Redleaf
Active member
mr grieves said:RedLeaf said:mr grieves said:RedLeaf said:The guy hasn't been without mistakes. I don't think too many GMs are. But what I like about Nonis is that he hasn't sold the farm for reclamation projects and 'wanna be Leafs before they retire' guys like so many Leaf GMs did before him. He's been patient, kept most of his draft picks, and has put together,(along with Burke), the most talented squad of youngsters the Leafs have had in 'as long as anyone can remember'. I respect the fact that he hasn't sold out, and believe he's done a real good job all around.
Sure, but that seems to me a pretty low scratch for the GM of a young, rebuilding team to meet. And where he's made his mistakes, it seems to me, is precisely with cutting bait or over-committing to complementary players like Bolland. I don't know what the Clarkson signing was if not mismanaging assets (not picks or youth, but compliance buyouts and cap space) for a "wanna be a Leaf before he retires."
To each their own, but I think some people are putting entirely too much weight on the Clarkson contract when sizing up how well Nonis has done.
That was his big acquisition. What else of note has he done? Got rid of dead-weight Mikhail Grabovski, let Clarke MacArthur walk, turned a maybe-top-6 center prospect and a 2nd into a maybe-top-6 center prospect, traded one 4-6 D with a boat anchor contract into one that's worse and with more of an anchor contract... McLaren... I mean, the only positive improvement has been Bernier.
So, there's not that much evidence that he hasn't been pretty mistake prone since becoming GM. And if 80% of the decisions someone makes are poor, why would you appeal to his authority as a 'smart hockey man' arguing that the next one's going to be good?
And not that it's worth getting into Clarkson again, but:
RedLeaf said:How much is it really a reflection of Nonis abilities as a GM to judge talent when a player like Clarkson suddenly and surprisingly has by far the worst season of his career?
The extent of the drop off -- sub-fourth liner on a team with a 4th line -- was surprising. That he did fall off wasn't.
RedLeaf said:Are we really saying Nonis should have anticipated this happening and because he didn't he's now a bad GM? Had Clarkson performed as well as he has virtually every other season he's played in the NHL, there wouldn't be nearly as many critics of Nonis decision to sign him.
Yes, Nonis should've known there was going to be a drop off. I recall a few people noting how he was used in NJ -- particularly on the top PP unit -- as being incredibly important to his success there. Without that, those skeptical of his 1.5 excellent seasons said, he'd be 3rd line grinder, nowhere near worth a $5m+/season, buyout-proof contract. Time has proven them 'smarter hockey men' than Dave Nonis.
RedLeaf said:Let's not forget, Clarkson had more than a few suitors willing to offer him that very same contract and more.
Clarkson had one other suitor who wanted to give him "that very same contract and more": the GM of the Edmonton Oilers. So, Dave Nonis. Marginally smarter than the GM of the most inept organization in the league.
Wow. You are not a fan. I get it. So, who's the GM we need who is substantially smarter, and knows in advance when players careers are about to turn for the worse?