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Frank E said:I don't know until you tell me the %/point...
Nik the Trik said:Frank E said:I don't know until you tell me the %/point...
I'll do you one better. With Connor at 7.143 here's all of the RFA forwards who merited their own thread here:
Point: .090
Tkachuk: .111
Boeser: .129
Rantanen: .130
Connor: .135
Konecny: .138
Marner: .142
Laine: .166
(Nylander, fwiw, was at .143)
So the real outliers are Laine and Point which make sense. Point because of the Tampa thing, Laine because he is being paid more like the player he was in his first two years. The Tkachuk deal is weird but I figure that's about his big jump in scoring in year three.
So, all in all, players more or less got paid according to their offensive production. Nothing particularly surprising all things considered.
princedpw said:The spread according to this data is .111 to .166.
.166/.111 approx= 1.5
So one team is paying 50% more per point than another?
Nik the Trik said:Frank E said:I don't know until you tell me the %/point...
I'll do you one better. With Connor at 7.143 here's all of the RFA forwards who merited their own thread here:
Point: .090
Tkachuk: .111
Boeser: .129
Rantanen: .130
Connor: .135
Konecny: .138
Marner: .142
Laine: .166
(Nylander, fwiw, was at .143)
So the real outliers are Laine and Point which make sense. Point because of the Tampa thing, Laine because he is being paid more like the player he was in his first two years. The Tkachuk deal is weird but I figure that's about his big jump in scoring in year three.
So, all in all, players more or less got paid according to their offensive production. Nothing particularly surprising all things considered.
Heroic Shrimp said:Nik the Trik said:Frank E said:I don't know until you tell me the %/point...
I'll do you one better. With Connor at 7.143 here's all of the RFA forwards who merited their own thread here:
Point: .090
Tkachuk: .111
Boeser: .129
Rantanen: .130
Connor: .135
Konecny: .138
Marner: .142
Laine: .166
(Nylander, fwiw, was at .143)
So the real outliers are Laine and Point which make sense. Point because of the Tampa thing, Laine because he is being paid more like the player he was in his first two years. The Tkachuk deal is weird but I figure that's about his big jump in scoring in year three.
So, all in all, players more or less got paid according to their offensive production. Nothing particularly surprising all things considered.
While I don't disagree with your general point, I'd also observe that comparing the value of bridge deals to long-term deals is very much apples to oranges.
Heroic Shrimp said:While I don't disagree with your general point, I'd also observe that comparing the value of bridge deals to long-term deals is very much apples to oranges.