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I never said he was doing anything wrong, he has that right, you either buy in or you don't, no judgement at all. Can't blame anyone for trying to max their income at all.Guilt Trip said:Absolutely. Nylander is doing nothing wrong and neither are the Leafs. It will work out in the end. Fans need to chill.Nik the Trik said:Highlander said:ight now it seems Nylander is bit mercenary and that is leaving a lot of fans with a bad taste in their mouths.
Those fans should probably grow up.
I doubt they know anything.sickbeast said:TSN posted today that they have a source telling them that Nylander still has not budged off his $8 million figure.
cabber24 said:I doubt they know anything.sickbeast said:TSN posted today that they have a source telling them that Nylander still has not budged off his $8 million figure.
Highlander said:I am just old school and remember when most hockey players sold cars or insurance or started a side business to make a living during the summer, or Bobby Baun playing on a broken ankle to score the winner. Things and time change.
Now, the rules around restricted free agency were different then. But make no mistake. At age 22, precisely Nylander?s age, Shanahan looked out for Shanahan. He became the seventh-highest-paid player in the NHL, earning more in his first year in St. Louis than Mark Messier would earn winning the Hart Trophy for the New York Rangers. And as for pursuing the Stanley Cup? Partly as a result of the price St. Louis paid to acquire Shanahan ? which included captain Scott Stevens in a controversial compensation award ? the Blues lost in the first round of the playoffs in three of Shanahan?s four seasons in St. Louis. They never made it past the second round. In other words, Shanahan?s priority in his youth was building his fortune, not his legend.
princedpw said:Shanahan?s comments are a mistake.
Frycer14 said:princedpw said:Shanahan?s comments are a mistake.
Yeah, maybe he came on a bit strong in that department. If he had just said something along the lines that "there's benefits other than money to be part of a strong franchise, and we hope our RFAs buy into that" and kind of left it there, it would have been more palatable.
Ultimately, I think the reason he spoke out was because he wanted everyone to know (players and agents included) that the whole management team was firmly behind the GM.
How does that work? Let's say they trade him to Carolina. I'm guessing Carolina would work out a deal with Nylander prior to making the trade?AvroArrow said:Assuming the Leafs have told teams they're not trading Nylander (which was rumoured to be what they told the Canes), at what point do the Leafs start serious trade negotiations with other teams regarding Nylander?
Do they ride it out to November, December, the new year?
If, for instance, they wait until the new year, there's always the chance they don't complete a trade before the trade deadline (since trades take time).
AvroArrow said:Assuming the Leafs have told teams they're not trading Nylander (which was rumoured to be what they told the Canes), at what point do the Leafs start serious trade negotiations with other teams regarding Nylander?
Do they ride it out to November, December, the new year?
If, for instance, they wait until the new year, there's always the chance they don't complete a trade before the trade deadline (since trades take time).
...when a deal is finally concluded ? say it?s $7.5-million for seven years, the AAV is going to have to be bumped up to make him whole for the salary he?s not collecting at the moment. Take that $7.5-million and make it $7.85-million.
Call it a two million dollar difference per year for the sake of discussion. If this is a six to eight year contract, the dispute is over something between $12-million and $16-million.
...Toronto will give you an AAV of $6.5-million on Dec. 1...you?re basically risking $2-million or so for a potential payoff of between $12-million and $16-million. Even though Nylander might be light on leverage at the moment, it?s pretty easy to see why he?d be willing to wait. Call it an investment of $2-million or so with a potentially very high rate of return.
herman said:AvroArrow said:Assuming the Leafs have told teams they're not trading Nylander (which was rumoured to be what they told the Canes), at what point do the Leafs start serious trade negotiations with other teams regarding Nylander?
Do they ride it out to November, December, the new year?
If, for instance, they wait until the new year, there's always the chance they don't complete a trade before the trade deadline (since trades take time).
If unsigned by December 1, Nylander would be ineligible to play for the season.
If Leafs wait until after October 15th they can give him 7x7 and the cap hit for subsequent years is lower than 7Bullfrog said:How is he not worth $7M?
Though I understand everyone's human, I'm skeptical about how much the Leafs current performance has on any negotiations.
Zee said:If Leafs wait until after October 15th they can give him 7x7 and the cap hit for subsequent years is lower than 7Bullfrog said:How is he not worth $7M?
Though I understand everyone's human, I'm skeptical about how much the Leafs current performance has on any negotiations.
And its great that he didNik the Trik said:Highlander said:I am just old school and remember when most hockey players sold cars or insurance or started a side business to make a living during the summer, or Bobby Baun playing on a broken ankle to score the winner. Things and time change.
Yeah, those guys didn't actually like that situation. It's why guys like Ted Lindsay fought so hard to change things.