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herman said:*cackling
Weekly allowance?
herman said:*cackling
Weekly allowance?
herman said:and 30-50 bags of these bad boys
herman said:and 30-50 bags of these bad boys
louisstamos said:herman said:and 30-50 bags of these bad boys
I understood this reference.
This summer, after Waddell?s contract expired in June, Dundon has so far declined to give him a new one, and Waddell at the time seemed agreeable to continue on an at-will basis. Two months later, Waddell clearly has happy feet and the spectacle of a sitting general manager interviewing for another team?s opening has little precedent in NHL history.
?I?m not going to pay what other guys pay GMs, so me having a contract with a GM doesn?t really help me,? Dundon said. ?Don in essence has a contract. I already told Don, ?I?m not going to fire you. If I did, I?d tell you a year in advance.? My life?s pretty good. I want people to do what?s best for their life. If this is what?s best for Don, the Hurricanes will be fine.?
CarltonTheBear said:Here's that Carolina story:
https://www.newsobserver.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/luke-decock/article233585707.html
This summer, after Waddell?s contract expired in June, Dundon has so far declined to give him a new one, and Waddell at the time seemed agreeable to continue on an at-will basis. Two months later, Waddell clearly has happy feet and the spectacle of a sitting general manager interviewing for another team?s opening has little precedent in NHL history.
?I?m not going to pay what other guys pay GMs, so me having a contract with a GM doesn?t really help me,? Dundon said. ?Don in essence has a contract. I already told Don, ?I?m not going to fire you. If I did, I?d tell you a year in advance.? My life?s pretty good. I want people to do what?s best for their life. If this is what?s best for Don, the Hurricanes will be fine.?
Coco-puffs said:It definitely bucks the trend of what is done in the NHL, where teams usually agreed to a certain length of contract with their GM's. If they are fired, they still have to be paid to the full length of their contract. I can see why Dundon may want to avoid that. It does come with the drawback that the GM can leave at any time for a better offer since there is no statement in a contract that doesn't allow you to just seek a new job elsewhere. As Dundon states, he wouldn't hold anyone back.
Nik the Trik said:Coco-puffs said:It definitely bucks the trend of what is done in the NHL, where teams usually agreed to a certain length of contract with their GM's. If they are fired, they still have to be paid to the full length of their contract. I can see why Dundon may want to avoid that. It does come with the drawback that the GM can leave at any time for a better offer since there is no statement in a contract that doesn't allow you to just seek a new job elsewhere. As Dundon states, he wouldn't hold anyone back.
I think the bigger drawback is that unless you can find someone who would choose to have no stability or guarantees over having stability and guarantees then by having this policy you're effectively relegating yourself to the least in-demand candidates for the job. Because so much of running a sports team is presenting yourself as being willing to do anything to win, having a policy that virtually guarantees you'd be ranked 31st on a list of teams to work for will make for tough sledding if your team struggles.
Coco-puffs said:But there are only 31 spots and 200 hockey men probably vying for them, so its not like he's gonna have a position that won't have some good candidates.
Coco-puffs said:But there are only 31 spots and 200 hockey men probably vying for them, so its not like he's gonna have a position that won't have some good candidates.
Nik the Trik said:Imagine that happening before a trade deadline or July 1st or draft?
CarltonTheBear said:Nik the Trik said:Imagine that happening before a trade deadline or July 1st or draft?
Or a month before training camp opens...
Nik the Trik said:Coco-puffs said:But there are only 31 spots and 200 hockey men probably vying for them, so its not like he's gonna have a position that won't have some good candidates.
Well, except I'd argue that finding 31 good GMs among those 200 has proven pretty difficult even with everyone being signed to contracts. The thing about sports at this level isn't really about being "good" at your job as I'm pretty convinced that if I got hired to run a NHL team tomorrow I wouldn't embarrass myself too badly but rather it's about where you rank on that list of 31. Look at the trouble teams around the league have gotten into by virtue of having a bad GM, now imagine your team has a policy that almost guarantees you'll have the worst GM in the league from year to year.
Because the second effect here is that if Dundon does find someone good, and I agree that going outside the typical pool of GM hires opens up some intriguing possibilities for him, the nature of the business is that as soon as that person develops that sort of cachet they'd probably leave as soon as they got a decent offer from elsewhere. Imagine that happening before a trade deadline or July 1st or draft?
Coco-puffs said:I hadn't stated it because I thought it was obvious, but yes, without a contract and one of the lowest salaries in the league for the position, anyone good would be much easier to poach. Since most teams don't make those types of changes at the trade deadline or July 1st (or mid-summer) there usually isn't an opening at those times where said person would get poached.
Coco-puffs said:And an owner who seems VERY involved in decisions might mean that the GM role in Carolina doesn't actually give you final say.
Coco-puffs said:Finally, I disagree entirely that this method guarantees you'd have the worst GM in the league year to year. The bar for that isn't too high in the NHL IMO. And as I stated above, having a good front office (Tulsky!) can mitigate not having one of the top GM's in the league.