True Blue
Registered User
- Feb 27, 2002
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Buying out Staal and Smith would deliver more relief than buying out Hank.A buyout offers some relief, and we need every cap dollar we can find.
Buying out Staal and Smith would deliver more relief than buying out Hank.
I guess it depends if you feel they're that attached to Geo. If they are hell bent on keeping him short of an insane offer, then sure.
I don't think they're at that point though. This comes down to a matter of dollars and unless they need every penny that they'd get from buying out Hank vs. Staal, I don't see how Hank is the correct choice here.
2.133 + 1.567 = > 3.Not true. Hank saves us 3 mil. Staal saves us 2.133 mil and Smith saves us 1.567 mil.
No matter which of those players gets bought out, they have to be replaced. Hank will provide the best net savings, especially if we trade Georgiev and sign a cheap backup.
To the first point, I can't help but feel there are older guys who could carry us through something like that. The difference between them and Geo is there is no expectation for them to be long-term starters. They are what they are.
And ultimately, that leads to your second, which is the trade value of Georgiev. His value isn't so much as a backup, so much as it is a potential starter. A second round pick is probably more or less in the range for that kind of potential, albeit uncertain potential.
As for the difference between a second and third, it can be fairly significant. Your odds are better with second round picks vs. third round picks. And looking at our roster, you're looking at some interesting assets like Fox, Lindgren, Lemieux, even a trade up to grab someone like Miller in a draft. So I'm always hesitant to take that difference for granted.
Gonna be really tough for them to come up with the money for AP.
We have a cheaper cap alternative though!
2.133 + 1.567 = > 3
If it was just about carrying three goaltenders, they'd make an announcement that Hank will not suit up and let him ride out the contract at home. Buyouts aren't to resolve issues like this. Buyouts are for the cap, and the fact is that buying out Hank just doesn't deliver much relief. Partner that with the points discussed re: Georgiev, and something doesn't add up about the buyout reporting.
Hajek and K'Andre. Cost negligible, improvements on Staal and Smith.But you have 1 extra player you have to replace, so there goes your savings.
Who was the last player to get bought out for non-cap concerns?That's not at all true. Buyouts can be used for a number of situations. In fact they're literally the only option teams have to get themselves out of exactly this kind of situation.
Gonna be really tough for them to come up with the money for AP.
We have a cheaper cap alternative though!
Let's say it were a gamble.
The higher reward would be, Geo's value goes up, say it's a 2nd now, maybe that turns to a 2nd and a good prospect or turns to a 1st.
The bad side, let's say it goes down to a 3rd
The even would be the value stays the same.
I would probably gamble on the value either staying the same or increasing. Yet if I lost that gamble I would not feel as if I lost very much. While there is of course a difference between a 2nd and 3rd, your examples are good, yet mine would be all the 2nds the Rangers have whiffed on or used on a goalie.
Hajek and K'Andre. Cost negligible, improvements on Staal and Smith.
I agree here, except that we don't have a goaltender requiring protection in the expansion draft other than Georgiev.It is gamble, but I feel like any gamble comes down to the odds. Odds, somtimes even more than the upside return in many situations, is the deciding factor.
I'd say the odds of Geo's value going up, let alone substantially, is pretty slim.
I'd say the odds of Geo's value doing down, even if only a very modest amount, is fairly high.
And that's taking into account that unless Georgiev really hits a lights-out kind of level, he's either expansion draft fodder, or a candidate to go to another team to hedge their losses in an expansion draft. But I don't think there's higher value there either.
Given that buying out Staal and Smith results in an extra million in cap savings, and a backup to Igor will likely cost another million+, cost negligible.How is the cost negligible? Hajek has a 833k cap hit and Miller has a 925k cap hit, with another 300k in performance bonuses. Because we are going to exceed the bonus cushion, that 300k will count against the cap, so that's a total of 2.058 mil.
And that assumes they are both ready for the NHL.
It is gamble, but I feel like any gamble comes down to the odds. Odds, somtimes even more than the upside return in many situations, is the deciding factor.
I'd say the odds of Geo's value going up, let alone substantially, is pretty slim.
I'd say the odds of Geo's value doing down, even if only a very modest amount, is fairly high.
And that's taking into account that unless Georgiev really hits a lights-out kind of level, he's either expansion draft fodder, or a candidate to go to another team to hedge their losses in an expansion draft. But I don't think there's higher value there either.
Given that buying out Staal and Smith results in an extra million in cap savings, and a backup to Igor will likely cost another million+, cost negligible.
As we just ran through, the numbers don't support your statement.Assuming the same replacement cost, buying out Hank saves us more money, which is the opposite of what you said. Call it negligible if you want, you were still wrong. If you want to argue against buying out Hank, that isn't the hill to die on.
I feel way more confident that Georgiev will be worth less in the future than he is today, than I do the other way around.
He's just not going to play a lot, unless Shestyorkin goes down with a catastrophic injury
The numbers don't support your statement.
I agree here, except that we don't have a goaltender requiring protection in the expansion draft other than Georgiev.