Nik the Trik said:If Nonis thinks there's someone out there who can do the job he's tasked Nonis with as well or better than Nonis than I don't care in the slightest if Nonis is back next year. If not though, and I'm encouraged by the personnel moves made since February began, then I don't think there's an intrinsic value in paying Nonis not to work for the club.
Nonis can do other things if they want to keep him around. Might be time for Cliff Fletcher to pass his special adviser role on. Nonis can scout or be GM of the Marlies.
The deals since February didn't knock me out as acts of GM genius. Players going to the highest bidder and taking a phone call from Columbus on Horton.
I just think someone other than Nonis can examine moving existing deals they didn't sign easier because their name isn't on them and with that, to some extent, their legacy as a GM in Toronto isn't attached to the existing contract - they can just focus on getting max value. And if that max value isn't great, so be it. They can easily pull the trigger because they had nothing to do with the contract in the first place and therefore, it won't reflect as badly on them. They're just cleaning up the mess.
Nonis can't offer that. He has a bit of a conflict of interest. Might be in his best personal interest to hang on to a player longer, hoping he'll turn it around - even though the odds of that happening aren't great. That can put off the embarrassment in the media of how the deal is perceived by the other NHL GMs.
I think it's fair to question the accuracy of how well Nonis valued these guys. And how poorly he failed to build a roster with character.
A new assistant GM - he's not bogged down with any of that baggage.