contract start in 2025-2026 season. He will still be on his rookie contract next season. The salary cap is also going up. His contract will be a steal in 3 years (after cap going up).Hes on ELC next year
If hes 75 pt player he will be worth his deal.
Some risk in the deal but his 2nd half points to potential to live up to this
Then consider yourself a young man who hasn't seen the carnage of the 70s Habs.Depends on how the roster will play out too. One of Caufield, Slaf, and Demidov will have to be on the second line in the long run. Out of the three, I expect Slaf would be more likely to go on the second line, although he will probably be on PP1 because of his size/role.
If they don't get hit by the injury bug all the time, I can see Caufield, Slafkovsky, Suzuki, and Dach being regular 65-75 points players. Demidov is the unknown. If he pans out, with his skills, he could be more of a 90+ pts player. I just won't believe that this is a possibility in Montreal until I see it with my own eyes, since it has never happened in my lifetime.
We got Suzuki, Caufield and now Chad-kovsky long term, all under 8M/yr.
This is great.
Yep. For a kid with this much talent and upside, you always bet long-term on them.People always say these big money post-ELC contracts are risky yet they almost always end up being among the best contracts in the league. This is great for MTL.
All the games I've seen of him were poor but Habs fans are high on him and I've only seen a handful of games. If they're right it's a great contract. All the games I saw he struggled but I'll have to trust their judgment. These are the type of contracts that can get you championships or sink you so if the fundamentals are there then it could potentially be an amazing contract. Don't know why Slaf signs that though unless he has a significant injury nobody knows about.
You're 100% right. I wrongly assumed Slovakia was a poor country but i looked it up and it's nowhere near as bad as i believed. I will go to bed a little more educated tonight thanks to you.I really fail to see what being a Slovak has to do with it lol but yeah he seems to have a "just happy to be here" attitude all the time feel like he just wants to get rid of the distractions and play
Power one I didn't agree with at the time but I don't think they're having buyer's remorse on the other two. And even if they fall in the middle of their last two years, which is the most likely, they're really not bad deals as much as they looked to be complete steals a year ago
And Vancouver still has ptsd after being "dusted" by the OilersNot surprised they gave him 8 years, Montreal still has ptsd after Carolina stole their 3rd overall pick.
I wish that the Flames had done this with Tkachuk, instead of letting him prove that he wanted to leave townWow huge overpayment for a kid who hasn't even proved himself yet.