Hmm, verkar som att GMs i många NHL-klubbar blivit lite fartblinda och strör pengar omkring sig. Jag som trodde att det var just pga denna "fartblindhet" som lönetaket kom till.
Inte bara jag som känner så
"The labour dispute was supposedly launched because small market teams could not compete for the best players because salaries were too high. Everybody takes a year off. Salaries are reset so that a Sergei Gonchar would have earned $2.75 million last year. Suddenly Pittsburgh - Pittsburgh! - is committing $25 million to him over five years!
The whole point was supposed to be that salaries were out of whack. We go through all that pain, the players are put in their place, salaries are whacked back, and the Pittsburgh Penguins and Edmonton Oilers start throwing around money. Why? What has made the financial situation of the Pittsburgh Penguins so much better over the past year? Why aren't the gains made in the new CBA being used to put franchises that were supposedly doomed on sound financial footing?"
WarhawK: Verkar som att tänkbara spelare för Flyers att trada är Roenick, Handzus eller Desjardins. Man har tydligen förnekat från Flyers-håll att det inte var aktuellt med att trada Roenick till Kings.
Någon som inte är riktigt nöjd med traden Peca mot York, antar jag
"Are Peca's intangibles really worth paying at least $1mil (depends what York signs for) and trading a player 4 years younger? I don't think so.
Are Oilers fans excited that their team is finally a buyer and not a seller? or are they pissed because their team is suddenly just going frickin' nuts tossing money around after years of crying poor?
Oilers now have $22.1mil commited to 13 players. The Oilers need to resign RFA's like Ales Hemsky, Shawn Horcoff, and Ryan Smyth. Methinks Lowe ought to be stopped before he can do more damage."
Poffa: Tja, man har ju uppenbarligen inte tänkt sig att utnyttja maxgränsen för lönetaket i varje fall. Men vem tar då över som den som säljer souvenirer i Avs. De två gamla nyförvärven lär ju inte göra det i varje fall. Hejduk, kanske.
Tja, att Foppa skulle få ett bud som var nästan hälften jämfört med en femteback som Malik hade man aldrig kunnat tänka sig.
Hmm, hade MoDo någon föraning om var Foppa kunde tänka sig att hamna eftersom den nya matchtröjan är enligt uppgift baserad på Flyers matchtröja.
Tja, att det kommer någon form av reaktion från MoDo-håll är inte underligt eftersom (vad jag förstått) så står väl Salo fortfarande under kontrakt med MoDo. Det här bättrar väl inte direkt på förhållandet med Frölunda, antar jag. Undrar vad Ahdrian tycker?
Det återstår ju att se om det står en Salo i motståndarkassen i premiäromgången. Nu när Steen är borta måste vi ju ha någon som höjer temperaturen inför och under matcherna...
Poffa: Jo, det är klart. Har man satsat stora pengar i en spelare som gått skadad större delen av de senaste säsongerna så är det klart att man funderar en extra gång innan man är beredd att satsa pengar på honom.
Fast under Foppas skadeperiod 2003 så hittade man ju exempelvis en utmärkt radarpartner till Hejduk i Marek Svatos, nog för att deras samarbete bara varade i drygt fyra matcher men ändå. Återstår att se om den killen kan få ett lyft kommande säsong. Han har tydligen, även han, varit väldigt skadedrabbad. Återkommande axelskador har jag för mig.
Hmm, för mycket high-five:ande månne? ;)
Sett ur alternativet att behålla Foppa och trada iväg Hejduk så känns det mer rätt att satsa på Hejduk.
Paddan: Jahapp, det behövdes alltså att Foppa bytte klubb och att Avalanches message board kraschade för att jag skulle bli tillåten in igen. Märkligt, eller intressant... jag kan inte riktigt bestämma mig.
Shit, det här var nästan värre än modohockey.se. Drygt 40 trådar om händelserna under natten till idag.
