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nfreeman

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Everything posted by nfreeman

  1. TJ Brodie, anyone? From the Athletic -- an article about top 20 players likely to be traded -- https://theathletic.com/1011961/2019/06/05/nhl-trade-board-top-20-players-who-could-move-this-summer/ He shoots left, he's 6'2", 180 lbs and had 34 pts in 21.5 min per game last year for a division-winning Calgary team. He's from Chatham, Ontario -- closer to Detroit, but only about 3.5 hrs to Buffalo. His contract status is obviously a major issue.
  2. First things first -- Nylander needs to make the freaking team. Based on performance to date, that's a 50/50 proposition at best. Having said that, if he makes the team, I don't he necessarily needs a top-6 spot (and certainly not right away) to prove himself. He needs to play his game, work his butt off, and the opportunities will come. It's not like there are a bunch of good wingers ahead of him.
  3. I think it would be serious GM malpractice to assume that any of those 3 is ready for a top-6 NHL role this season. If the Sabres are lucky, they'll get one top-9 winger out of those 3 this season. Care to elaborate?
  4. I think it's now-or-never for Nylander this year too.
  5. I feel your pain on those quotes, my friend. Yes -- last year he was able to elevate the 2nd line from the RW spot, even without much talent with him on that line. I think scoring depth is a huge issue for this team and having Reino on the 2nd line is an important part of the cure. This is my concern too -- I don't think he can skate well enough to cover a center's defensive responsibilities. I'm with TB on this. Skinner, assuming he signs, should be permanently stapled to Eichel. But by all means, let's get some talent to play with Reino on the 2nd line.
  6. Well, I sure hope you're right, but I thought their goaltending pretty much nose-dived in the 2nd half of last season. I thought they were getting (probably unsustainable) top-5 goaltending early in the season and by the 2nd half they were getting bottom-10 goaltending. I agree that the defense also fell apart, and that it's reasonable to think that better D will have help the goaltending, hopefully resulting in a magical Krueger defense-goaltending synergistic feedback loop -- but I really think it needs to start with better play in net. I don't see how they can bring him back. He looked completely out of gas to me as the season wore on. If the kids aren't ready to provide 2ndary scoring, then I'd rather try to find some speed and potential elsewhere. We know what Pommer is and the ceiling is pretty low at this point IMHO.
  7. I think Duchene will get substantially more than Skinner. As for "warriors" -- I think there is plenty of toughness in Skinner's game. And YMMV, of course, but I don't see "greedy" in a UFA trying to maximize (or come close to maximize) the dollars he gets out of the one chance in his life to market himself when his value in his profession is at its peak.
  8. We'll be the judge of that, sir.
  9. I thought the first Deadpool was better than any of the X-Men movies.
  10. I'm with Sabel on this -- I didn't love any of the X-men movies (including Logan, which I saw).
  11. I thought Rodak was fine.
  12. I generally agree with the substance here, but take it down a notch please.
  13. Serious question: have JB's repeated statements that he's confident, they're close to a deal, etc., been counter-productive? i.e. has he put himself into a corner by creating public expectations that Skinner will stay, and thus given Skinner more leverage to extract more $$, NMC, etc.? The only upside I can see to JB making these statements is atmospheric -- i.e. by continuing to praise Skinner and speak as though Skinner is and will remain a Sabre, JB is contributing to a positive "team togetherness" vibe that he thinks will help Skinner to decide to sign with the Sabres before going to UFA.
  14. Welcome back @New Scotland (NS)! Congrats on the new house! Is it the one you posted photos of a few months ago?
  15. There's no question Reino has great hands, a ton of other hockey skills and a high hockey IQ. He's also not offense-only and doesn't shy away from traffic. IMHO the question with him is whether some combination of coaching, contract motivation and internal determination/maturity/focus will be able to get it out of him consistently enough such that he becomes a mainstay that they can rely on to play a big role in lifting them out of loserdom. That's what they need from him, and from anyone to whom they make a long-term, big-money deal.
  16. One guy had likely borderline suicidal depression, another had bipolar disorder with substance abuse and the third forced his way off a team for the 2nd time. Would any of the the outcomes have been different on, say, Tampa? Maybe, but the first 2 seem pretty likely to have happened anywhere. In any case there is NFW of knowing and thus not really "because Buffalo" evidence.
