Let him sit and let him think LONG and hard about his position.Zee said:Hypothetical Monday:
So what if Nylander's camp won't budge off his ask (and say it's in the $8M range) and he asks for a trade? What would you do?
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Let him sit and let him think LONG and hard about his position.Zee said:Hypothetical Monday:
So what if Nylander's camp won't budge off his ask (and say it's in the $8M range) and he asks for a trade? What would you do?
princedpw said:[quote author=mr grieves]
But we all agree fair compensation for Nylander is in that $7.5-8m range.
Nik the Trik said:And if you, Lou, feel comfortable with making an offer like that because you're not a contender then you're also probably taking a huge risk that the Leafs wouldn't match and be happy to take your draft picks off your hands. Which, as we saw with Kessel, can be a long term negative for you even if the player you get is a very good one.
Nik the Trik said:Remember that players have to agree to offer sheets. So unless you're offering them something way over and above what their team is willing to match, you probably have to also do some schmoozing and convincing them not only of your desire for them to join your team but your belief that you can build a winning club around them. Again, your idea here is that a team would do all this in bad faith just to slightly mess with another team's cap.
Nik the Trik said:Which is the final thing. I don't think teams are really going to let it mess with their cap too much. Dubas may very well be hoping to get Nylander at 6-7 for his long term plans but Nylander at 7-8 would just make their future depth thornier, not a disaster.
Coco-puffs said:princedpw said:[quote author=mr grieves]
But we all agree fair compensation for Nylander is in that $7.5-8m range.
Im not sure we all agree on that one. For an 8 year contract ... maybe.
mr grieves said:Coco-puffs said:princedpw said:[quote author=mr grieves]
But we all agree fair compensation for Nylander is in that $7.5-8m range.
Im not sure we all agree on that one. For an 8 year contract ... maybe.
Exactly. My "fair" number is certainly different based on term.
6 yrs? 6.75M is probably fair based on history.
8 yrs? 7.5M is probably fair based on history.
cabber24 said:I am not stressed at all... we're a pretty good team. He can wait and sign at number that works for the team.
Zee said:cabber24 said:I am not stressed at all... we're a pretty good team. He can wait and sign at number that works for the team.
It's just fascinating to watch it play out on your own team. I know there's a handful of guys every year that go through this but I never really cared before cause it wasn't the Leafs. Leafs aren't under any pressure to get this done since the team is still good without Nylander, so Dubas holds the hammer here. Will be interesting to see how this gets resolved.
OldTimeHockey said:Zee said:cabber24 said:I am not stressed at all... we're a pretty good team. He can wait and sign at number that works for the team.
It's just fascinating to watch it play out on your own team. I know there's a handful of guys every year that go through this but I never really cared before cause it wasn't the Leafs. Leafs aren't under any pressure to get this done since the team is still good without Nylander, so Dubas holds the hammer here. Will be interesting to see how this gets resolved.
The last time I remember a player of significance holding out was Kaberle. I believe that was 2000 or 2001
Zee said:OldTimeHockey said:Zee said:cabber24 said:I am not stressed at all... we're a pretty good team. He can wait and sign at number that works for the team.
It's just fascinating to watch it play out on your own team. I know there's a handful of guys every year that go through this but I never really cared before cause it wasn't the Leafs. Leafs aren't under any pressure to get this done since the team is still good without Nylander, so Dubas holds the hammer here. Will be interesting to see how this gets resolved.
The last time I remember a player of significance holding out was Kaberle. I believe that was 2000 or 2001
You mean from the Leafs. Recently there's been other guys who've signed very late. Trouba comes to mind as he signed in November I think.
mr grieves said:Yeah, it'd be a bad move for Lou, and the only potential upside would be, y'know, spite. But if I were GM of a team that's on the way up, I'd consider it. Panthers and Buffalo (well, maybe next year) in the Leafs division, or any of the teams are likely to have to get through the Leafs in the East at some point in the next 5 years -- so, NJ, Philadelphia, Carolina, maybe Columbus.
mr grieves said:Yes, but I'd imagine there are plenty of RFAs who know that the team that holds their rights would match within the 24 (48?) hour window. How many times has the original team not matched? And the end result is that the player would be under contract -- a good one -- on the team they want to play for. So, if I were Nylander's agent and a $8 x 7 year offer sheet showed up from the Panthers, I'd see it as a way of resolving my client's contract stalemate.
mr grieves said:Like I said, death by a thousand paper cuts. Hobble a contender through a bunch of small overpayments.
OldTimeHockey said:Zee said:cabber24 said:I am not stressed at all... we're a pretty good team. He can wait and sign at number that works for the team.
It's just fascinating to watch it play out on your own team. I know there's a handful of guys every year that go through this but I never really cared before cause it wasn't the Leafs. Leafs aren't under any pressure to get this done since the team is still good without Nylander, so Dubas holds the hammer here. Will be interesting to see how this gets resolved.
The last time I remember a player of significance holding out was Kaberle. I believe that was 2000 or 2001
Nik the Trik said:OldTimeHockey said:Zee said:cabber24 said:I am not stressed at all... we're a pretty good team. He can wait and sign at number that works for the team.
It's just fascinating to watch it play out on your own team. I know there's a handful of guys every year that go through this but I never really cared before cause it wasn't the Leafs. Leafs aren't under any pressure to get this done since the team is still good without Nylander, so Dubas holds the hammer here. Will be interesting to see how this gets resolved.
The last time I remember a player of significance holding out was Kaberle. I believe that was 2000 or 2001
Nylander isn't holding out, he doesn't have a contract.
And Kadri didn't sign his bridge deal until mid-September.
Nik the Trik said:OldTimeHockey said:Zee said:cabber24 said:I am not stressed at all... we're a pretty good team. He can wait and sign at number that works for the team.
It's just fascinating to watch it play out on your own team. I know there's a handful of guys every year that go through this but I never really cared before cause it wasn't the Leafs. Leafs aren't under any pressure to get this done since the team is still good without Nylander, so Dubas holds the hammer here. Will be interesting to see how this gets resolved.
The last time I remember a player of significance holding out was Kaberle. I believe that was 2000 or 2001
Nylander isn't holding out, he doesn't have a contract.
And Kadri didn't sign his bridge deal until mid-September.
Zee said:Kadri signed the day before training camp began with the Leafs so he missed nothing. We're well beyond that point with Nylander.
Nik the Trik said:Zee said:Kadri signed the day before training camp began with the Leafs so he missed nothing. We're well beyond that point with Nylander.
We're 12 days beyond that point.
OldTimeHockey said:I'd say the difference between 12 days in August and 12 days from the first day of training camp is significant.
Nik the Trik said:Nylander isn't holding out, he doesn't have a contract.
Deebo said:I don't where that definition of holdout came from but I hear sports radio guys say the same thing. That it isn't a hold out if you don't have a contract. I would call failing to report when you are under contract a breach of contract, not a hold out.
The dictionary definition of holdout seems to describe what Nylander is doing:
http://www.learnersdictionary.com/definition/holdout
1 : a person who refuses to reach an agreement until certain terms are met
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/holdout
someone that does not agree or consent, usually because they are attempting to gain concessions or a better deal
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/holdout
1. An act of resisting something or refusing to accept what is offered.