Unable to keep Peter Forsberg or Adam Foote, the Colorado Avalanche moved quickly to sign veterans Pierre Turgeon and Patrice Brisebois to two-year contracts Wednesday night.
Both signed deals that will pay them $1.5 million in the upcoming season, the same as was offered to Forsberg and Foote. Brisebois will make $3 million in his second year and Turgeon $1.5 million.
The transactions capped a busy three-day session for Avalanche general manager Pierre Lacroix, who wanted to keep Foote and Forsberg, but because of the way the new salary cap is structured, didn't think it was wise to offer either more than $1.5 million for next season.
"Peter was so understanding, just like Adam was," Lacroix said. "They were very understanding of the situation. They know it's a new era of the NHL. Other teams are doing different things, but other teams don't have the quality and roots we have."
There was a possibility of offering more to Forsberg and parting with some of the younger players, like Tanguay and Hejduk, but "I don't think the fans would have been proud of me for that," Lacroix said.
The GM said he was sad to say goodbye to Forsberg, who has played his entire career with the Avalanche organization and was considered the best player in hockey when he was healthy. But in his thinking, there was no way to increase the offer to him over the four-year, $13.5 million deal he tendered.
"We would have had to ask Peter to play one shift on defense and one at forward," had the team offered more than the $1.5 million, Lacroix said.
Petey21: Hmm, det där såg väl inte farligare ut än exempelvis Frölundas forum på Svenska Fans efter att Steen skrivit på för MoDo ;)
Knepigt ändå, 5.7 miljoner borde ju inte ligga utom räckhåll för Colorado känns det som. Men det återstår att se vad Foppa själv säger om affären. Gissar att det lär vara rätt många journalister mm som försöker att komma i kontakt med honom för närvarande.
Albert Hall: Tja, jag har svårt att se det, för närvarande. Känns som att man framförallt på backsidan är alldeles för långsamma och tunga för det "nya snabba" NHL.
knaskamilla: Tja, just nu känns det som att en post som GM i Avalanche inte är en angenäm sits. De enda två, vad jag kommer på, som varit med sedan Quebec-franchisen skriver kontrakt med andra klubbar.
WarhawK: Tja, vad ska man säga. Det var någon journalist som skrev, angående signandet av Malik, att " i New York så verkar man tro att ju fler dollar man investerar desto bättre investering ser det ut som att man gjort." Tja, någonting åt det hållet i varje fall
WarhawK: I samband med presskonferensen som förkunnade att Brent Sopel lämnar Canucks så meddelade man också att en värvning av en back var att vänta inom kort.
WarhawK: Förstår jag Eklunds kryptiska och korta text så ska det vara någon form av trade med Gagne. Fast Eklund har väl hunnit ha fel ungefär 150% av gångerna hittills, känns det som.
WarhawK: Pingvinerna från Stålstaden har, enligt Sportsnet, skrivit kontrakt med några draftpicks från 2001 och 2002. Backarna Noah Welch och Ryan Lannon som närmast kommer från Harvard
"The Boston Bruins have agreed to terms with defenseman Brian Leetch on a one-year contract, it was announced today by Bruins General Manager Mike O'Connell. Leetch was an unrestricted free agent, and in keeping with club policy, terms of the contract were not released."
Mats GBG: Nu har även det tjeckiska hockeyförbundet valt att säga nej till avtalet med NHL. Samtliga 14 klubbar i högsta ligan ogillar det nya avtalet.
Verkar som att Red Wings har svårigheter att hitta någon lösning på kontraktsfrågan med Zäta och Datsyuk
"Contract talks with Datsyuk and Zetterberg, however, are going nowhere. ``I don't know what it's going to take to sign Datsyuk and Zetterberg,'' Holland said. ``My thoughts and their thoughts aren't close. It's a little bit of a guessing game on how much money we'll have.''
