Cousin Strawberry wrote: ↑Sat Jul 19, 2025 1:33 pm
Picker I disagree "Karlsson plays naturally grittier than Joshua"
Comparing the 2 I'd say DJ is quite decidedly the better player at every facet of the game including bringing grit and scoring.
The question is about risk and return on your cap investment. In this sense, considering DJ's play post nut removal, the value/return on cap investment is a wash or even leaning in Karlssons favour .... especially when you factor in that Dakota may never recover from said nut removal
Correct about risk/return. We are talking about marginal value; even if Joshua repeats his career best 30 point season with a handful of WTF minor penalties and decent penalty killing and Karlsson doesn’t take a step forward, it’s a pebble of a difference compared to, say, EP40 playing halfway decent or Demko playing at all.
But I don’t think we should assume Karlsson will be a worse player than Joshua over the next 3 seasons (or next year). Linus Karlsson has improved his game every season since he’s been Canucks property. He profiles with a bottom 6 game, yet solved the AHL as a top line player. His mitts are decent, his o-zone intelligence is high, his hand eye is good. The knock on his game is skating—and he’s not quick—but while Joshua had decent speed, he had terrible edgework.
Understand that Dakota Joshua accomplished no more than Linus Karlsson at Karlsson’s age. Neither had played more than a few dozen nhl games. Now most guys with such a scant resume at 25 will settle at tweener and never earn a $13 million contract; Joshua did because he improved significantly defensively and provided decent scoring one season—and a good playoff run. I rag on him a bit, but he absolutely improved his game in a meaningful way, especially in the d zone, and that reliability got him the minutes it takes to score a bit more.
I actually think the chances are good that Karlsson can have a 30 point season so long as he can be good enough two ways to earn the coach’s trust. His play around the net is quite good, so he’ll have his chances to convert back door passes, and score on tips, rebounds, and point shots that hit him while he’s battling with a defenseman.