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Guilt Trip said:Madano? Lets hope not. Yes he was a very good player but I never thought of him as elite. I like this comparison better...Patrick said:High-end from what I've heard is a more defensively capable version of Mike Modano.
Low-end is probably Chris Drury.
Marc Crawford, Matthews? coach with the Lions, couldn?t have given the young star more praise, lauding his hockey sense and comparing him to two current NHL superstars as well as the Hall of Fame centre who he won the 1996 Stanley Cup with in Colorado.
?He will be a No. 1 centre in the NHL and his game will be one where I think he can dominate with his shot and his abiltiy to make short area plays - dekes and shots and quick passes that spring people,? Crawford told Yahoo Canada Sports. ?He?s a little like Anze Kopitar and a little like Jamie Benn. His speed and the way he drives the net is like Anze. He shoots like Benn and stays on puck for second chances like him.
?The player he reminds me most of is Joe Sakic. Joe didn?t need to play with outstandingly great players, he made people better by converting passes that seemingly weren?t very good, he was good at putting pucks in really good areas. His release and shot is like Sakic?s, Joe was deceptive with shooting angles, Auston has those same abilities. He is a great scoring centre.?
Nik the Trik said:I swear to god, next person who suggests trading this pick is getting tossed in the lake.
mr grieves said:But but but but... What about trading #1 to Winnipeg for #2 and Trouba or Columbus for #3 and Jones? Pick a Finn, sign Stamkos, contend.
Nik the Trik said:mr grieves said:But but but but... What about trading #1 to Winnipeg for #2 and Trouba or Columbus for #3 and Jones? Pick a Finn, sign Stamkos, contend.
Have you seen the lake recently?
Patrick said:Guys, one thing nobody has really mentioned is, should the Leafs consider trading the pick?
I mean maybe to Arizona? Worth considering at least.
We here at Monday Morning Quarterback Central might not subscribe to the theory that the fix was in on the NHL draft lottery.
Why would the NHL want to arrange the result? Sure, Rogers paid a bazillion dollars for the broadcast rights. Yeah, the ratings for the network?s game telecasts are down there where the submarines roam, so Rogers is taking a bath on its NHL investment.
And yes, the Toronto Maple Leafs are the linchpin of that whole broadcast deal and they?ve been rancid since around 1967. But rig the draft so that the NHL?s pet franchise gets a crack at the top pick? Only a greedy, money-obsessed sports league would even ? oh, never mind.
What is more troublesome than the possibility that the NHL might have rigged the lottery is the process that brought us to this point: Blatant, persistent tanking is fatal to a sports league. Any league. The players on the ice may be trying hard, but when management has already ensured failure by shipping out most of their high-priced players, that?s tanking.
That?s what the Toronto Maple Leafs did this year: they tanked. That Brendan Shanahan is being praised for tanking is so mind-bending, we won?t even go there. Somehow, even with the lottery percentages altered to give the league?s worst team only a 20 per cent shot at the top pick, the Leafs still beat 5-to-1 odds to waltz away with the chance to draft Auston Matthews.
herman said:http://montrealgazette.com/sports/jack-todd-draft-lottery-leaves-a-bad-smell-hovering-over-nhl
I smell butthurt.
We here at Monday Morning Quarterback Central might not subscribe to the theory that the fix was in on the NHL draft lottery.
Why would the NHL want to arrange the result? Sure, Rogers paid a bazillion dollars for the broadcast rights. Yeah, the ratings for the network?s game telecasts are down there where the submarines roam, so Rogers is taking a bath on its NHL investment.
And yes, the Toronto Maple Leafs are the linchpin of that whole broadcast deal and they?ve been rancid since around 1967. But rig the draft so that the NHL?s pet franchise gets a crack at the top pick? Only a greedy, money-obsessed sports league would even ? oh, never mind.
What is more troublesome than the possibility that the NHL might have rigged the lottery is the process that brought us to this point: Blatant, persistent tanking is fatal to a sports league. Any league. The players on the ice may be trying hard, but when management has already ensured failure by shipping out most of their high-priced players, that?s tanking.
That?s what the Toronto Maple Leafs did this year: they tanked. That Brendan Shanahan is being praised for tanking is so mind-bending, we won?t even go there. Somehow, even with the lottery percentages altered to give the league?s worst team only a 20 per cent shot at the top pick, the Leafs still beat 5-to-1 odds to waltz away with the chance to draft Auston Matthews.
herman said:http://montrealgazette.com/sports/jack-todd-draft-lottery-leaves-a-bad-smell-hovering-over-nhl
I smell butthurt.
That?s what the Toronto Maple Leafs did this year: they tanked. That Brendan Shanahan is being praised for tanking is so mind-bending, we won?t even go there. Somehow, even with the lottery percentages altered to give the league?s worst team only a 20 per cent shot at the top pick, the Leafs still beat 5-to-1 odds to waltz away with the chance to draft Auston Matthews.
bustaheims said:herman said:http://montrealgazette.com/sports/jack-todd-draft-lottery-leaves-a-bad-smell-hovering-over-nhl
I smell butthurt.
That?s what the Toronto Maple Leafs did this year: they tanked. That Brendan Shanahan is being praised for tanking is so mind-bending, we won?t even go there. Somehow, even with the lottery percentages altered to give the league?s worst team only a 20 per cent shot at the top pick, the Leafs still beat 5-to-1 odds to waltz away with the chance to draft Auston Matthews.
This may a little in the nitpicking realm of things, but, the odds were 4-to-1, not 5-to-1. Yes, the Leafs beat the odds, but, any team that could have won any of the three lottery would have had to beat the odds to do so.
Nik the Trik said:That said, he's right that incentivizing failure is awful for a league and he's further right that it's not something that should be praised exactly but that has nothing to do with the Leafs winning the pick this year.