I get that this is just how it is in general on HF and the internet-sphere, but those types of statements are way too black and white for my taste.
“They don’t value what these players bring.”
Is such a simplification. I mean, it also could certainly be true for some people. But isn’t it also possible that rather than “not valuing” something, they simply hold a philosophical difference when it comes to team building, and that philosophy may partially be that building around smaller, slower players is about as smart of a strategy as building from the net out.
Like… could it be possible to fully understand Fox’s value in a vacuum and simultaneously not want to continue building a roster of small-ish, slow-ish players? Fox - sub 6’, slow as molasses. Lafreniere - just 6’, pretty slow. Perreault - sub 6’, pretty slow. Regardless of how good these players may be individually, maybe some people see their value but aren’t overly keen on building a roster with an average height of 5’11 that would lose foot races to Joe Thornton and Jaromir Jagr - today.
Is that hyperbole? Yes. Is raising concerns about the team needing better skaters, or Fox having already seemed to have lost a step after having several prolonged post-seasons and playing through injuries “not valuing” the individual players? Or is it okay to have different opinions on the necessity/value of speed and dynamic skating ability in the NHL, etc?
there is a disconnect between what you're saying and what you are saying you're saying.
You'd be very hard pressed to find someone on this board that doesn't think the Rangers need to get faster, or more aggressive. We all think that.
There's a lot of ways to accomplish that, but for some reason you're fixated on the idea of trading Perreault as the primary route to doing so. You are continually asserting implicitly that the absence of a Perreault trade is a team wide holistic commitment to only "building around" smaller slower skilled players. This is disingenuous because there are other players on this roster who can, should, and/or will be moved off the roster in the next 1-3 years. These roster holes can in theory be filled with the type of heavier meaner faster hockey player that you want to prioritize - and by the way, Drury has actually prioritized drafting that archetype. Hartford currently has 3-4 who could be on the big league team as soon as next year who fit that mold. An infusion of that style of player does not necessitate trading Perreault, nor does not trading him mean that we are hitching our wagons unduly to that style.
Secondly, you are arguing against the straw man that "Perreault is untouchable." While some may hold that to be true, a far greater number of us are arguing the slightly more nuanced opinion that we do not trust the current front office to get proper value for this asset. As we saw with the Buch trade, the Nemeth trade, the Kakko trade, we don't get good value. So GP is almost certainly worth more to us than what we'd get back - not just as a pure talent in a vacuum, but as a cost controlled pre-ELC asset.
That brings us to the final point here - Pettersson for Zib+Perreault. Getting younger at C by exchanging Zib for Pettersson is attractive to me. However, the disparity in cap cost between these players, plus the extreme diminishment in cost-controlled talent makes this a poor idea. We are not contending, nor will we be with Pettersson instead of Zib. We already have 2 11mm contracts on the books. In both the short and long term it's actually kind of a nonstarter: not just because Perreault is essentially our Panarin replacement at 11mm less, but because the issue with our team is our defense. We need an infusion of talent on our defense both young and old, cheap and costly. Look at what the Devils have done on the back end, supplementing young developing pieces with solid vets. That takes time. Pettersson is 26 now but to properly build a D core will take longer than that. I also believe Miller should be signed and Housley jettisoned but that's a different discussion.
Finally, the issue that I can't get past with your Pettersson idea is that, despite his production, he has many issues that you're looking past that are the same thing you profess we need to get away from: specifically softness, aggressiveness, and playoff production. 1 goal 5 ast in 13 postseason games last year, plus the off ice stuff. You're chasing points with an 11.6mm investment (see Panarin, A.) but the same metric means nothing when evaluating Perreault as a prospect because Corey Pronman didn't like his skating stride - something we have seen can be improved. Btw he's listed as 178 as a sophomore on BC website - 2 pounds heavier than Pettersson. Have you watched both players in depth? I like EP btw.
So - if you want to list some LHD or C that you think Perreault - whose compete factor, clutch factor, and even something like FO credibility is more attractive than you are giving credit for - is worth trading for, I'm all ears. But to continually imply that to not trade him is to commit to a team building ethos is just incorrect and it's the basis of your argument. Supplement his talent, which appears elite, with the type of players you're describing. Get younger, get faster, get bigger, get more aggressive, and most importantly, get f***ing better.
Perreault is that last one.