Where? Again. You don't make that concession without knowing that you can help and improve other parts of the team.
Post #1398 for one. And you keep saying that, but people keep advocating for the change without any clear direction. Every suggestion is vague, unrealistic, or makes us worse.
But I suspected as much, but obviously, your Dubas bias plays a part in this. What's the angle here?
No Dubas bias or angle. It's just the facts. If we look through the entire Matthews era and our forwards, and then remove the core 4, deadline additions, and players with less than 20 GP, we end up with 20 forwards that produced 0.4 P/GP or more.
Of those 20:
-13 were brought in by Dubas. They all cost between 700k and 3.5m, and many brought additional defensive and/or PK value.
-7 were brought in by one of Treliving (2), Lou (1), Burke (3), or Nonis (1). They all cost between 3m and 6.25m, and only Bozak brought additional defensive/PK value.
And that's not even including the likes of Robertson, Holmberg, Minten, etc. Or Kampf, who actually brought some decent value when we first brought him in at 1.5m. I'd rather pay ZAR 850k for good defense and get 10 goals, than pay assets and 1.2m to Dewar and get none. Even someone like Ennis got us 12 goals in 51 games for 650k once upon a time.
And its not just forwards. Found quite a few efficient depth defensemen too. The only time we've been a good defensive team was under Dubas, and it wasn't by spending more. If you can't acknowledge that he was better at finding efficient depth, then perhaps you need to examine your own Dubas bias.
And if you look around the league, that's how successful teams tend to win. By keeping their best players and finding efficiencies in their depth. Not by throwing money at depth.
Depth turnover can happen, but it seemingly keeps getting more unproven and worse off.
It's getting worse because we fired the guy that was good at finding it to hire a guy who is bad a finding it! Of course it's worse! Our cap space didn't change (other than getting more). We're just spending it worse.
Who has Treliving actually contributed? He paid Reaves 1.35m to pace 8 points and play like trash. He paid assets and 1.2m for Dewar to pace 2 goals and 14 points. He paid 2.4m for Kampf to pace 18 points. Gregor and Lorentz were cheaper, but still only paced for 16-17 points. Pacioretty pacing 29 points in our top six for 1.5m isn't great.
We shouldn't need to spend 5.5m on Bertuzzi or 3.75m on Domi to get a trash defensive player that can put up 40 points in our top 6. And it doesn't help that he hired a coach to neuter our offense even more, for no actual benefit.
But the larger point is just to look at the holes in the team. There is no center depth, and still, after all these years, there is not much on RD, in addition to not much having in-term of picks, prospects or cap space to fill them because the last guy blew his brains out. And you need at least one of those to make additions to your team.
No team in the cap world is perfect. The holes we have are from management failures, not the fact that we have great players. Getting rid of our best players - especially Marner - would just create a bunch more holes.
We have picks and prospects, and we've had plenty of cap space to make changes, and we're about to have tons more. The types of things we need shouldn't require more than we have of those things.
So, that leaves you in a spot where they couldn't even make a competitive offer to O'Reilly to stay, and now you'll say, "Oh, he didn't want to stay." Fine, but what about an offer for someone like Chandler Stephenson last summer? Nope, can't do that.
We had more than enough to re-sign O'Rielly. He made less than Bertuzzi. Treliving just couldn't get it done. We also could have signed Stephenson if we wanted; though we didn't really need a second line center. instead we chose 3 goal Domi, and Liljegren, who we almost immediately dumped for low picks and a cap dump.
What are you talking about? What model? What team has won with three 3/4 guys making as much as the Leafs top guys?
Most teams win with a model of getting and spending significant money on stars and then finding efficient depth. Having guys this good and signing them all within a year of each other and then having the cap stagnate for half a decade obviously isn't super common, but we were still able to build great teams through that with good GMing, and we're past that now anyway. This is literally the best time to re-sign a star. Even if we re-signed Marner and Tavares for 20m, for example, the core four would be under a much more normal 40% as soon as 2027.
lol, right. Well, that's debatable, isn't it? May need some time to pass before we can properly judge.
You're the one that brought them up. What we know right now is that they won with their stars.
Including the playoffs.
Anyway, Yeah, so it's cherry-picking when the stats don't suit you.
No, It's cherry picking when you pick out a small sample of only the stats and timeframe that suit you, and ignore what doesnt.
But the plain facts are he's not scored over 100 points in a season. He may be paced like that at times, and well done; I suppose he wants to get paid for that as well?
Hitting some arbitrary mark is irrelevant. All players get paid for the level they perform at, and he has proven it over a massive sample.
Yes, the guy who has a higher PPG in the playoffs than Mackinnon is not as good as Marner.
Mackinnon has a higher playoff PPG than Rantanen, for the record, and you let playoff production without context skew your perception too much. Playoff production is heavily impacted by the very disparate situations teams face. You can have a higher PPG than another player in a small sample of easier-to-produce situations and still be a worse player.
Great, I don't care what he paced for. I want him to be paid for what he actually did (90 points). Is that such a difficult request?
He's hit higher than 90 points as well. He's got 99, 97, and 94 points in 3 separate seasons, and will likely surpass that this year. And whether you care about pace doesn't change that it matters to GMs and agents. Trying to change the standard of how NHL contracts work because you want a deal is indeed a pretty difficult and unrealistic request.