Nathan Horton's contract is more "me me me' than Joey's.
Horton easily would have gotten higher AAV from other offers but took less to come to CBJ.
Not every team needs megainjured player.
I understand that Joey flew back to VanCouver late last week. Is he training at his home? Skating hard? If he comes in and takes a month to get back to game ready shape then he is hurting the team. In fact every day he misses he is hurting the team
I understand that Joey flew back to VanCouver late last week. Is he training at his home? Skating hard? If he comes in and takes a month to get back to game ready shape then he is hurting the team. In fact every day he misses he is hurting the team
When (and if) 19 caves and accepts the offer the Jackets have put in front of him (the 2 year deal), will he pout and piss and moan his way thru the season (and potentially hurt the team more than help)?? Then 'miraculously' play like a man-child possessed in the 2nd year to showcase the big $$ he will think he's due on the next contract?? I wonder.....
This is what I expect. Maybe not due to "pouting', but due to missing training camp. I figure we're going to be in the same position in two years.
Perhaps someone who follows Porty could post his recent tweets on the continuing negotiations?
Remember JD is dealing with a 22 who had the gall to declare that a $ 3 million offer was a "slap interface". I think there are a lot of us who would like to get slapped that hard.
When (and if) 19 caves and accepts the offer the Jackets have put in front of him (the 2 year deal), will he pout and piss and moan his way thru the season (and potentially hurt the team more than help)?? Then 'miraculously' play like a man-child possessed in the 2nd year to showcase the big $$ he will think he's due on the next contract?? I wonder.....
Yes I'm sure Joey will spend the next two years not trying and just skating around with a frown his face. Please.
He makes some good points in theory, if you read the 60 comments, nearly everyone is in agreement that johansen and his agent are greedy, trying to compare johansen to Kane and toews.
This gentleman had a great point.......
I did a little research to actually find a couple of comparable players to match up with Johansen. Tyler Seguin and Jeff Skinner are two close matches, same age, same stats for the best year of their entry deal. Seguin 29/38 in 81 games, Skinner 31/32 in 82 games, and Johansen 33/30 in 82 games. Seguin and Skinner both had better stats in their other seasons than Johansen, but we will stick with the best for each. They are all 22 year old 1st/2nd line centers with Skinner now playing wing on top line. Seguin and Skinner both signed 6 year deals for about 5.75 per after their entry deal. Using those comparables, it doesn't seem like the offers from Columbus were that far off the mark.
Why the CBJ management were so stubborn for so long with their $3m/$3.5 bridge deal is a mystery to me.
OK I understand the comparing Johan to them as players and their contracts but there's one thing that keeps bothering me...Am I the only one who doesn't see Skinner or Seguin as centers? Both guys play on the wing the vast majority of the time right? Or am I crazy.
This was posted by Kashie14:
In August 2011, Logan Couture signed a 2 year bridge for an AAV of $2.875 million. The cap at the time was $64.3M, so Couture got ~4.5% of the cap. With today's cap of 69 million, that translates to $3.105 M.
In June 2012, Duchene signed a 2 year bridge for an AAV of $3.5 million. The cap at the time was projected to be $70.2 million for the upcoming season, however a new CBA was not yet signed. Duchene got ~5% of the cap, which today translates to $3.45 million.
In September 2013, Derek Stepan signed a 2 year bridge for an AAV of 3.075 million. The cap at the time was $64.3M, so Stepan got ~4.75% of the cap, which today translates to $3.275 million.
The highest % of a cap that a 2 year bridge contract has ever been was 2013-14 when Duchene was still getting $3.5M on the newly lowered cap of $64.3 million. That was ~5.5% of the cap, which today translates to $3.795M. Again, this is the highest figure for a bridge, ever.
My hunch is that CBJ offered 3 million on the bridge with the expectation that Overhardt would bring it up to 3.5, maybe even 3.75 during the negotiations. CBJ cannot offer over 4 million dollars without completely obliterating all established bridge contract precedent. That's why Davidson mentioned that they were effectively restricted by the CBA in what they can offer. If they do offer 4.5 million a year, it's a tacit message that all of those prior contracts need to be trashed and a new precedent set. Now, it's perfectly reasonable to think that a new precedent does need to be set. I do remember after pretty much every bridge contract how everyone (on here at least) felt all those contracts were low. However, compared to his peers and the contracts they have signed, Johansen is not being lowballed by being given offers in the 3 million dollar AAV range.
The reason why a 4.5 million dollar offer feels fair is that it splits the dispute in two. It might feel fair, but it isn't, unless you feel that bridge contracts have been categorically too low. One party was close from the get-go, while the other was asking for Jupiter. Split that in half and you're still somewhere around Mars; a far cry from Earth. Giving a 4.5 AAV bridge would be about a 20% increase over the next highest a 2-year bridge has ever been after adjusting for the current cap. Johansen hasn't proven to be 20% better than the players listed above.
Can't vouch for the accuracy of the math, but it's interesting, nonetheless.