CarltonTheBear said:
25 for 29 and 76. In 2015 the trade was 24 for 29 and 61. So yeah doesn't look great in comparison but if St. Louis was the only team looking to trade up you have to kinda take what you can get. And I doubt they would have been interested in giving up 45, which was their only other pick.
I agree with this in the broad strokes but I suppose my thinking is, and forgive me for going off on a bit of a journey but this isn't a fully formed thought so much as a gut reaction, something along these lines:
When we talk about trading down we generally hold it to be a pretty good idea in one of three cases:
1. Your team doesn't really like anyone available at their spot
2. Your team thinks they can get the guy they want at the spot they trade down to and pick up an extra asset in the process
3. Your team has a bunch of guys they'd be equally happy with and know they can get one at the spot they trade down to.
Scenario #1 seems really only useful if you're drafting high and right about where a tier drops off. So it's the two others I think I have some uncertainty towards.
#2 is probably the most commonly cited but just in general I tend to think it's bad strategy. If there's a guy you like and he's there...I generally say just take him. Can you trade down and pick up another asset? Sure but you are taking a risk. Even if you're pretty sure that none of the teams between you and where you're trading down to will take him you're still risking that another team doesn't like the same prospect and doesn't trade up to snag him. I think really hitting on your 1st round pick is important enough that unless you're getting a really solid return, which like I said I don't think a mid-3rd is, it's not something I'd do.
Besides which if things do go wrong it's not like we'd ever know about it so the "Well, they were going to take him anyway at 25" is conjecture to some extent.
But also,I guess there's a part of me that looks at rationale #3 up there and thinks we maybe are too quick to assume that a sort of wishy-washy "Well, I think all four prospects are equally good" attitude could ever really be entirely disconnected from a desire to add assets. Knowing that you can trade down and add a pick, I think, could sort of smooth out the edges between prospects even if subconsciously. It's sort of the idea of those draft charts you're talking about. It's not that 29 is just as valuable as 25, it's that 29+76 grades out better. So likewise if say a team were scoring prospects out of 100 and they had four guys who all bunched together from 76-79 or something then the temptation might be to sort of ignore the small differences in favour of the asset.
Which, to be fair, I think has some merit but really more if you've got a prospect system that's painfully low on depth. In the Leafs' situation, where I think their depth is ok but they really need some high impact guys I guess I'm a little disappointed that with all of the resources at their disposal they wouldn't be able to laser focus in on one guy who they really think is going to be that high impact prospect.
Because I think if you can do that then if that guy's available where you're picking...you just take him and avoid the risk.
But, like I said, just thoughts percolating.