iwas11in67
Member
just for fun..what Toronto prospects are similiar to what Pittsburgh gave up?
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Bullfrog said:Zee said:Feaster is an idiot, this should have happened 2 years ago not now. Could have gotten more for Iginla back then and be well on his way to actually starting a rebuild.
Perhaps Iginla wasn't prepared to be traded then?
Iwas11in67 said:just for fun..what Toronto prospects are similiar to what Pittsburgh gave up?
CarltonTheBear said:Apparently the 1st round draft pick that Boston was offering was conditional on Iginla re-signing with the Bruins. They have a bit of cap room, but Rask needs a new contract and he'll likely eat up a bunch of that. So Iginla re-signing wasn't a foregone conclusion.
If that's the case then it makes the Penguins offer seem a little better in comparison. If they weren't going to get a teams top-5 prospect from the deal they at least needed to secure a first round draft pick.
Omallley said:You've got to think this puts a little more pressure on teams to make a move (especially Boston). I'm still surprised the Pens have been as aggressive as they have been...
bustaheims said:CarltonTheBear said:Apparently the 1st round draft pick that Boston was offering was conditional on Iginla re-signing with the Bruins. They have a bit of cap room, but Rask needs a new contract and he'll likely eat up a bunch of that. So Iginla re-signing wasn't a foregone conclusion.
If that's the case then it makes the Penguins offer seem a little better in comparison. If they weren't going to get a teams top-5 prospect from the deal they at least needed to secure a first round draft pick.
Wow. I can't believe Feaster was even willing to accept that deal with the pick being conditional. Neither of the prospects Boston was offering were exactly top notch guys either. I know Bruins fans are big on Khoklachev, but, every team has a guy like that in their system. I'd say he's probably their Greg McKegg.
CarltonTheBear said:Khoklachev is generally considered a top-5 prospect for Boston, although I think that's partially because after Hamilton their prospect pool tapers off a little bit. Still, I think Colborne would be a better comparable here.
bustaheims said:CarltonTheBear said:Khoklachev is generally considered a top-5 prospect for Boston, although I think that's partially because after Hamilton their prospect pool tapers off a little bit. Still, I think Colborne would be a better comparable here.
I'd say the serious difference between the size of Colborne and the size of Khoklachev makes them pretty weak comparables. McKegg and Khoklachev are both smaller, skilled centres.
CarltonTheBear said:So where exactly does Iginla play now? Bylsma likely won't break up Malkin and Neal, so it's either on the first line with Crosby or on the third line with Sutter and Cooke.
Kunitz-Crosby-Dupuis/Iginla
Morrow-Malkin-Neal
Cooke-Sutter-Iginla/Dupuis
Personally, I would leave Iginla on the third line, at least to start. It's not like the first line is having difficulties scoring with Kunitz and Crosby anyway.
Deebo said:CarltonTheBear said:So where exactly does Iginla play now? Bylsma likely won't break up Malkin and Neal, so it's either on the first line with Crosby or on the third line with Sutter and Cooke.
Kunitz-Crosby-Dupuis/Iginla
Morrow-Malkin-Neal
Cooke-Sutter-Iginla/Dupuis
Personally, I would leave Iginla on the third line, at least to start. It's not like the first line is having difficulties scoring with Kunitz and Crosby anyway.
I'd put him on the top line with Kunitz and Crosby.
WhatIfGodWasALeaf said:Deebo said:I'd put him on the top line with Kunitz and Crosby.
Likewise, Cooke-Sutter-Dupuis looks like a formidable 3rd line shutdown group, something along the lines of Moen-Pahlsson-Neidermayer that the Ducks used to kill a lot of teams top lines.
CarltonTheBear said:WhatIfGodWasALeaf said:Deebo said:I'd put him on the top line with Kunitz and Crosby.
Likewise, Cooke-Sutter-Dupuis looks like a formidable 3rd line shutdown group, something along the lines of Moen-Pahlsson-Neidermayer that the Ducks used to kill a lot of teams top lines.
The Penguins don't really use a shutdown trio though, I don't think. They often just go power-on-power, which for them makes sense. Having a shutdown line just takes away minutes from Crosby and Malkin which doesn't make sense at all. Of course that would still make for a responsible 3rd line nonetheless.
I just like the idea of putting Iginla on the third line and making it a legitimate offensive threat. They would have three scoring lines and it wouldn't come at a cost to their top-6 in any way. Imagine Jarome Iginla going out against the oppositions third defensive pairing night in and night out.
WhatIfGodWasALeaf said:I hear you, but I think if you have him on that third line you're getting the player he was in Calgary, if you put him with Sid you have the Iggy of old.
CarltonTheBear said:So where exactly does Iginla play now? Bylsma likely won't break up Malkin and Neal, so it's either on the first line with Crosby or on the third line with Sutter and Cooke.
Kunitz-Crosby-Dupuis/Iginla
Morrow-Malkin-Neal
Cooke-Sutter-Iginla/Dupuis
Personally, I would leave Iginla on the third line, at least to start. It's not like the first line is having difficulties scoring with Kunitz and Crosby anyway.
CarltonTheBear said:WhatIfGodWasALeaf said:I hear you, but I think if you have him on that third line you're getting the player he was in Calgary, if you put him with Sid you have the Iggy of old.
Playing against the worst competition he's seen in over a decade on a regular basis could also be a big boost for him though. I'm sure they'll try all possibilities until something clicks.