Indrid Cold
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- Oct 24, 2022
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Great question. It will likely end up with some great content and also a lot of people justifying why they chose their team as one of the top five in five years.Give us your top, and bottom 5 teams in 5 years' time.
Great question. It will likely end up with some great content and also a lot of people justifying why they chose their team as one of the top five in five years.
I think you have to take two lenses to this.
Having prefaced with this, her is my quick list but I am sure this will evolve when I read more in depth analysis from others.
- One is obviously the current young player and prospect roster. Which teams have the best group of players that will be in their primes five years from now.
- The other is cap and economics, not only which teams will have bad contracts holding them back in five years but also who will have spending power. As the cap continues to grow and perhaps exponentially we will see more of a gap between cap teams and budget teams. The Covid flat cap era leveled that paying field. We may go back to a dynamic where the top third of the league's spenders are spending $20M more per year than the bottom third.
TOP FIVE
Vancouver. Cap team that has some nice young pieces. Hughes, Demko, and Petterson will still be in their primes in key positions.
Edmonton. Same as Vancouver. They will spend to the cap and still have McDavid and Draisatl in the tale end of primes. Bouchard looks like something to build around. If Skinner has a decent career these guys will continue to contend.
Toronto. The flat cap hurt the Leafs more than most. They will still have Matthews, Nylander and Marner if they want him. They will have money to spend and some decent young support pieces (strong young goalie prospects).
Buffalo. Probably not a cap team and that will hurt them. Lots of good young D and a couple of young G that could be franchise guys. Lots of F depth hitting prime too.
Rangers. Will always outspend others. Possibly the best goalie in the league for the next five years. Some good young D and F.
LATE EDIT. Chicago could be in here too. It's all about Bedard being the next one. They will have budget and supporting pieces.
BOTTOM FIVE
Ottawa. Not a cap team. They have locked in most of their roster for the next five years and it doesn't seem to have the high end talent to lift them. They will continue to struggle to attract and retain FA without overpay. It's a tough position for a budget team.
Montreal. Similar to Ottawa though they can spend a bit more. What pieces do they have now that are going to lifr then out. Finishing too many seasons where they wer bad, but not bad enough to pick at the top of strong drafts will hurt them.
Tampa. How do they avoid this. Vasilevsky, Hedman, Point will all be old and unless they do a fire sale of these vets they have no way to restock the shelves. No picks or prospects and they seem to be trying to extend the current window rather than building for the next one.
Pittsburgh. See Tampa but happening sooner.
Calgary. Just starting a rebuild now. Can they attract FA or will they have to build through the draft. They have picks but no real young pieces yet. They have to hit on a lot of picks and be patient with their development. Hard to do.
Cool. Which teams are you sure will be better. I imagine you have the same opinion of my Edmonton selection? Since their "core" is only two and they are older than the Leafs you reference?I doubt the Leafs are a top 5 team 5 years from now with a core of players all over 30. Rielly will be over 30 also. Not a chance.
BOTTOM FIVE
Ottawa. Not a cap team. They have locked in most of their roster for the next five years and it doesn't seem to have the high end talent to lift them. They will continue to struggle to attract and retain FA without overpay. It's a tough position for a budget team.
Ya poster has a lot of wrong teams there, and falsehoods.They're within 2M of the cap ceiling with a 21-man roster. Any sign Andlauer is going to run them as a budget team?
I don't know for sure obviously. Yes, they are within $2M of the cap at $88M. If the cap rises 5% to 7% a year that has it at $115M in five years. Are they still spending to the cap?They're within 2M of the cap ceiling with a 21-man roster. Any sign Andlauer is going to run them as a budget team?
Cool. Does this poster have any actual substance to add? Better choices with less falsehoods?Ya poster has a lot of wrong teams there, and falsehoods.
It does have the real possibility of going this way. I tried to maintain objectivity.top 5: my team and 4 others
bottom 5: teams i dislike
Yeah, the only possible way to avoid this is to sell off Crosby, Malkin, Letang and Karlsson but that is not the direction. I understand this too. Take another shot while you have Crosby. At least the upcoming drought follows cup victories...a trade off most fanbases would happily make.My Pittsburgh Penguins should be in everyone’s bottom 5 list. Unfortunately, I don’t see anyway that they can avoid it. Would need their prospects to step up and get lucky on multiple others.
Andlauer has shown no signs of not spending, and adding to the front office.I don't know for sure obviously. Yes, they are within $2M of the cap at $88M. If the cap rises 5% to 7% a year that has it at $115M in five years. Are they still spending to the cap?
It's a smaller market with a smaller corporate base, the largest employer/industry is government and they don't spend like the private sector does on sponsorship, etc. The building is old and in a bad location, this could be the source of attendance issues. These have been the issues that have plagued the franchise forever. Maybe the new owner digs deep and finances losses. As I said, I don't know for sure and I am basing my thoughts on the future on data from the past. Things could change.
This is half of the equation, the other half is that they are coming out of a tank rebuild and with some nice pieces + Ullmark they shouldn't be banking on high draft picks for the next few years. Are those pieces good enough to change the trajectory here? They are all locked in (except Ullmark) so they need to hope they have bet on the right horses. Is the new coach a difference maker, more here than he was in Vancouver and NJ? He has coached to one winning season in his career so far.
I may be placing too much currency in economics but I do worry about small Canadian markets. Add in taxes, weather, and playing in a fishbowl and it's tough. I have two of them (+ Montreal) in my bottom five. Winnipeg concerns me too, though I think their current position is strong enough to not be a bottom five in five years.
Cool. Does this poster have any actual substance to add? Better choices with less falsehoods?
LmaoIt does have the real possibility of going this way. I tried to maintain objectivity.
