Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Moderator: Referees
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Hey tuna I'm just quoting the Career stats on wiki, what can I say?
You're the guy trying to claim the guy is a superstar playoff performer.
You're nicely trying to point out a ppg average while neglecting context.
It's pretty telling that the guy since he was thirteen has played 22 playoff games
I should be asking you if you're serious...
You're the guy trying to claim the guy is a superstar playoff performer.
You're nicely trying to point out a ppg average while neglecting context.
It's pretty telling that the guy since he was thirteen has played 22 playoff games
I should be asking you if you're serious...
- BladesofSteel
- CC Hall of Fan Member
- Posts: 1546
- Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2011 6:29 pm
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Yes but UK, the stats don't lie.
:p
:p
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
NHL stats, no. Peewee stats, well maybe...BladesofSteel wrote:Yes but UK, the stats don't lie.
:p
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
That's the thing about stats tuna you can manipulate them anyway you like.BigTuna wrote:NHL stats, no. Peewee stats, well maybe...BladesofSteel wrote:Yes but UK, the stats don't lie.
:p
Figures never lie, but liars sure figure...
Edit) careful now, I ain't calling you liar big T, just pointing out all the figuring it takes to stretch a paltry 22 games into superstardom over a life time of playing hockey at all levels. Peewee, bantam, college and pro...
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Yup. Every year. All 2 of them.BigTuna wrote: He's played 8 years, not 14. And the Bruins were making the playoff with him every year.
And he was a 0.56 ppg average for the Bruins over those 3 seasons.....wait a second.....did I say 3 seasons? But Kessel only recorded playoff games played in 2 of those 3 seasons. Oh that's right, the Bruins failed to qualify for the playoffs in 2006-07. And Kessel played 70 games for them that year!!!!!
Yeah.....so Kessel was an integral cog in that there Boston Bruin machine. They traded him after they were ousted in the semi-finals in 2008-09. They got the same results in 2009-10. Then won the Stanley Cup in 2010-11.
I tell ya, that there Phil Kessel was the engine driving the Bruins playoff hopes, he was the one keeping them in the race.
- Hockey Widow
- CC Legend
- Posts: 16112
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2011 8:52 pm
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
As a goal scorer Kessel is the type of player you want as a complimentary player, not as the key player to build a team around. He would have been great to have around when we needed scoring to compliment the rest of the team. But he is not leadership material and not a franchise type player.
That's the main point I think in all of this. The Bruins understood this which is why they leaped at the BB offer. They were thrilled to get the first round picks, what they did with them after that is not relevant to the discussion. They converted a good young scorer who did not have leadership skills nor was he a franchise player, into two great young assets.
I would love to have Kessel on the Canucks second line at 5-6 million per, which is what he is worth but then again we see how many silly contracts are out there. The other point in all of this was that BB calculated, quite wrongly, that the addition of Kessel would make them a playoff team and a building block to becoming a contender. He didn't bank on being a lottery team and losing such high picks. If he had for seen that it is highly unlikely he does that deal. Which by the way, is what the hockey world as saying at the time. Sure, give up those picks for a Kessel type, but at the right time in the team development. It was the wrong player at the wrong time. If the leaves were on the verge of becoming a contender then it would have been the right move. As it is that move set the franchise back 10 years.
If Kessel hoists a cup with the leaves before his contract expires then he will prove us all, except the fish, wrong.
That's the main point I think in all of this. The Bruins understood this which is why they leaped at the BB offer. They were thrilled to get the first round picks, what they did with them after that is not relevant to the discussion. They converted a good young scorer who did not have leadership skills nor was he a franchise player, into two great young assets.
I would love to have Kessel on the Canucks second line at 5-6 million per, which is what he is worth but then again we see how many silly contracts are out there. The other point in all of this was that BB calculated, quite wrongly, that the addition of Kessel would make them a playoff team and a building block to becoming a contender. He didn't bank on being a lottery team and losing such high picks. If he had for seen that it is highly unlikely he does that deal. Which by the way, is what the hockey world as saying at the time. Sure, give up those picks for a Kessel type, but at the right time in the team development. It was the wrong player at the wrong time. If the leaves were on the verge of becoming a contender then it would have been the right move. As it is that move set the franchise back 10 years.
If Kessel hoists a cup with the leaves before his contract expires then he will prove us all, except the fish, wrong.