A league source said Datsyuk's agent, Gary Greenstin, is asking for ``way more'' than the $3.8 million a year the Wings are paying Robert Lang. Greenstin said Datsyuk should be paid like one of the top players in the NHL.
But, he's had only one good season (30 goals, 38 assists in 2003-04) and has struggled in the playoffs (no goals in his last 16 games). The Wings aren't going to break the bank to keep him, even if it means letting him play in Russia. Greenstin said Datsyuk has a lucrative offer on the table from Moscow Dynamo.
Negotiations with Zetterberg are proving to be nearly as difficult. A report in a Swedish newspaper indicated Zetterberg is seeking a huge raise ($2.5 million per season) from his salary in 2003-04 ($650,000).
Don't expect Datsyuk or Zetterberg to come to terms any time soon."
Äh, vi tar väl en artikel till när jag ändå är på gång
Team competitiveness key to Nazzy's return Two other teams matched Vancouver's three-year, $18-million-US offer
Tony Gallagher The Province
Wednesday, August 03, 2005
In the end, it seems Vancouver general manager Dave Nonis was extremely successful in selling the take-less, compete-more theory to his Swedish superstar Markus Naslund, the pitch evidently falling on receptive ears Tuesday night.
Naslund opted to return to the Canucks late in the evening because he wanted to play here and because the other two high-revenue teams which matched the offer of $18 million US over three years he will receive from Vancouver weren't, in his view, quite as ready to compete now as is the local club.
The agreement comes as great relief to the ownership and management of the Canucks, who were looking at restructuring their team had Naslund decided to take his skills elsewhere -- not really what you want to do from a marketing point of view given the NHL is returning from a tiresome lockout.
Naslund's re-signing allows them to hit the ice in much the same shape as they were when the lockout began, which is far more than most teams can boast. It puts them in what should be excellent shape for a good start to the season Oct 5.
"We evaluated every element to this and in the end it all pointed to the market being what it is and Markus' desire to return to Vancouver," said Naslund's exhausted Kingston, Ont. agent Mike Gillis, who had a long day also signing clients Tony Amonte (Calgary), Bobby Holik (Atlanta) and Pavol Demitra (Los Angeles).
"There's no doubt that competitiveness played a huge part in his decision and maybe the way it is now, you really do have to sacrifice a little to be on a winner.
"I mean, there's a reason why Martin Brodeur took less to stay playing in New Jersey. Obviously, money was not the overriding factor in Markus' final decision."
The return certainly blows away all the nonsense about Naslund being bothered by the personal attention he receives in this city, and the burden of being the captain and having to speak to the media every day during the season, as has been suggested publicly over the last two weeks.
Had he been troubled by these factors, the other cities in the running would surely have been given more consideration.
The locking up of Naslund comes just as the league appears set to make an announcement on the reinstatement of the Swede's longtime linemate Todd Bertuzzi, who will certainly be heartened to hear that when he does return to the ice the chemistry the pair generates should still be very much intact.
Bertuzzi is said to be in the best shape of his life, tipping the scales at 238 pounds, roughly 10 pounds lighter than when he was suspended by the league in March 2004.
Naslund went to bed late Tuesday night in Sweden and was not answering his phone, but his decision now allows Nonis to go about the business of actually improving the team that left disappointed after losing Game 7 to the Calgary Flames last year.
Word is he has made inquiries about Paul Kariya and at least two other players about the possibility of joining the Canucks, whose image around the league certainly gets a lift with Naslund's return.
That's great news," said Ed Jovanovski from Florida, where he was trying to contact his departing defensive partner of last year, Marek Malik, to congratulate him on his big-money deal.
"Obviously Markus is a big part of our team, the captain, and he brings a lot with his presence. With the new rules, I expect he'll really be something special this year. The rules will help him ... they should help us all. I just hope they find a guy for me to play with soon."
