JPeeper
Registered User
- Jan 4, 2015
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Trading Kylington for nothing is going to spectacularly blow up in Treliving's face
Oh mos def.
Trading Kylington for nothing is going to spectacularly blow up in Treliving's face
Would we do Kylington for Jack Roslovic? Jets still haven't signed him. I think Jack's still got some untapped potential.
Roslovic is way better than Kylington. Not sure why the Jets would entertain that tbh.
Roslovic and Chucky are friends iirc.
One problem. The forwards that the Flames choose to protect is dicey as it is. If Roslovic was acquired via a trade, he would have to be protected. Then, who would be dropped from the protected list? Right now I could see the Flames protecting Gaudreau, Monahan, Tkachuk, Mangiapane, Lindholm, Dube, and Bennett leaving veterans Backlund and Lucic exposed (assuming he waives his NMC). If Roslovic is better than one of the aforementioned, he bumps them off the list. If the Flames place a greater value on keeping Backs, then two of the players gets dropped off the list.I’d do it.
One problem. The forwards that the Flames choose to protect is dicey as it is. If Roslovic was acquired via a trade, he would have to be protected. Then, who would be dropped from the protected list? Right now I could see the Flames protecting Gaudreau, Monahan, Tkachuk, Mangiapane, Lindholm, Dube, and Bennett leaving veterans Backlund and Lucic exposed (assuming he waives his NMC). If Roslovic is better than one of the aforementioned, he bumps them off the list. If the Flames place a greater value on keeping Backs, then two of the players gets dropped off the list.
If the Flames retain Kylington I imagine he would be a protected D as the Flames would risk losing one of Giordano or Tanev instead of risking Hanifin, Andersson, or Kylington.
The Flames would not protect Kylington over 38 year old Gio or Tanev. We didn't even play him over Gus, Forbort or even Stone much for that matter. He holds very little value to the organizationOne problem. The forwards that the Flames choose to protect is dicey as it is. If Roslovic was acquired via a trade, he would have to be protected. Then, who would be dropped from the protected list? Right now I could see the Flames protecting Gaudreau, Monahan, Tkachuk, Mangiapane, Lindholm, Dube, and Bennett leaving veterans Backlund and Lucic exposed (assuming he waives his NMC). If Roslovic is better than one of the aforementioned, he bumps them off the list. If the Flames place a greater value on keeping Backs, then two of the players gets dropped off the list.
If the Flames retain Kylington I imagine he would be a protected D as the Flames would risk losing one of Giordano or Tanev instead of risking Hanifin, Andersson, or Kylington.
My guess is the 1st + Kylington are offer up in exchange for Seattle selecting Lucic. I have my doubts if Kylington will be an NHL defenseman, let alone worth protecting.It's all about succession planning and timing. Who is projected to ultimately be the #1 LD? Will that person be ready in two years or he is ready now? If ready, can you get one more season after this (to be fair maybe even more)? Are you prepared to give up on a young asset? If so, trading him for another asset to fill a gap might be what is needed. Of course if that asset needs to be protected then you might just bump someone else out.
The Flames will lose one player in the draft. They can dangle a forward, e.g. Bennett or Backlund and stay safe with their D-men. Or they can dangle a D-man, e.g. Gio or Tanev (or both) to protect one of those forwards and all three of their young D-men.
They need to look to the future. Not one year or two, but six or seven. Sacrificing a vet today may pay dividends down the road as there will be extra cap space and room for the youngsters. So of the D-men, do you keep the 38 year old (Gio) or the 30 year old (Tanev)? You can protect them both.
Or do you dangle them both and protect that 23 year old asset with elite skating ability and the runway to improve? Remember we can only lose one player. Who will it be?
My vote is to expose Gio, Tanev, Backlund, Lucic (again if he waves) and protect the young talent that we have. Use the cap room to re-up a youngster and use a good chunk to fill a gap via a UFA or a trade.
I mean, you look at it and if you're projecting 6-7 years down the road you understand Giordano is out of the league, and it's like, projecting that far is where the importance of this season for Kylington is. If he continually shows that he is lacking the ability to step into that runway (whether Calgary's usage of him is related to that or not), then losing Giordano who was head and shoulder still the best defensemen by 9 points, is our captain, and has continually shown that he is able to stay ahead of the age curve, is a tough proposition for the team. Tanev is being exposed either way and then we have Andersson and Hanifin as the easy locks (they surprisingly produced the same points last season), so it's between Giordano and Kylington. The draft is still a ways out, but sacrificing one of our veteran leaders who holds hella value to us for 'cap reasosn' and to build for the 'future' makes no sense when that 'future' has continually been passed over and has not showed defensive progression that is meaningful.They need to look to the future. Not one year or two, but six or seven. Sacrificing a vet today may pay dividends down the road as there will be extra cap space and room for the youngsters. So of the D-men, do you keep the 38 year old (Gio) or the 30 year old (Tanev)? You can protect them both.
Or do you dangle them both and protect that 23 year old asset with elite skating ability and the runway to improve? Remember we can only lose one player. Who will it be?
Its not about Gio, his age is something thats unavoidable. Its about Kylington and not really being any good at anything, except for skating. He simply doesn't have the shot, brains or physicality to make up for his shortcomings in other areas.Fair enough. All good points. As I've posted before Gio may very well be one of those guys that plays into his 40's.
Its not about Gio, his age is something thats unavoidable. Its about Kylington and not really being any good at anything, except for skating. He simply doesn't have the shot, brains or physicality to make up for his shortcomings in other areas.
You're obviously forgetting about Ras, who had the best point shot on team. Ras, followed by Gio, then I say Valimaki and debatably Hanifin before Kylington even comes into the conversation. The point is who cares by this stage. Its a debate about average or below average by this point and not even close to where it needs to be for Kylington to make up for his deficiencies. From where I'm sitting, the kid needs to score at a Gustafsson pace or better to be a full time NHLer, and I just don't see that happening.I hear what you're saying, but Kylington's shot isn't one of his issues. I'd argue besides Gio, he has the next best shot on the blueline.
You're obviously forgetting about Ras, who had the best point shot on team. Ras, followed by Gio, then I say Valimaki and debatably Hanifin before Kylington even comes into the conversation. The point is who cares by this stage. Its a debate about average or below average by this point and not even close to where it needs to be for Kylington to make up for his deficiencies. From where I'm sitting, the kid needs to score at a Gustafsson pace or better to be a full time NHLer, and I just don't see that happening.