The only HW the Canucks need
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
This is a good point.....I think that Kessel has all the skill required to be a franchise player, he just lacks the heart and attitude. The leaves literally have 2 of the worst "top players" at their positions when it comes down to it. Kessel and Phaneuf. Neither of them are franchise guys, but they are being paid like they are. Kessel doesn't have the attitude and Phaneuf lacks the brains.Hockey Widow wrote:As a goal scorer Kessel is the type of player you want as a complimentary player, not as the key player to build a team around. He would have been great to have around when we needed scoring to compliment the rest of the team. But he is not leadership material and not a franchise type player.
That's the main point I think in all of this. The Bruins understood this which is why they leaped at the BB offer. They were thrilled to get the first round picks, what they did with them after that is not relevant to the discussion. They converted a good young scorer who did not have leadership skills nor was he a franchise player, into two great young assets.
Kessel has been putting up top 3 numbers for the last 3 seasons. He's streak prone, and not much of a team guy when it comes to playing in all 3 zones, but you can't question the numbers. Saying he's worth $5M-$6M is a low-ball assessment. He's worth $6.5M easily if you base this on scoring alone, probably $7M.HW wrote: I would love to have Kessel on the Canucks second line at 5-6 million per, which is what he is worth but then again we see how many silly contracts are out there. The other point in all of this was that BB calculated, quite wrongly, that the addition of Kessel would make them a playoff team and a building block to becoming a contender. He didn't bank on being a lottery team and losing such high picks. If he had for seen that it is highly unlikely he does that deal. Which by the way, is what the hockey world as saying at the time. Sure, give up those picks for a Kessel type, but at the right time in the team development. It was the wrong player at the wrong time. If the leaves were on the verge of becoming a contender then it would have been the right move. As it is that move set the franchise back 10 years.
He has never had a real center to play with in Toronto, and who knows, maybe that has diminished his value and his attitude as well. We all saw how Kesler responded to several years of being a top forward while management failed to get him any legitimate linemates to play with.
You are right about Burke's mistake in building around him. There are very few wingers in the league that a team should build around. I can't think of many at all right now that have ever been true franchise players when playing without legitimate top 3 linemates. Franchise players are generally considered to be centers, stud defensemen, and goaltenders. Wingers are generally players who finish plays and don't have the acumen to be a force in all 3 zones.
Nah. Even if the leaves do hoist a cup with Kessel, he won't be the leader on that team if/when they do. He will be a top scorer, but it will be another player who leads them there. The only thing it will prove is that Kessel couldn't do it alone.....think Scottie Pippen.HW wrote: If Kessel hoists a cup with the leaves before his contract expires then he will prove us all, except the fish, wrong.
- Hockey Widow
- CC Legend
- Posts: 16112
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2011 8:52 pm
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
^^^^
That Mëds, was a good response! Betamax could learn from this
That Mëds, was a good response! Betamax could learn from this
The only HW the Canucks need
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Hockey Widow wrote:As a goal scorer Kessel is the type of player you want as a complimentary player, not as the key player to build a team around. He would have been great to have around when we needed scoring to compliment the rest of the team. But he is not leadership material and not a franchise type player.
That's the main point I think in all of this. The Bruins understood this which is why they leaped at the BB offer. They were thrilled to get the first round picks, what they did with them after that is not relevant to the discussion. They converted a good young scorer who did not have leadership skills nor was he a franchise player, into two great young assets.
I would love to have Kessel on the Canucks second line at 5-6 million per, which is what he is worth but then again we see how many silly contracts are out there. The other point in all of this was that BB calculated, quite wrongly, that the addition of Kessel would make them a playoff team and a building block to becoming a contender. He didn't bank on being a lottery team and losing such high picks. If he had for seen that it is highly unlikely he does that deal. Which by the way, is what the hockey world as saying at the time. Sure, give up those picks for a Kessel type, but at the right time in the team development. It was the wrong player at the wrong time. If the leaves were on the verge of becoming a contender then it would have been the right move. As it is that move set the franchise back 10 years.
If Kessel hoists a cup with the leaves before his contract expires then he will prove us all, except the fish, wrong.
He's a PPG player in his prime and you think he's worth 5-6 million? LOL. There's third liners earning that. Second only to Giroux in points the last 3 seasons. a PPG player with Bozak but he's so overpaid at 8 million per. He's outscoring your Sedins now.