  17. The article doesn't say anything about Howie.
  18. I read today that Siakam’s nickname is “Spicy P”.
  19. Is every player the same as every other player, with age being the only distinction?
  20. Nylander had 61 pts in each of his 1st 2 full NHL seasons, averaging 16:01 min and 16:41 min per game. (His 3rd season was largely wiped out due to his holdout.) Reino had 42, 47 and 50 pts in his first 3 NHL seasons, in about 17 min per game each year. Nylander has more speed and produces more shots, despite playing fewer minutes. It's a closer call than the other guys you mentioned, but I'd rather have Nylander. The numbers comparison is similar with Ehlers -- better production in his 2nd and 3rd NHL seasons (64 and 60 pts), with more shots, on fewer minutes. Ehlers (like most NHL forwards) also is faster than Reino. Now, both guys almost certainly have benefited by playing with much better teams than Reino has -- but I think it's fair to say that both got off to stronger starts to their careers than Reino did, which made their GMs more comfortable with awarding fat 2nd contracts than JB did with Reino.
  21. Yes -- I'd rather give it to Skinner. As I've posted before, I think goal-scoring is the most valuable skill there is in hockey, and Skinner has tons of it. He scores in a bunch of different ways. He's also fast, he plays with an edge and he fits beautifully on Eichel's wing. There is a decent chance that Reino proves to be worth more than Skinner, but he's not close to being there yet IMHO. (BTW, I moved a bunch of the Reino posts to the new Reino thread -- thanks @LGR4GM)
  22. I think this is kinda unfair -- Edwards is certainly a homer and "blowhard" can be sometimes applicable but he's pretty knowledgeable about hockey IMHO.
  23. Your comparison of Eichel and Marner is acute, as always. I think though that Marner is as good as Eichel in gaining the zone and carrying the puck. Marner is also more relentless, although Toronto's depth probably helps there. As for Reino, I will agree that his 1st half last season was better than good and close to great, but I will stand by "crappy" for his 2nd half (and was ready to do so before @Thornystepped up with the fact-checking). Look at his game log: http://www.espn.com/nhl/player/gamelog/_/id/3114722/sam-reinhart He had 3 points in true garbage time, i.e. the last 2 games of the season. So he had 22 pts in the 1st 39 games of the 2nd half -- a 46-pt pace. More importantly, as I've posted previously, there was a 19-game stretch from early Jan to late Feb in which the Sabres went from 3-4 games over DeLuca .500 to 3-4 games under -- and in that stretch, which was when the season was lost he was meh, with 1 or 2 shots on goal in 11 of those games, 1 goal in an 8-game stretch and 2 goals in an 11-game stretch. Was Reino as bad in the 2nd half last season as he was in the 1st half of the previous season (which, I'm sure you'll recall, was, similarly, when that season was lost at the same time Reino went on leave)? No. But he wasn't good, he wasn't a leader, notwithstanding his throwing of his goalies under the bus, and he sho-nuff didn't deliver what an allegedly (and incorrectly described, as Skinner is better) 2nd-best forward on a team is supposed to deliver. As for your list of comparables: if we're using the "25 GMs" metric, Pastrnak, Monahan, McKinnon, Barkov, Ehlers and probably Nylander are all clearly better than Reino -- and they all demonstrated it earlier in their careers. Well, you're kinda ignoring the key point here, which is how much it will cost to keep him. I certainly don't want to "move on" from Reino just because I'm annoyed with his inconsistency, his lousy skating, his lack of leadership and the fact that he isn't as good as Draisaitl. Even with those drawbacks, he's still a good, young, improving player with plenty of potential on a cost-controlled contract. But the decision isn't made in a vacuum. I don't want to make a long-term commitment to Reino unless and until he proves that he's part of the solution to the terminal suckitude that the Sabres have stupidly immersed themselves in. I think when guys get fat contracts that they don't deserve, it affects the mental state of the rest of the team. This is what happened with Roy and Stafford, and I don't want to repeat it. As I said last summer, I think Reino needs the motivation that a bridge deal provides. He improved last year over the prior year and I expect him to do the same this year. If he does, and puts together a consistent season in which he plays a big role in the team re-establishing itself as a non-joke franchise, he'll have earned the contract that many here are ready to give him -- and of course we'll never know whether he would've done so if he'd already had the contract in his pocket. YMMV, of course. Fair point, although as I note above, it's impossible to know whether he would've become a 65-point guy without the motivation of a bridge deal.
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