I assume that when you are referring to the "Brackett era" you're not referring to his time as a part-time regional scout.
We were discussing the likelihood of 2nd round picks making it generally before, so I don't see how this is even that relevant. And Brackett always specialized in the USHL/NCAA area of prospects, which applies to Demko. Seems like you're leaving out Demko as it goes against your argument that 2nd round picks aren't very likely to pan out? It just goes to show that the Canucks can hit on 2nd round picks every now and then.
Yes. It was certainly a high price to pay for Gudbranson. We basically traded two late 1sts + for him. But I think a lot of it does have to do with Gudbranson not being the top 4 right shot RD we hoped he would. If he was, the equation changes. In terms of the draft pick, it was certainly a high pick that gives you a good shot at drafting a first round talent who develops into a good NHL player. I think the Canucks did have a shot at drafting DeBrincat and Kryou (who were ranked 33rd and 34th, respectively, by McKenzie) but there is a huge difference between a 40 goal scoring DeBrincat and Kryou. I certainly wouldn't lose sleep over trading McCann and Kryou for a 2nd pairing right shot RD with size and physicality so the problem absolutely is Gudbranson not being the top 4 Dman we hoped he would be and DeBrincat having been as good as he was.
Agreed, the price was reasonable if we were getting a solid, young top 4 with top pairing upside. The other advantage to any of those prospects listed is that you are able to fill out the bottom 6 with much more cost-controlled, lower cap-hit players with more upside than players like Beagle/Roussel/Eriksson/Sutter/etc.
I guess I may be able to compartmentalize better than you here. To me you're talking about two different things. The Canucks have traditionally done poorly at the draft. It's a major reason why the Canucks have never won the Stanley Cup. Being a Canucks GM who is good at drafting is really a low bar that Benning has met. At the same time, the odds are the odds.
Agree to disagree. I recall Benning coming in as GM being heralded for his drafting/scouting abilities, and I also recall Benning supporters routinely pointing to our draft picks/prospects as the main reason for praising Benning. So it follows that it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to trade away draft picks when your GM's main strength is drafting. And it definitely doesn't make sense for fans to praise his drafting, and then say that 2nd round picks rarely work out so trading them isn't a big deal after all. All I take away from this is that there are certain people that are able to rationalize any actions made by a GM as they'd prefer to be "optimistic" or "glass half full" in spite of any of the evidence that arises to the contrary. It's easy to convince yourself everything is fine and live happily ignorant; I've definitely been guilty of it before.
What were the odds of Goldobin developing in to an NHL player at the time of acquisition and say a player you draft in the late 2nd?
Mentioning Goldobin is a red herring here. Trading for other team's prospects is an entirely different beast compared to drafting. Usually when a team is willing to trade one of their prospects, they probably have a good reason for it - whether it's the player's deficiencies on the ice (Goldobin's play away from the puck), or other things like personality/character/commitment issues. Draft picks are a clean slate where scouts can do their due diligence and select any player out of hundreds of prospects depending on their preference, which is much more preferrable for a rebuilding team IMO. The Goldobin/Vey/Dahlen/Pouliot/Clendening trades were just lazy shortcut, age gap experiments that failed - Benning just wanted to save the time a draft pick would take to develop and get someone NHL ready, but he clearly did a poor job scouting these prospects prior to making the trades based on the results.