No owner shows signs of not spending until they stop spending. It's not good for business to telegraph austerity. As I said, who knows. Maybe he finances losses.Andlauer has shown no signs of not spending, and adding to the front office.
Looking at a new building as well.
The building is old lmao, it’s 3 years younger than the leafs building, guess they’ll be building a new one soon as well.
Leafs won’t be top 5 in 5 years, they’re starting to drop in the east.
lol, at the cap hurt the leafs the most. It hurt all cap teams the same.
Lmao
Those are some good choices, especially on the bottom five. Washington seems likely, NYI always seem to stay in the mushy middle. I think St. Louis avoids bottom five because they have great management.1. Florida
2. Edmonton
3. Colorado
4. Dallas
5. Vancouver
28. Calgary
29. New York Islanders
30. Washington
31. St. Louis
32. Pittsburgh
You forgot to put team I like in the top 5 wtftop 5: my team and 4 others
bottom 5: teams i dislike
Even better is the "grinning idiot" emoji response but no comment. Or the picking one team that's wrong with the list but no alternative.You forgot to put team I like in the top 5 wtf
Those are some good choices, especially on the bottom five. Washington seems likely, NYI always seem to stay in the mushy middle. I think St. Louis avoids bottom five because they have great management.
On the top end, the age of Dallas is an issue. Having said this, core key players are young enough. They have good management.
I think Florida starts the cup-hangover cap-related dismantling soon. Do they have any actual young pieces that will augment their aging core? They don't need to be stars, just guys that can help Barkov and Reinhart. Bobrovsky coming off the books helps, but then they need a goalie. They have good management also.
Colorado? I agree they could be there with MacKinnon and Makar. They need more pieces and a goalie.
Edmonton and Vancouver were on my list and pretty interchangeable with the Leafs.
I find the fun and value in these types of questions and polls is discussing the criteria and decision making process.Yah, ultimately so much unknown but my general criteria was teams that are good now and who's best players are still young-ish. Florida and Colorado were definitely tougher picks for me. For Florida, I like that most of their core pieces are still under 30 including Tkachuk at 26. Both those teams will need to figure out goaltending in five years. And I like the mangement of both.
Bottom five was probably harder than top five. You never know who might hang on to the middle vs. commit to a rebuild and all it takes is a draft pick hit or two or some hot goaltending and you'll stay out of the true basement (for better or worse).
Little early to put that label onGreat question. It will likely end up with some great content and also a lot of people justifying why they chose their team as one of the top five in five years.
I think you have to take two lenses to this.
Having prefaced with this, her is my quick list but I am sure this will evolve when I read more in depth analysis from others.
- One is obviously the current young player and prospect roster. Which teams have the best group of players that will be in their primes five years from now.
- The other is cap and economics, not only which teams will have bad contracts holding them back in five years but also who will have spending power. As the cap continues to grow and perhaps exponentially we will see more of a gap between cap teams and budget teams. The Covid flat cap era leveled that paying field. We may go back to a dynamic where the top third of the league's spenders are spending $20M more per year than the bottom third.
TOP FIVE
Vancouver. Cap team that has some nice young pieces. Hughes, Demko, and Petterson will still be in their primes in key positions.
Edmonton. Same as Vancouver. They will spend to the cap and still have McDavid and Draisatl in the tale end of primes. Bouchard looks like something to build around. If Skinner has a decent career these guys will continue to contend.
Toronto. The flat cap hurt the Leafs more than most. They will still have Matthews, Nylander and Marner if they want him. They will have money to spend and some decent young support pieces (strong young goalie prospects).
Buffalo. Probably not a cap team and that will hurt them. Lots of good young D and a couple of young G that could be franchise guys. Lots of F depth hitting prime too.
Rangers. Will always outspend others. Possibly the best goalie in the league for the next five years. Some good young D and F.
LATE EDIT. Chicago could be in here too. It's all about Bedard being the next one. They will have budget and supporting pieces.
BOTTOM FIVE
Ottawa. Not a cap team. They have locked in most of their roster for the next five years and it doesn't seem to have the high end talent to lift them. They will continue to struggle to attract and retain FA without overpay. It's a tough position for a budget team.
Montreal. Similar to Ottawa though they can spend a bit more. What pieces do they have now that are going to lifr then out. Finishing too many seasons where they wer bad, but not bad enough to pick at the top of strong drafts will hurt them.
Tampa. How do they avoid this. Vasilevsky, Hedman, Point will all be old and unless they do a fire sale of these vets they have no way to restock the shelves. No picks or prospects and they seem to be trying to extend the current window rather than building for the next one.
Pittsburgh. See Tampa but happening sooner.
Calgary. Just starting a rebuild now. Can they attract FA or will they have to build through the draft. They have picks but no real young pieces yet. They have to hit on a lot of picks and be patient with their development. Hard to do.
1. Florida
2. Edmonton
3. Colorado
4. Dallas
5. Vancouver
28. Calgary
29. New York Islanders
30. Washington
31. St. Louis
32. Pittsburgh
Isn't it a little early, five years too early to put that label on anyone?Little early to put that label on
Montreal
The thing to remember is that their crash was exasperated by setting records for man games lost to injury. I see at least a 10 point improvement thus year with an upside of a play off spot especially if they can trimm off another 100 man games lost to injury.Isn't it a little early, five years too early to put that label on anyone?
I worry that Montreal did not maximize their tank window. They have some decent pieces and maybe they get another high pick this year but otherwise I don't see the core there to lift them out. They might not be bottom five, but mushy middle. Then of course, how long does that fanbase tolerate mediocrity?
I don't love their coaching or management to get them out of this and I am not sure what kind of UFA destination they are.