And BTW, Kessel isn't just a "Goal Scorer" he has amongst the most assists of any player the past two seasons. You're selling him short by saying he just scores goals. And please show me what "Complimentary Player" puts up Kessel's stats? There are NONE.
Top scoring wingers were getting 8 million years ago with a lower cap.
And not having Seguin and Hamilton set them back 10 years? Seriously? If they had no Kessel and Hamilton+Seguin you think they're so much better? They might not even have Morgan Rielly, who knows. And he's more talented than Hamilton (But of course he's a Leaf, so he's not a "Building Block).
Last edited by BigTuna on Sun Aug 17, 2014 11:48 am, edited 4 times in total.
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
You mean the seasons he was a teenager and had cancer? You're the one who claimed they traded him because they weren't successful. They thought the exact same of Tyler Seguin.Mëds wrote:Yup. Every year. All 2 of them.BigTuna wrote: He's played 8 years, not 14. And the Bruins were making the playoff with him every year.
And he was a 0.56 ppg average for the Bruins over those 3 seasons.....wait a second.....did I say 3 seasons? But Kessel only recorded playoff games played in 2 of those 3 seasons. Oh that's right, the Bruins failed to qualify for the playoffs in 2006-07. And Kessel played 70 games for them that year!!!!!
Yeah.....so Kessel was an integral cog in that there Boston Bruin machine. They traded him after they were ousted in the semi-finals in 2008-09. They got the same results in 2009-10. Then won the Stanley Cup in 2010-11.
I tell ya, that there Phil Kessel was the engine driving the Bruins playoff hopes, he was the one keeping them in the race.
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
I forgot he had cancer, that's a point in the pro column.
lol tuna I admire your loyalty, but bottom line is phat Phil is phat Phil because he wears Rob Ford blue and it says canuckscorner on the top left of your screen.
da guy is a bum
lol tuna I admire your loyalty, but bottom line is phat Phil is phat Phil because he wears Rob Ford blue and it says canuckscorner on the top left of your screen.
da guy is a bum
- Strangelove
- Moderator & MVP
- Posts: 28122
- Joined: Sat Dec 18, 2004 12:13 pm
- Location: Lake Vostok
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Yeah Phil was a good cherrypicking goalscorer.
But there's no excuse for that kind of ballessness.
I speak of him in the past tense because I don't think he will pass the physical this season.
But there's no excuse for that kind of ballessness.
I speak of him in the past tense because I don't think he will pass the physical this season.
____
Try to focus on someday.
Try to focus on someday.
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Where did I claim they traded him because they weren't successful?BigTuna wrote:You mean the seasons he was a teenager and had cancer? You're the one who claimed they traded him because they weren't successful. They thought the exact same of Tyler Seguin.Mëds wrote:Yup. Every year. All 2 of them.BigTuna wrote: He's played 8 years, not 14. And the Bruins were making the playoff with him every year.
And he was a 0.56 ppg average for the Bruins over those 3 seasons.....wait a second.....did I say 3 seasons? But Kessel only recorded playoff games played in 2 of those 3 seasons. Oh that's right, the Bruins failed to qualify for the playoffs in 2006-07. And Kessel played 70 games for them that year!!!!!
Yeah.....so Kessel was an integral cog in that there Boston Bruin machine. They traded him after they were ousted in the semi-finals in 2008-09. They got the same results in 2009-10. Then won the Stanley Cup in 2010-11.
I tell ya, that there Phil Kessel was the engine driving the Bruins playoff hopes, he was the one keeping them in the race.
YOU said they were making the playoffs with him every year.....like wow.....a whole 2 seasons where he was putting up 3rd line numbers.
My point was that they traded him after they were ousted in the 2nd round and that they didn't miss a beat. Kessel meant nothing to the Bruins success while he was with them, and he meant very little to their success in the future outside of Seguin and Hamilton's contributions.....the merits of which are still somewhat up for debate.
So I don't even bother getting into the "who won the Kessel trade" nonsense, because really, who cares? Boston dumped his ass to Toronto and won a Cup 2 years later. The impact of the Kessel trade on that was not exactly earth shattering.
Consider this though when thinking about how much Kessel is worth......
Kessel is a pure goal scorer. He doesn't bring much of anything else to the table. He gets $8M for that.
