Confirmed Trade: [MTL/NSH] Alexandre Carrier for Justin Barron

Treb

Global Flanderator
May 31, 2011
29,909
30,862
Montreal
It seems like you’re rationalizing things in retrospect. Not a mind reader but Colorado had Makar when they drafted him, so you’re safe there about not projecting him as a top pairing D. But he was taken with a 1st so you can probably expect there was some hope he’d be a 2nd pairing. When he was traded, Montreal didn’t have anything close to a Makar. But it kind of seems like a feeble assumption to think they traded Lehkonen for a guy they were hoping would be a 3rd pairing D.

You’re assuming I’m referring to Michkov when I’ve been banging the drum about Montreal needing the high end 1C. That was a F heavy draft, no?

I don't know what kind of value you think Lehkonen had, but the majority of people (Habs fans and others) were saying Barron+2nd was solid value. Barron disappointed, but a prospect is a prospect, it's always a gamble. At the time of the trade, Barron was seen as a future #4-6 D, which has no impact on whether Montreal would select a potential top pair D in the 2023 draft.

What #1C would you be talking about? I see a bunch of potential wingers and 2C drafted after Reinbacher, but all the blue chips Cs were drafted before. I don't think any of Leonard, Danielson or Dvorsky will be a better C than Suzuki.

I don't understand your obsession in having a loser in this trade.
 

biturbo19

Registered User
Jul 13, 2010
27,475
12,622
I don't know what kind of value you think Lehkonen had, but the majority of people (Habs fans and others) were saying Barron+2nd was solid value. Barron disappointed, but a prospect is a prospect, it's always a gamble. At the time of the trade, Barron was seen as a future #4-6 D, which has no impact on whether Montreal would select a potential top pair D in the 2023 draft.

What #1C would you be talking about? I see a bunch of potential wingers and 2C drafted after Reinbacher, but all the blue chips Cs were drafted before. I don't think any of Leonard, Danielson or Dvorsky will be a better C than Suzuki.

I don't understand your obsession in having a loser in this trade.

Yeah. With hindsight, it's easy to say the Lehkonen deal was bad...but at the time, he was very much seen as a sort of middle-6 winger at best. Traded for a pretty generous package.


Just turns out that Barron wasn't all that good and they didn't necessarily use that 2nd to maximum advantage. But that's what happens with futures deals. Sometimes they don't pan out.
 

Michel Beauchamp

Canadiens' fan since 1958
Mar 17, 2008
23,335
3,417
Laval, Qc
Are you talking about that supplemental draft where the Habs had first choice of a Quebec born player?

That draft produced one decent player in it's entire existence (Rejean Houle) because any player worth a damn was already signed to what was called a "C-Form" before those drafts would take place.

That draft is a common myth for producing the pipeline of talent that came through the organization.
You're absolutely right about the players available in the draft prior to the first universal amateur draft, but you forgot about Marc Tardif, who, in my opinion, was a better player than Houle...
 

BLONG7

Registered User
Oct 30, 2002
37,081
23,830
Nova Scotia
Visit site
I don't know what kind of value you think Lehkonen had, but the majority of people (Habs fans and others) were saying Barron+2nd was solid value. Barron disappointed, but a prospect is a prospect, it's always a gamble. At the time of the trade, Barron was seen as a future #4-6 D, which has no impact on whether Montreal would select a potential top pair D in the 2023 draft.

What #1C would you be talking about? I see a bunch of potential wingers and 2C drafted after Reinbacher, but all the blue chips Cs were drafted before. I don't think any of Leonard, Danielson or Dvorsky will be a better C than Suzuki.

I don't understand your obsession in having a loser in this trade.
If..........the guys go back and look at Lekky's stats, he had two seasons he couldn;t score in a soccer net....he had a huge goal in the playoffs, yes, but he was just ok with us.
It was a good gamble, based on what we need, and the rebuild having just started.

Lekky was not Zach Hyman, ask leaf fans how painful that one was.
 

JianYang

Registered User
Sep 29, 2017
19,832
19,568
You're absolutely right about the players available in the draft prior to the first universal amateur draft, but you forgot about Marc Tardif, who, in my opinion, was a better player than Houle...

Well I learned something new then. I didn't know tardiff came from that source.
 

Michel Beauchamp

Canadiens' fan since 1958
Mar 17, 2008
23,335
3,417
Laval, Qc
Well I learned something new then. I didn't know tardiff came from that source.
Sam Pollock was a genius for persuading his colleagues to allow him to keep that privilege in the 1st year of the universal amateur draft.

And to debunk the myth that the privilege allowed the Canadiens to dominate the NHL, read the two parts of the article linked below:

The Truth Behind the Canadiens' "First Choice of Quebecers" Rule: Part 1

The Truth Behind the Canadiens' "First Choice of Quebecers" Rule: Part 2
 

John Mandalorian

2022 Avs: The First Dance
Nov 29, 2018
11,938
7,696
Do you not realize that Lehkonen was viewed as a third/fourth liner around the league? It was considered a massive overpay from Colorado. Most said we'd be lucky to get a third round pick by itself.

There were no first line talents aside from michkov left when the Habs picked. The forward top end talent were picked 1-4.

You're being intentionally obtuse trying to create a narrative that isn't there.

Go look up what Hagel was traded for just a few days before. Then come stepping up with your lame rhetoric again.
 

John Mandalorian

2022 Avs: The First Dance
Nov 29, 2018
11,938
7,696
I don't know what kind of value you think Lehkonen had, but the majority of people (Habs fans and others) were saying Barron+2nd was solid value. Barron disappointed, but a prospect is a prospect, it's always a gamble. At the time of the trade, Barron was seen as a future #4-6 D, which has no impact on whether Montreal would select a potential top pair D in the 2023 draft.

What #1C would you be talking about? I see a bunch of potential wingers and 2C drafted after Reinbacher, but all the blue chips Cs were drafted before. I don't think any of Leonard, Danielson or Dvorsky will be a better C than Suzuki.

I don't understand your obsession in having a loser in this trade.

I’m not trying to retroactively bump up his trade value and say the Avs should have traded more. But Avs are/were data driven and he had good analytics. It was well known at the time the Avs had been scouting him. And again, look at what Hagel got a few days before.
 

SlafySZN

Registered User
May 21, 2022
7,750
16,921
Yeah. With hindsight, it's easy to say the Lehkonen deal was bad...but at the time, he was very much seen as a sort of middle-6 winger at best. Traded for a pretty generous package.


Just turns out that Barron wasn't all that good and they didn't necessarily use that 2nd to maximum advantage. But that's what happens with futures deals. Sometimes they don't pan out.
They did use the 2nd in their advantage. It helped trading up in the draft to get Michael Hage.
 

Ezpz

No mad pls
Apr 16, 2013
15,427
11,991
Go look up what Hagel was traded for just a few days before. Then come stepping up with your lame rhetoric again.
Hagel had two extra years at 1.1 and had already beaten lehkonens career high by quite a bit in only 55 games. If hagel were an expiring rfa he would have been significantly less valuable to Tampa.

Not to mention one to one hagel is a better player. You're comparing your current view of Lehkonen to the lowest possible view of hagel. Lehkonen was not seen as a huge get going into the trade deadline and no amount of meandering logic is going to make it retroactively true.
 

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