- Sep 29, 2016
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Had a chance to connect with a bunch of guys in my network recent;y. Not Ranger related, but summary notes below:
- Travis Hamonic will more than likely end up on the Jets, as a UFA.
- Jets feel that adding Hamonic, and signing Samberg will help form a top 4 unit next year. One of the reasons they wanted Pionk was because of Neal's relationship with Samberg. They are from the same hometown in Minnesota.
- The Capitals are set to make a couple of more runs. Due to the way they managed the cap, they end up needing depth pieces at the deadline. Those guys cost 2nd-4th rounders. It's a really good way of team-building.
- As shared with some previously, Vegas needs defensemen that can skate. They are vulnerable off the rush, and their counter-attack from the backend doesn't exist without Theodore or Schmidt. They won't be winning this way.
- If you are going to make a trade with Tampa- ask for Mathieu Joseph. The Lightning have found roles for themselves up-front and he's the odd-man out. Tampa also has 3-4 forwards in the AHL that can step in. TB needs cost controlled defensemen. They are not worried about the cap, they have to pay Cirelli, Cernak, and Segachev. Expect those guys to get 3 year bridge deals.
- The Foote brothers in Tampa will both make a push next year. Nolan is healthy, and was treated for an injury that he played through all of last year. It caused him to slip in the draft, but it's good to see the kid rehab accordingly. Fits the size, speed, skill quotient that you want to see.
- Cal needs to fill the Jan Ruuta role. Be a good PKer, and take away half the ice. He's close to the show.
- There are a number of teams with underperforming cores in the league today. The question for those teams becomes whether or not that they can with their mix.
- Nashville changed their philosophy to sign long term deals after the Suter-Weber debacle of 2012. It's why you see all of their guys get 6-8 year contracts. The problem with that is that they are now locked in with the same set of guys. Would not be surprised if they move out a name player or two this summer.
- No body wants Kyle Turris.
- One of the trends you'll see teams using, is to shift older top 6 centers onto wings. League is faster than ever, and it helps keep the older legs fresh. Think Claude Giroux, and Steven Stamkos.
- The Ducks are going to go on a full teardown. That is not a market that can be profitable with a losing team. Their farm was an interesting one. They had a lot of players who were very very good in college or junior, but look to be very underwhelming at the NHL level. One of my guys argues against the draft philosophy that lead to what the Ducks are experiencing. "Your draft for roles now, when you get past pick 20, you pick guys that can play roles, unless to get a home run hit due to some other issue." Topic was around Kaliev and Lundestrom. The latter is going to be a good bottom 6 forward. The former could be a top 6 guy.
- Another contact agreed, he's been on the hunt for pro player that can skate well and kill penalties. Doesn't care how old they are, or where they come from, as long as they can play today. A good find is Nygard in EDM. Carl Hagelin-Lite.
- Expect to see the premium on defensemen go up in the next two to three years. The 14 draft was weak when it came to defensemen. Only 5 top 4 defensemen were taken that year. 2015 is a little better, and 2016 is much better. However, most contending cores have their top 4 d-men in their 24-29 age brackets. Lots of minutes to eat, while being at their peak skating prime. When you have a number of weak draft classes it dilutes the talent in those brackets.
- One of my contacts' teams has three NHL defensemen that are 23 or younger, with a veteran core. The changing of the guards is coming up for them with 2 of the younger players getting top 4 minutes now. It's their forward core that's been a big letdown. At some point, they will have to ask themselves, can we win with these guys?
- Why is the metro so strong and the west so weak this year? The west has a lot of younger teams- but with lesser practice time. The metro has kept their cores intact for a few years in a row. They know what to do, and have enough practice time to reinforce their concepts. It's new to a lot of teams in the west due to coaching changes, younger rosters, and roster turnover.
- Lots of coaches got fired this season, for a variety of reasons. But I think you are also seeing another generational shift. Much like how the guys in the 2001-2006 draft classes wouldn't respond to a Mike Keenan, the 2013-Now crop won't respond to the Babcock's of the world. Hockey is experiencing cancel culture due to the social media platforms. These were things you wouldn't even hear about 5 years ago.
- Regardless of how you feel about, hockey media is experiencing a changing of the guards. You will see that shift continue as fan bases sub-segment themselves into their preferred coverage channels.
- IMO it's good for the game of hockey. You are no longer one size fits all. What do I mean by that? The mainstream will still come down to the games, ultimately people don't care about the talent during game coverage. You are however seeing a spike in engagement across other mediums. Blogs, podcasts, etc.
- Some teams are much better than others at this.... and that fan engagement has a high correlation score against ticket sale & price performance above or below prior periods, respective to each market.
- Some teams have gotten "better" while others have gotten "smarter". With the exception of one organization that is really experiencing a backlash from eng(r)aged fans.
Caps have more than enough depth...what they need to win cups is a top4 RD and potentially a goalie.