Personally think the reactions are logical based on the orginal sell from trotz and trotz saying he would love to have every one of the ufas back....
That essentially stops any youth movement, keeps fabbro in the pressbox or trades him off, keeps glass in the pressbox or trades him off, and needlessly exposes players like Parssinen/Tomasino/Afanaseyev/del gaizo to waivers or trades them off all in the persuit of a round 1 exit so this team can chase a repeat of career years that are unlikely to be repeated.
Edit: hopefully trotz has some crafty trades up his sleeves. If we go into next season with the team we essentially ended the season with ill be less than enthused.
I guess I'm just not sure what people want to see then. I see it as one of Sherwood/Zucker/Beauvillier returns, Carrier walks, and Tomasino is out the door. Parssinen, Kemell, ZLH, Stastney and MDG will get their looks. Those are pretty minor tweaks.
If you blow the team up and commit to a rebuild, you need to trade Saros, Josi, and Forsberg for max return right now. That's not going to happen. If you trade only Saros and commit to even more youth movement, you're still "mushy middle" with a roster that has FF and 59. The only way not to be "mushy middle" is to add players that are good right now, wait for our best prospects (Wood, Kemell, Molendyk) to show they can compete at a very high level, or blow it up and sit at the bottom of the standings for over a decade. I think I'd rather field a competitive roster, ease the young guys in as they're ready, and get into the playoffs while finishing between 10 and 16 overall, rather than experience whatever is happening in Detroit or Buffalo. This team as constructed has shown they can play at a league best level for almost half a season.
The name of the game is to win the Stanley Cup, and we don't have good enough young talent to commit to a full blow up. That's just ridiculous to think about. It's silly to sit here and be mad about next season before any moves are even made, regardless of what he said. Poile said many times he'd never trade Shea Weber and yet it still happened.