herman
Well-known member
herman said:https://twitter.com/theflintor/status/1123706285717897217
Full: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ocm8uJs2s3U
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
herman said:https://twitter.com/theflintor/status/1123706285717897217
Guilt Trip said:You def don't want to give Marner an ultimatum. As for the Nylander deal. Money wise yes but the timing really didn't end up being fine. He missed 2 months and never got his game together. Total waste of a year. Leafs didn't appear to have a plan B in his situation. They absolutely need one with Marner. Willy should be fine next season.Nik the Trik said:It's not really a firm deadline if it's "If you don't sign by a particular date, we start considering our options". The Leafs should always be considering their options and an artificial deadline only hurts the Leafs' ability to come to a mutually beneficially agreement here.
For all the comparing the situation to Nylander, the Nylander deal ended up being fine.
Bullfrog said:Using ultimatum are not good negotiating tactics. Neither is saying: "$10M is the most we can afford, how about you take $9.5M?"
herman said:A lot of fans seem to see contract negotiation as a zero sum game. There is already ample evidence that Dubas and Pridham approach these with the goal being mutual benefit.
Ultimatum in my eyes is coming across as being cold. Take it or f-off kind of thing. I probably used the wrong word. You def have to have a deadline and you let them know it, but you also have to keep it friendly, right? You don't want a pissing contest.mr grieves said:Guilt Trip said:You def don't want to give Marner an ultimatum. As for the Nylander deal. Money wise yes but the timing really didn't end up being fine. He missed 2 months and never got his game together. Total waste of a year. Leafs didn't appear to have a plan B in his situation. They absolutely need one with Marner. Willy should be fine next season.Nik the Trik said:It's not really a firm deadline if it's "If you don't sign by a particular date, we start considering our options". The Leafs should always be considering their options and an artificial deadline only hurts the Leafs' ability to come to a mutually beneficially agreement here.
For all the comparing the situation to Nylander, the Nylander deal ended up being fine.
If you "def don't want to give Marner an ultimatum," then how on earth do you avoid a Nylander situation? Just sign him to whatever his agent asks for and be done with it?
Nik the Trik said:Kaberle15 said:With the difference the Leafs can not afford the year 1 penalty on the Cap for a late sign, plus how to deal with our RFAs and UFAs without knowing the Marner's Cap hit ?
Given that the range between Marner's initial ask and the sort of super-dream Team-friendly deal is probably no more than 2.5 million, that's not a number that should paralyze the Leafs' ability to make decisions on other guys.
herman said:A lot of fans seem to see contract negotiation as a zero sum game. There is already ample evidence that Dubas and Pridham approach these with the goal being mutual benefit.
Bullfrog said:So you're suggesting the Leafs offer $9M/year and then Mitch gets to pick how many years? That's bizarre. Why would the AAV of a 3-year contract be the same as an 8-year contract? One is buying UFA years; the other is not.
Your first example is an ultimatum.
Your second example doesn't consider Marner's interests fairly. It says the club's interests are 1st, then his are second. Deals should be fair; ideally, they're equally beneficial. In each example, you're dictating terms, and this will not go over well.
This is not even addressing the fact that saying they can afford $9M and not a loonie more is a lie.
mr grieves said:...
If your position is that, in dictating any of the terms, the Leafs are dictating all of the terms, then you're not describing a negotiation where mutual benefit is an outcome that's on the table.
disco said:Dreger reports: $10.16 x 5 years.
Bullfrog said:You're including a false premise in your argument: that the Leafs no.1 priority is to have as good or better a team as last year.
Bullfrog said:And then you're making assumptions based on that, such as Marner signing at $10M will prevent them from satisfying this assumed priority.
Bullfrog said:I could then infer an assumption that the alternative (say, 1st round draft picks and a top free agent [Panarin?]) achieves that priority. But if it does, then an assumption that the draft picks (futures) is acceptable completely falsifies the original premise. Because if they'd accept futures + a lesser player (because banking on Panarin is a pretty risky gamble), then why wouldn't they just pay Marner his money and accept the slight dip in other talent for a year?
Deebo said:disco said:Dreger reports: $10.16 x 5 years.
What is his report? that it is done? or just speculating?
herman said:A lot of fans seem to see contract negotiation as a zero sum game. There is already ample evidence that Dubas and Pridham approach these with the goal being mutual benefit.
CarltonTheBear said:Deebo said:disco said:Dreger reports: $10.16 x 5 years.
What is his report? that it is done? or just speculating?
I can't find any evidence Dreger said something like that, even just speculating. He's still on the $11mil talk.
Frank E said:I love you, man. But that's just a bunch of fluff. MLSE employs players to play hockey, and they negotiate a contract based on MLSE's benefit. Contract ask is too much? Then no deal, no employment.
Nik the Trik said:Frank E said:I love you, man. But that's just a bunch of fluff. MLSE employs players to play hockey, and they negotiate a contract based on MLSE's benefit. Contract ask is too much? Then no deal, no employment.
I think that what is meant there is that Dubas sees that it's not always in a team's best interest to necessarily get the player signed for the lowest possible price and that some negotiations can create rifts between players and teams that linger beyond when a deal is signed. I'd rather Marner sign a 9.5 million aav deal that he was happy with than a 9 million dollar deal he felt undervalued and disrespected by.