Jovanovski will become an unrestricted free agent at the end of next year, so he presents the next big challenge toward keeping this team together (the market for Scott Niedermayer likely to be a good indicator of where he'll come in next year at just 30 years of age).
Ibland lönar det sig att läsa message boards, ja förutom Avalanches som inte ens vill låta mig besöka den sidan utan säger att jag är "banned".
Här kommer artikeln
"Naslund signing shows Nonis has a firm grip No one needs to worry about 'boy GM'
Ed Willes The Province
Wednesday, August 03, 2005
Considering that the world around him was going insane -- and considering the next couple of days would make or break the Vancouver Canucks, to say nothing of his embryonic career as an executive -- Dave Nonis sounded fairly calm Tuesday.
Yes, he said, negotiations were under way with Markus Naslund and the captain was aware of the Canucks' limitations. Yes, there had been talks with Scott Niedermayer, but Nonis doesn't regard the situation as either/or ... in other words, the Canucks wanted to proceed with Naslund and the familiar core which, tragically, no longer includes Marek Malik, or they would rebuild around Niedermayer and a new nucleus.
Nonis left the distinct impression he's very much in control of things, which may come as some comfort to the faithful who are used to the more theatrical style of his predecessor.
Then again, there was a reason he sounded very much in control of things. Nonis, as The Province's Tony Gallagher uncovered later in the evening, had locked up Naslund for the next three years, thereby securing the core of his team and, just as importantly, securing his position as the new sheriff in town.
With the player market in the new NHL moving at the speed of light, there was some concern over the new man's ability to do the job. But with the signing of Naslund, Nonis has sent a clear message about the franchise's future and his own abilities.
He isn't Brian Burke. He's still a little green. But in a hyper-accelerated marketplace, where GMs are adding and discarding players as if they were managing fantasy-league teams, Nonis delivered the one player he had to deliver.
Now the Canucks can get on with their season and the fans can get on with the serious business of living and dying with this team. But the one thing they no longer have to worry about is the boy general manager.
"The pieces only fit if the numbers let them fit," Nonis said earlier in the day. "If it doesn't work out, it's up to us to move on to something else."
Still, earlier on Tuesday, there was some question over what would be left if things didn't work out for the Canucks. Day 2 of the new NHL was marked by unprecedented movement around the league, but as Canucks fans waited for news of Naslund, Plan A, or Niedermayer, the organization's fallback, the only announcement concerned the loss of the useful but expendable Malik to the always accommodating New York Rangers.
Niedermayer's name, in fact, generated most of the heat throughout the day. Late in the afternoon, his agent Kevin Epp said the great defenceman could finalize his decision as early as today -- which seemed to indicate he would choose between Vancouver and Calgary. Niedermayer, who's also contemplating a multi-year, $6.8-million-US-per offer from the New Jersey Devils, may still end up in Vancouver, but if Nonis can find a way to work Naslund, Todd Bertuzzi and Niedermayer under the salary cap, he should consider a new line of work.
Minister of Finance pops to mind.
But, in the end, Naslund was restored to his team and this market, and there's something reassuring about that. The sublime Swede might have received more money elsewhere but Naslund, you sensed, was never fully about the money.
Being captain of the Canucks seemed to mean something to him. Playing in Vancouver seemed to mean something to him. The fans' unconditional affection for him seemed to mean something to him. Today, all those things we always thought about him will be confirmed.
It's funny. During the course of attempting to track this story down Tuesday, a call was placed to Burke to see if he had any interest in signing Naslund for his new club in Anaheim. The Canucks' former GM protested he'd never do that to Nonis.
"[Naslund] should finish his career in Vancouver as a Canuck," Burke said. And there was something very right in that.
Paddan: Jahapp, man kanske skulle ha kollat tidningarna i Vancouver också. The Province skriver något om att han signat med Canucks, men mer går det inte att få ut då man som femtielva andra tidningar i USA och Canada måste vara medlem för att få läsa artiklarna.