- Jan 18, 2022
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The Habs had the 1OA they could’ve done anything they wanted! How much choice should the Habs have before you agree to call a spade a spade?Did the Habs really have a choice? Nobody from that draft played in the NHL in their first season (a consistent role anyway). They were all "projects" to a certain degree.
Note I am NOT re-litigating the choice to select Slafkovksy with the 1OA. There is no point to do so right now. But to say the Habs didn’t have a choice but to choose Slafkovsky is not remotely appropriate.
The Habs chose Slafkovksy and they chose to start him in the NHL and they chose to keep him last game9 and trigger his first year ELC and they chose to keep him even after he got rocked skating with his head down multiple times and they chose to keep him past game39 where it would count against his early UFA eligibility.
At every inflection point they had choices. And then he got a 40-game injury.
As for other options, my comment on the first page of this thread was written in July 2022. To summarize: I don’t know why they chose the W with question marks over the Cs and Ds with question marks. All things being equal we needed blue chip talent at C and D and both are harder to come by. If they had not picked Slafkovsky would anybody at that moment really have been surprised, shocked, disappointed, let down? I don’t think so, Slaf simply wasn’t a “must have” prospect in general or for the Habs. He was a very intriguing prospect but his warts were not hidden or few. And I don’t think the other options were as big projects as Slaf, tbh. If Wright is the Tinman then Slaf is the Scarecrow.
As for the C talk, some said Dach is the C we needed. I don’t agree. Dach isn’t a first line C right now. he might break 40pts this year and post a c.55 pt pace which is very good step up from last year. How much more can we expect him to improve? I don’t think it’s fair of Habs fans to expect Dach to add another 20pts to his PPG, that’s not really easy to come by.
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