rypper
21-12-05 it's finally over.
- Dec 22, 2006
- 17,223
- 22,067
This trade will really show its worth at the deadline.
Well this part isn't accurate at all.
- Both Poolman and Landeskog will be on LTIR for the entire regular season.
- Once a team goes into LTI, adding additional LTIR contracts is irrelevant to anything other than contracts /50 and real money.
- That makes this trade Colorado buying a 4th round pick for cash.
- Brannstrom goes to Vancouver as a proxy for retention. He is on a 1-way contract and is not going to make Colorado.
- So it's Colorado buying a 4th round pick for 1.4M (80 percent of Poolman's salary minus Brannstrom's 900k).
- Retained salary doesn't go on LTIR, so for Vancouver they are paying a 4th round pick to be able to bank money towards the Trade Deadline. They did not have to go into LTI because they could have gotten under the cap, but 2.4M in open cap space is significant.
- There is also a small chance that they can get a 4th-7th round type pick for Brannstrom down the line. Teams with injuries will always give up late picks for legitimate NHL defenseman. Once he clears and becomes waiver exempt, that makes him more valuable.
I don't think so.Both Poolman and Landeskog will be on LTIR for the entire regular season.
- Both Poolman and Landeskog will be on LTIR for the entire regular season.
- Once a team goes into LTI, adding additional LTIR contracts is irrelevant to anything other than contracts /50 and real money.
- That makes this trade Colorado buying a 4th round pick for cash.
- Brannstrom goes to Vancouver as a proxy for retention. He is on a 1-way contract and is not going to make Colorado.
- So it's Colorado buying a 4th round pick for 1.4M (80 percent of Poolman's salary minus Brannstrom's 900k).
- Retained salary doesn't go on LTIR, so for Vancouver they are paying a 4th round pick to be able to bank money towards the Trade Deadline. They did not have to go into LTI because they could have gotten under the cap, but 2.4M in open cap space is significant.
- There is also a small chance that they can get a 4th-7th round type pick for Brannstrom down the line. Teams with injuries will always give up late picks for legitimate NHL defenseman. Once he clears and becomes waiver exempt, that makes him more valuable.
Thanks for the succinct summary. I think there are a lot of posters who really don’t understand the deal and its implications.
- Both Poolman and Landeskog will be on LTIR for the entire regular season.
- Once a team goes into LTI, adding additional LTIR contracts is irrelevant to anything other than contracts /50 and real money.
- That makes this trade Colorado buying a 4th round pick for cash.
- Brannstrom goes to Vancouver as a proxy for retention. He is on a 1-way contract and is not going to make Colorado.
- So it's Colorado buying a 4th round pick for 1.4M (80 percent of Poolman's salary minus Brannstrom's 900k).
- Retained salary doesn't go on LTIR, so for Vancouver they are paying a 4th round pick to be able to bank money towards the Trade Deadline. They did not have to go into LTI because they could have gotten under the cap, but 2.4M in open cap space is significant.
- There is also a small chance that they can get a 4th-7th round type pick for Brannstrom down the line. Teams with injuries will always give up late picks for legitimate NHL defenseman. Once he clears and becomes waiver exempt, that makes him more valuable.
Who the f*** is VCR?
Well this part isn't accurate at all.
I'm mostly curious about the 20% retention. I believe its possible the Avs are gonna be in a situation where they're actually still going to get to bank cap space. IIRC there's something about the Cap and the way LTIR works where if you can get as close to the cap as possible without going over, before utilizing LTIR, you can continue to bank a bunch of space.
I think with the 20% retention the Avs are going to be extremely close to that cap, like maybe $70,000 under or something silly.
I think Brannstrom gets picked up on waivers.
Not lip service at all... In fact, the current timeline has him back before January.Is he actually coming back before the playoffs, or is that just lip service?
I don't think he gets picked up on waivers unless there is an injury before the time a claim has to be made.
I think it's more likely that he clears and then gets traded somewhere else. Especially if another team has their own 1-way contract buried that they can swap in the trade.
I doubt he spends the entire season in Vancouver's org'. Someone will need a defenseman who has played in the NHL before and give up a late pick for him.
I think Brannstrom gets picked up on waivers.
First couple pages were painful to read.Absolutely hilarious thread so far of fans not understanding how the cap works and proclaiming x fleeced x. This is a win win trade
Not lip service at all... In fact, the current timeline has him back before January.
Just say you don't understand how the cap works in regards to LTIR and cap accrual and take the L mateFam, Avs need to accrue capspace too to bring Landeskog and Nuke back blud.
I think a bad team would give him a shot to let him just all out as a PMD. Like maybe Chicago or Sharks.
I don't think they will want him on 1-way money when he isn't guaranteed a spot in the NHL.
With that said, it's possible that once he clears a team might take him if they really like him. He won't come with the opportunity spot of taking up an NHL spot, and he could work his way back up.
You have no idea how the salary cap worksWow, Allvin just got owned by CMac. A free draft pick essentially.
Not sure why it matters once he clears waivers. Cause hes still on a NHL contract if they trade for him and dont play him in the NHL. If anyone likes him, just get him now while he is free. Worst case, you waive him and just pay him nhl $ or vancouver will just pick him up again.