The Real JT
The crowd called out for more
That’s encouraging to hear from Brock.
Oh wait, that’s a quote from Tavares before he left. Never mind.
I think the rationale with re-signing Nelson is that if you *don’t* re-sign him you have a massive hole at 2C next season, which for a team as low scoring as the Islanders makes it a big shoe to fill.
Younger options (i.e. Mittelstadt, Zegras, etc.) are just as expensive and not as productive as Nelson so how do you reasonably upgrade/re-tool that position without dealing someone like Dobson?
@periferal I get you’re probably in the camp of crash and burn, but the fact of the matter is they aren’t going to run Pageau out there as a 2C next season so unless they are planning on moving Barzal back to center, Nelson (in a vacuum) is one of the best center options available this summer.
Personally, I *would* interested in Mittelstadt as a 2C and Frederic as a 3C. This allows you to flip Nelson and Pageau for picks/prospects and fill their holes with younger, cheap to acquire players with potential to bloom into a bigger role.
Use the assets from Nelson and Pageau to add scorers on the wings.
And why we should put basically zero stock in anything we read until the thing actually happens, one way or the other.View attachment 975981
That’s encouraging to hear from Brock.
Oh wait, that’s a quote from Tavares before he left. Never mind.
No doubt we have added a lot more speed in to the lineup, especially short burst acceleration which the NHL EDGE model favors.Not to detract from the Brock and Noah Show, but apparently we're the 12th fastest skating team in the league (the chart goes slowest at the top to fastest at the bottom):
View attachment 975949
I'd hate to see the 20 teams behind us.
Seriously, I get that this is a measurement of bursts and not necessarily true speed, but OTOH I'd guess that COL and EDM were the fastest teams in the league and they're #1 and #3 here, so....
I’m sure it’s considered, but deciding factor? Many kids have been uprooted for less, and they’re young.The part that was left out of the quotes we have been reading.
It does not change my mind about the fear of losing him for nothing, however he does mention about his Kids being settled in Long Island....
“Everything will sort itself out. Lou a great guy. I love playing for him. He’s a great guy. He’s given me a great opportunity the last seven years. He’s an influential guy in hockey in general. My agent has a great relationship with him and communicates with him and I know everything will kinda sort itself out.”
“Being familiar with the Island, different things and kids are settled down there, that’s a factor for sure,” Nelson said.
No doubt we have added a lot more speed in to the lineup, especially short burst acceleration which the NHL EDGE model favors.
I mean, we’re gonna get like the 25th pick in a weak draft and some B- prospect. Trading Nelson isn’t going to save the franchise or anything - the return won’t be a third of what we could’ve gotten for Tavares and I think it’s dangerous to constantly compare the two without making that distinction.No it doesn't, and here's why...
The Islanders are not coming close to a Stanley Cup while Nelson is still productive. That means you are literally holding a very valuable asset and just letting it slowly decay until it has no value - When instead you could actually get rid of that assets while it is very valuable and help this team increase its chances of winning long-term.
Given those two choices, there isn't a choice - Just an obvious path to take.
And you can see that Nelson is already starting to fade. The next contract he gets will probably be his last in the NHL. And if you resign him, the moment you do it cuts his value to other teams down by half at least given the contract he will get.
Lou has already proven he does not know how to maximize the salary cap to the Islanders benefit so there's zero reason to resign any player who will only make that worse, and especially when you trade him for younger assets that is how you will increase the odds of opening up a new Cup window as soon as possible.
The Isles should've traded Tavares when they had the chance and he was in his prime. Nelson is leaving his prime for a team nowhere near a Cup. To not trade him is true GM malpractice.