I think committing more money and time to worse players instead is silly, and I don't get the stubbornness in thinking that what needs to change is one of the best players in the league being purged from our team. There are a million different ways to win the cup. There is no formula. History is littered with "cup winners haven't _____" , before exactly that wins a cup. The reason that there aren't an abundance of examples is because teams don't get the chance at this really specific scenario in the first place. That doesn't equate to it not being possible to win this way.
Well, you did reference a model, So I thought some prior team could be given as an example.
"Committing money to worse players." That idea, in a vacuum, may sound right. But that completely ignores the context of a team. and again, it's not like this group has been successful.
We're both talking about him, because he and what he did is relevant. How we built great teams through even the most difficult situations for this model is relevant. Treliving's track record and priorities do not give me much confidence in his ability to fill out the roster or replace Marner's impacts. That makes signing Marner even more critical, as he is a known quantity, and I can know that we will at least get significant and reliable positive impact from that cap space with really good potential for surplus value through most if not all of his contract.
You've got a very low bar for using the term "great." Being handed all the core pieces to a team and failing to get out of 1st round in all but one time is not what I would describe as "great."
And the rest is opinion., mostly influenced by the 'we can, we will" BS
But it doesn't. The stats I laid out for you do. There's a heck of a lot more to offensive impact than whether you hit the 100 point mark over an arbitrary 82 game sample or not.
But I thought scoring at a 100-point pace was important? Anyway, I'll agree with this even though I think you're discrediting other players too much and not taking the goal-scoring into account enough.
$14m x 8, though is still too much.
He said that he preferred a smaller market, but I don't know if that means that there was no chance of getting him to stay. He clearly had some level of connection to the city, and Dubas showed himself to be pretty good at convincing people to choose Toronto, even when it meant personal sacrifice. Maybe it turns out the same, but it's hard to blame him for a rental that he didn't even get a chance to re-sign.
Sure, only Dubas could've done it....
Because he's not doing a good job! I'm not "defending" anyone; I'm just stating the facts. But of course I'm going to view the person who did a good job more favourably than the person who is currently hurting my team. Why would anyone not?
It's not anti-Tre, pro-Dubas to state facts. Their terms and cap hit percentages for what they did through their pre-signing periods were consistent with the history of high end post-ELC contracts. Signing bonuses are there to help counter tax disadvantages, not change AAV. Tavares was irrelevant. Marner was last because Nylander was due a year earlier and we couldn't risk Matthews getting to July 1st. I would have preferred to sign them all earlier, but you can't force a contract unilaterally. Nylander has a responsibility to be in game shape whenever he joins.
C'mon now... as the other quote you constantly deflect, it's never him, even though he's the boss and they didn't win anything. Can you give me one example of a move you didn't like that he made?
And I'll say this as not an advocate of Treliving, but what different should he have done? because it sure seems like you've passed judgment on Treliving a lot sooner in his tenure.
As for the contract stuff. Utterly disagree. If you, as a GM, aren't using the wealth of the Toronto Maple Leafs to your advantage to actually compete against non-tax teams, which means getting AAVs nearer to what your competitors are paying. Then you're not doing it right. Why are you paying lump sums to that degree?
He capitulated on all fronts. And gave the $15m signing bonuses to these guys despite not winning anything and giving no advantage/break to the team. I'm sorry, but that's not good GMing.
But I'm sure you'll say, "Well, that's not how contracts are done." Right. Well, I guess not if you're a rookie who got taken to the shed.
Also, of course, Tavares factors in because Matthews was always going to be the highest-paid player. The moment JT's $11m is there, the precedent is set. Without John, Matthews' 2nd deal is either under Eichel's AAV (giving the team more cap space in those years) for shorter or possibly over ($11.6m) but for 7 or 8 seasons.
Worse players get paid less. What a shock!
Who's a worse player? You're not saying Mackinnon and Barkov are worse than Manrer, are you?
Based on their average impacts and realistic alternative options.
You don't know what is available, really. And if three players across three different positions cover for Marner, then they may be better off for it. I know you likely won't think so because you tend to view things as straight swaps. But it is possible, dear, particularly if it's a C and D.
Who knows, the loss of Manrer may actually inspire a big trade or offer sheet.
I know one thing that won't be inspiring is locking into this core for another, however many years if they do flame out early in the playoffs.
Mackinnon is 12.6m, and that's clearly not the reason. Especially with the cap skyrocketing. They wouldn't have exceeded a pretty normal range for their core. Either way, it doesn't work as an example to follow, because you don't even know that it was the right choice. They won the cup with their stars. They're 3-3 since the trade.
Yes, but that was with Mackinnon @ $6.3. You can have 3 of them if one of them is on a sweat deal like that. But they're projecting Mac @ 12.6 , Rantanen @ $13-$14m, and then Makar eventually @ $15m
That you can't do, and that's what the Leafs may be signing up for with a group that consists of 3 forwards who, again, haven't won anything close to what the Avalanche boys have.
No, because the purpose of sample size is to smooth out the differences and context, but there are even greater situational differences in the playoffs, and even more things that you need to account for. It makes smaller samples even less representative.
Not everything is Marner's fault. 36 games is a small sample size. It's not even his whole playoff sample.
That's just excuse-making at this point. The playoffs are a more intense and condensed format of playing; 36 games represent the last 5 seasons' worth of playoff games for Mitch, and he and Matthews, in particular, have been pretty disappointing. How else are we supposed to judge them?
So, I'm sorry if I take this into account before accessing his value to the team and contractually. I also don't mean to put it all on Mitch because he has had company at times, but when you're already on 11m, being a mildly ineffectual perimeter player during the most important games of the season is not a feather in his cap.
Every player ever, outside of rare instances where there is a massive injury concern. That doesn't apply here. The games he's missed are to random injuries, a pandemic, and resting for the playoffs. You're paying for the level they perform at when they play for your team.
Yes, which is a 90ish point player.
An example would be nice.
![dunno :dunno: :dunno:](/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/dunno.gif)
A player who's paid on his 3rd contract based on the pace rather than the actual numbers put up.
I mean, it is probably the biggest issue of the Shanahan era, paying players for what they may do rather than what they've done.
And what has been accomplished?