Sort of. 5% of player's pay automatically goes into escrow in case NHL revenues don't end up the way they should (that way it stays at 50% one way or the other), and the players can opt to say "meh, keep it" to boost the cap the following year. I don't think they've ever opted not to do so.Seriously it is the players right to force the cap to rise by 5%.
I'm curious as to what you think the viable alternatives were/are.With the Prout extension and Jones at 4 and Karlsson at 1.2 that puts us at 73.4 for next season assuming Boll,Tyutin and Campbell aren't bought out.
Jackets must be pretty sure of some of these:
a) the players will elect the escalator
b) this team is a hell of a lot better than this year's performance
c) there is a bunch of money for buyouts
d) someone is dying to trade for Tyutin.
e) Werenski is not ready for the NHL
f) they're going to trade Bob
HTF a bottom feeder locks up the same roster essentially to the cap before this season even ends is way beyond my powers of comprehension.
I'm curious as to what you think the viable alternatives were/are.
So now that it the team is essentially re-signed for next year presuming Jones and Karlsson are going to be what do you think should happen to make improvements/changes?
First thing I'd do is commit to burying Boll & Campbell in the AHL. Won't save any money but will buy almost 2 mill of cap.
Second I'd either trade Tyutin for whatever I could get (even retaining some if I had to) preferably a prospect and a pick to keep the cap hit down or buy him out.
Commit to Bjorkstrand, Rychel & Anderson to fill out the forward ranks and either go with 13 or add a depth FA for a mill or so.
Use cap savings to try and lock Jones up on a 6X6
Think about a trade with very few untradeables - Jones, Murray,Jenner are the only ones I wouldn't trade barring an unbelievable return. The rest I'd have no qualms about trading for an equal return.
I don't feel very optimistic about next season if we go with the status quo. Something has to change. Heck, even if we won the first 8 we'd still be a point out everything else being equal (which I realize probably wouldn't be).
Well not re-signing Prout was one. Scratch that.
No, no, no, no, NO. I'm not talking about who you get rid of, I'm talking about who you bring in instead. You can't just vote folks off the island without a plan for their replacements.
This is why I see little or no value in preemptively buying out or burying Boll and Campbell - because all that gets us is NHL Minimum room for bringing in replacement fourth-liners, and that's not going to buy you an improvement of any real significance. Burying them in favor of kids who are ready to move up is one thing; saying "just get rid of them and we'll figure out later" is an effective way to fail.
No, no, no, no, NO. I'm not talking about who you get rid of, I'm talking about who you bring in instead. You can't just vote folks off the island without a plan for their replacements.
This is why I see little or no value in preemptively buying out or burying Boll and Campbell - because all that gets us is NHL Minimum room for bringing in replacement fourth-liners, and that's not going to buy you an improvement of any real significance. Burying them in favor of kids who are ready to move up is one thing; saying "just get rid of them and we'll figure out later" is an effective way to fail.
Can't tell you what plans are for replacing Prout. I don't yet know who will be/become available. But now it's a moot point, isn't it? If you wait to resign Prout, you may get a clearer picture of what kind of roster movement might be available.
You think we even need to use the NHL vet minimum for players to replace those two?
No, no, no, no, NO. I'm not talking about who you get rid of, I'm talking about who you bring in instead. You can't just vote folks off the island without a plan for their replacements.
This is why I see little or no value in preemptively buying out or burying Boll and Campbell - because all that gets us is NHL Minimum room for bringing in replacement fourth-liners, and that's not going to buy you an improvement of any real significance. Burying them in favor of kids who are ready to move up is one thing; saying "just get rid of them and we'll figure out later" is an effective way to fail.
-what part of this don't you understand? I'll try and simplify it.Commit to Bjorkstrand, Rychel & Anderson to fill out the forward ranks and either go with 13 or add a depth FA for a mill or so.
The UFA market doesn't exactly look promising to me. If it turns out I've misjudged that (and we'll know in July), then, yeah, I may be a tad more annoyed with this deal. I just see a market that has either guys we can't afford or guys we wouldn't want to play here and think "let's just go forward with a set plan". I'm hoping that my assessment (and, presumably, Jarmo's) is accurate. If it's not, I'll note that as a teachable moment for myself, and will continue to hope for Jarmo's departure. It's all good.
Who else is going to be brought in that won't cost us even more?
And what if the kids aren't ready to take on that responsibility full-time? (For example, consider how Rychel's turned more or less invisible since rejoining LEM, per reports here.) What's the backup plan? Recall that picking up players early in a season - particularly decent quality players that can cover for developmental issues - is damn near impossible. As we have directly experienced in back to back years.Maybe you have reading comprehension problems?
-what part of this don't you understand? I'll try and simplify it.
The bolded is the key. Why not wait? I know the answer. I just don't agree with it.
You maybe misunderstood my point. You don't have to spend any money to have better players.
I'm still not following what you're getting at. It's not as though we can get other players for free. Unless you're also advocating for a "call up the kids, and hope that we don't need a backup plan" strategy.
Campbell is a good #13 forward. I don't think he'll be as effective next year as Bjorkstrand, Rychel or Anderson, but you keep him around behind them in case they slip. It's not cost effective to bury him and pay a replacement on top of it.
Boller is replaceable by your standard call up so that's an easy buy-out.
Buying out Tyutin saves $3m total* on the contract, but I doubt we can get a D-man at 1.5 per for the next two years, who is better than Tyutin. He's been a solid third pair D for most of the year. Now, if a prospect D really is ready and costs less than that, that changes everything. But I doubt we'll see that until 2017-18.
*I'm aware that the buy-out also stretches the remaining 2/3 of Tyutins salary until 2020, so you pay 1/3 of the current annual cost each year. I think it's a bad idea to shift our financial costs into the future when we might be in a win-now mode. The only exception I would make is if a buyout is the only way to squeeze in a long term mega deal with Jones.
And what if the kids aren't ready to take on that responsibility full-time? (For example, consider how Rychel's turned more or less invisible since rejoining LEM, per reports here.) What's the backup plan? Recall that picking up players early in a season - particularly decent quality players that can cover for developmental issues - is damn near impossible. As we have directly experienced in back to back years.
Yes, but kids' development can be ruined, whereas Campbell and Boll don't have to worry about that.You asked what I'd do I told you. I don't believe we will be any worse with the kids than with Boll, Campbell & Tyutin.
Well replacing Campbell with Chaput would be a pretty easy decision - that's one. Hell Boll has been healthy scratched on a regular basis. Is there really a debate here? The only one to give thought to is Tyutin and, to be honest, he's lost a step or three. If you can get rid of that contract before more of a decline, that would be a pretty good decision even if it hurts the team in the short term.
We'd be significantly better if we ran Calvert-Karlsson-Anderson as a 4th line.
what the heck is the escalator