Maybe jerked around was too harsh for Holloway. I more meant that a young kid could want and think he is ready for a bigger role. Edmonton is pretty set for top 6 Cs. Blues are an easier path. We are talking about having career winger Buchnevich who it terrible on the dot as our 2C this year.
Fair enough... I think it all depends on one defines "opportunity" and 20-something kids aren't known for patience.
Anyway, both these kids have been knocking at the door... it's a delicate balance with how/when to break in the kids and the cap makes it even harder. In both Broberg and Holloway's cases, they spent a few more months at various times in the AHL than they should have because we couldn't fit in anyone above league min. And we had [knocks on wood] zero injuries other than Kane over the last two seasons, so it was tough to find the ice.
This is like a checkmate move for the Blues. If Oilers let go of both, they lose 2 good young players that were low cap hits and lose depth trying to gain very little cap space. If they sign Holloway, and let Broberg go, Holloway cap hit will eat into whatever cap space that was gained from not signing Broberg. If they let Holloway go and sign Broberg, then they would be over the cap limit and need to trade guys while lacking a top 4D. The best option is to let both go and sign a top 4D in season even if it means they lost 2 young guys for only a 2nd and 3rd round pick. This hurts the Oilers big time, especially since they need cheap and young players on their roster. It hurts their depth
I think the only get out of jail move for the Oilers is the following:
1) Match both, putting them ~$7.2M over the cap
2) Send down J Brown, saving $1M, now 6.2M over the cap with 22-man roster
3) LTIR or trade Kane, they are now $1.125M over the cap, which is EXACTLY the max amount they can bury in the minors, but that means a 21-man roster... not really doable, so
4) Trade one of Kulak or Ceci, since they have already committed to Broberg anyway.
Now, they'd be fully cap compliant whether Kane is traded or LTIR'd. If he's traded, they will be about $2M under the cap, which accrues to $9M in spend at the deadline... this is ideal.
If they can't trade him, they will be essentially at the cap, since they don't accrue cap space... they will have no space to add a player at the deadline, but Kane becomes their "deadline add" when he returns for game 1 of the playoffs.