1) Goodrow isn’t a useful player, he’s more of what we already have.
2) Guys like Zetterlund, Granlund, etc. may not have been thrilled to be traded from good teams to an awful one, but they sucked it up and played well and provided leadership.
The fact that this is even a story shows that Goodrow is not like those two.
I agree that he has a limited utility, but management sees him as a useful player, hence the acquisition
We actually haven't heard anything from Goodrow, the article has the following excerpts:
Start Quotes
After speaking to multiple sources on Wednesday, there is widespread belief that Barclay Goodrow had included the Sharks on his 15-team, no-trade list that GM Chris Drury got around by placing No. 21 on waivers, where San Jose exercised the first claim to take the two-time Cup-winner," Brooks writes. "We're told that Goodrow's 15-trade list included teams in less-than-desirable locations and those who are not contenders. San Jose would fit into that last category. But the 31-year-old's feelings did not enter into this."
"We've been told by several folks that Goodrow — who scored six goals in 16 postseason matches after recording four in 80 games during the regular season — is not happy about how this went down. I guess I don't blame him," Brooks said.
End quotes
3rd hand accounts claiming "belief" that Goodrow "is not happy about how this went down"
Nothing from Barclay, nothing from his agent, nothing about dissatisfaction with the Sharks in particular, rather an allusion to frustration with the Rangers' handling of this
There's nothing here, the biggest city in the country's hockey team made a marginal move that people didn't expect which got them out of cap trouble and the New York media found an angle to write about it, there is no actual reason to read anything into this until we hear something from Goodrow's camp