JoseCuervo wrote:TK is more valuable to this team than he is on the trade market
Trade wise, he'd be worth the most as an add-on in a deal...obviously not the main piece.
Moderators: Three Stars, dagny, pfim, netwolf
JoseCuervo wrote:TK is more valuable to this team than he is on the trade market

mikey287 wrote:shmenguin wrote:Pitts wrote:I would say (and agree with the earlier suggestion) that Joe Thornton or Phil Kessel was the most recent example of a guy traded simply to send a message.
seriously?
Well, I remember when Thornton was traded, and I remember exactly the second the Bruins' brass snapped...there was less than a minute left in a game between the Bruins and Devils on November 29, 2005 (nationally televised I believe)...Thornton faced off against John Madden deep in the Boston end, Thornton lost it clean and it went right on the blade of Alexander Mogilny and he blew it right past Andrew Raycroft to win it for New Jersey. At that very second, the Bruins built the team around Patrice Bergeron and gave up on Joe Thornton. They didn't care much for Thornton's on-ice play in the playoffs and his off-ice regiment wasn't exactly the stuff captains were made of...
Is that a message? I don't know exactly. I'm not even sure exactly what that means. But that's what went down.


BigMcK wrote:mikey287 wrote:shmenguin wrote:Pitts wrote:I would say (and agree with the earlier suggestion) that Joe Thornton or Phil Kessel was the most recent example of a guy traded simply to send a message.
seriously?
Well, I remember when Thornton was traded, and I remember exactly the second the Bruins' brass snapped...there was less than a minute left in a game between the Bruins and Devils on November 29, 2005 (nationally televised I believe)...Thornton faced off against John Madden deep in the Boston end, Thornton lost it clean and it went right on the blade of Alexander Mogilny and he blew it right past Andrew Raycroft to win it for New Jersey. At that very second, the Bruins built the team around Patrice Bergeron and gave up on Joe Thornton. They didn't care much for Thornton's on-ice play in the playoffs and his off-ice regiment wasn't exactly the stuff captains were made of...
Is that a message? I don't know exactly. I'm not even sure exactly what that means. But that's what went down.
That scenario is a perfect example of a shake-up trade that would show other players that everyone has a role and either perform up to expectation, or get moved. Given an opportunity to prove to your team that their financial and time investment in you as their big game equalizer was a smart move, and you whiff at the chance. A total 'Get it done or we will find someone else who will' message.


columbia wrote:I don't have a dog in this hunt, but a leadership change seems pretty close to message sending.
ie This is NOT the way to play.

shmenguin wrote:BigMcK wrote:mikey287 wrote:shmenguin wrote:Pitts wrote:I would say (and agree with the earlier suggestion) that Joe Thornton or Phil Kessel was the most recent example of a guy traded simply to send a message.
seriously?
Well, I remember when Thornton was traded, and I remember exactly the second the Bruins' brass snapped...there was less than a minute left in a game between the Bruins and Devils on November 29, 2005 (nationally televised I believe)...Thornton faced off against John Madden deep in the Boston end, Thornton lost it clean and it went right on the blade of Alexander Mogilny and he blew it right past Andrew Raycroft to win it for New Jersey. At that very second, the Bruins built the team around Patrice Bergeron and gave up on Joe Thornton. They didn't care much for Thornton's on-ice play in the playoffs and his off-ice regiment wasn't exactly the stuff captains were made of...
Is that a message? I don't know exactly. I'm not even sure exactly what that means. But that's what went down.
That scenario is a perfect example of a shake-up trade that would show other players that everyone has a role and either perform up to expectation, or get moved. Given an opportunity to prove to your team that their financial and time investment in you as their big game equalizer was a smart move, and you whiff at the chance. A total 'Get it done or we will find someone else who will' message.
trading thornton wasn't a message. it was a functional trade to change leadership. i may be wrong, but weren't there some financial implications as well?


BigMcK wrote:mikey287 wrote:shmenguin wrote:Pitts wrote:I would say (and agree with the earlier suggestion) that Joe Thornton or Phil Kessel was the most recent example of a guy traded simply to send a message.
seriously?
Well, I remember when Thornton was traded, and I remember exactly the second the Bruins' brass snapped...there was less than a minute left in a game between the Bruins and Devils on November 29, 2005 (nationally televised I believe)...Thornton faced off against John Madden deep in the Boston end, Thornton lost it clean and it went right on the blade of Alexander Mogilny and he blew it right past Andrew Raycroft to win it for New Jersey. At that very second, the Bruins built the team around Patrice Bergeron and gave up on Joe Thornton. They didn't care much for Thornton's on-ice play in the playoffs and his off-ice regiment wasn't exactly the stuff captains were made of...
Is that a message? I don't know exactly. I'm not even sure exactly what that means. But that's what went down.
That scenario is a perfect example of a shake-up trade that would show other players that everyone has a role and either perform up to expectation, or get moved. Given an opportunity to prove to your team that their financial and time investment in you as their big game equalizer was a smart move, and you whiff at the chance. A total 'Get it done or we will find someone else who will' message.



Malkamaniac wrote:On a scale of 1-10. If TK was actually traded, I think you and Shmenguin would register a 7.8 on the upset scale.




Malkamaniac wrote:On a scale of 1-10. If TK was actually traded, I think you and Shmenguin would register a 7.8 on the upset scale.

shmenguin wrote:Malkamaniac wrote:On a scale of 1-10. If TK was actually traded, I think you and Shmenguin would register a 7.8 on the upset scale.
i don't think i'd be that upset. contrary to what some people think, trades always happen for a real reason. i can't think of a realistic scenario where trading kennedy would be some sort of injustice. even if it's something where they NEED to cut some salary so they can afford paul stinkin' martin - i still understand where they're coming from.
plus i'm a fan of his n'all, but i get really jammed up about kennedy because the arguments that go against him are often completely devoid of reason. lack of reasoning drives me bonkers. so him being traded would add sanity to my life.

Malkamaniac wrote:shmenguin wrote:Malkamaniac wrote:On a scale of 1-10. If TK was actually traded, I think you and Shmenguin would register a 7.8 on the upset scale.
i don't think i'd be that upset. contrary to what some people think, trades always happen for a real reason. i can't think of a realistic scenario where trading kennedy would be some sort of injustice. even if it's something where they NEED to cut some salary so they can afford paul stinkin' martin - i still understand where they're coming from.
plus i'm a fan of his n'all, but i get really jammed up about kennedy because the arguments that go against him are often completely devoid of reason. lack of reasoning drives me bonkers. so him being traded would add sanity to my life.
Until I start hating on the next target.





Users browsing this forum: pekkasteele and 2 guests