Kessel has played a grand total of 7 playoff games since he became the defacto top winger on his team. He is a career minus-41, he doesn't kill penalties, and he sure doesn't hit. He has won an Olympic Silver Medal, and a pair of International junior medals (Silver and Gold). He hasn't won anything of note at the professional level.
Jeff Carter has been lumped into the category of a one-trick pony goal scorer by several talking heads. He gets $5.2M for that. He has been badly mislabeled by those who consider him to be nothing more than just a goal scoring forward.
Carter has been a key contributor at every level.....and by key contributor I mean that he has been a big part of his teams winning it all. WJC Gold. Olympic Gold. Calder Cup. 2 Stanley Cups. He plays with an edge, he goes to the dirty areas, he checks, he wins faceoffs, he plays on all special teams. 111 playoff games under his belt and a career plus-47.
Considering that Carter is not considered to be a franchise player for any of his teams, and Kessel is the forward Toronto is building around, one has to wonder what the fuck TML fans and management are smoking.
It also begs the question: Why do you think Kessel is so valuable and worthy of his $8M?
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
Jeff Carter has an 11 year contract. His cap hit would be far higher if he signed it today. Apples and oranges. Rick Nash gets 8 million. Why not compare him? You're cherry-picking.
Why is Kessel worth 8 million? Statistics. That's what you throw at a team to get your deal. You can't dispute it. Only Giroux has scored more than Kessel the past 3 years. (That's overall points, not just goals).
And stop the "Pure Goal Scorer who doesn't do anything else" nonsense. Kessel is an elite passer and one of the top assists getters the past couple of seasons. To say he's worth 5-6 million in 2014 is absolutely laughable. He has scored a lot more than Jeff Carter has recently. In fact, while Carter had a great year, he hasn't been consistently a top forward at all. Philly dump him for drinking, his first year in L.A they won the cup and he did not play well at all. Phil has been much more consistent. In fact, you can talk about Carter in the Olympics, but Phil Kessel was the best forward at the Olympics.
Kessel signed his deal in much more recent circumstances with Patrick Kane. He gets 10.5 million. Kessel gets 8 million no issues there.
Jeff Carter is not considered a franchise player? Neither is Phil Kessel. have you heard the criticism this guy gets?
And are the leaves truly building around Phil Kessel? What about Bernier, Rielly, Nylander, Phaneuf, JVR, Kadri?
Why is Kessel worth 8 million? Statistics. That's what you throw at a team to get your deal. You can't dispute it. Only Giroux has scored more than Kessel the past 3 years. (That's overall points, not just goals).
And stop the "Pure Goal Scorer who doesn't do anything else" nonsense. Kessel is an elite passer and one of the top assists getters the past couple of seasons. To say he's worth 5-6 million in 2014 is absolutely laughable. He has scored a lot more than Jeff Carter has recently. In fact, while Carter had a great year, he hasn't been consistently a top forward at all. Philly dump him for drinking, his first year in L.A they won the cup and he did not play well at all. Phil has been much more consistent. In fact, you can talk about Carter in the Olympics, but Phil Kessel was the best forward at the Olympics.
Kessel signed his deal in much more recent circumstances with Patrick Kane. He gets 10.5 million. Kessel gets 8 million no issues there.
Jeff Carter is not considered a franchise player? Neither is Phil Kessel. have you heard the criticism this guy gets?
And are the leaves truly building around Phil Kessel? What about Bernier, Rielly, Nylander, Phaneuf, JVR, Kadri?
Last edited by BigTuna on Mon Aug 18, 2014 2:44 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Around the league (signings, RFAs injuries)
You guys are really lowballing Phil here IMO.
I mean even a one-balled Phil Kessel has more balls and more finish than a two-balled yet nutless Daniel Sedin.
And they make close to the same dough.
But yeah, this is riveting stuff guys. Can't get enough leaves talk on this site.
*sits back with popcorn to read the Mëds vs. Tuna summer novel, thinks better of it and heads outside*
I mean even a one-balled Phil Kessel has more balls and more finish than a two-balled yet nutless Daniel Sedin.
And they make close to the same dough.
But yeah, this is riveting stuff guys. Can't get enough leaves talk on this site.
*sits back with popcorn to read the Mëds vs. Tuna summer novel, thinks better of it and heads outside*
Chairman of the Jim Benning Appreciation Society