McGarnagle said:
herman said:
No one said anything about Griffith being better than Nylander, either. But if we're going to bring that up, Griffith is more skilled than Smith, Martin, Hyman, Soshnikov, Komarov, Holland, Leivo, Froese, Gauthier, and Leipsic, and might be comparable to Brown. Picking him up on waivers was a coup. Letting him go because he did not fit our preconceived requirement that our fourth line had to be a certain way is a missed opportunity.
Is there a single team in the league, or even historically ever, that hasn't deployed role players? Are all of them wrong?
Let me preface this with, I know where you're coming from re: role players, and that is why I phrased this statement deliberately as 'more skilled'.
You know how teams should draft for best player available and not for need? This is just the same concept played out in the lineup.
Griffith appears pretty comparable to Connor Brown, who in turn appears to be pretty similar to another player on the ice tonight: Jonathan Marchessault. Smaller, skilled guys, who were coming up through the ranks as the metagame of the league shifted from the traditional eyeballs-only talent evaluation, to more substantiative numerical evidence-based evaluation. Of course the three of them have different flavours to their game.
So my contention with the decision was largely not that I despise role players, but that these freebie/cheap skilled guys who drive play in general shouldn't be passed over for the sake of icing a gritty PK-specialist fourth line, especially if they get overrun at even strength regularly. Skilled guys generally can be taught those 'roles' and bring additional tools to the table.
What would've been the harm of running Holland, Griffith, and Martin (meh, but understandable) for the year on the fourth line and developing your PK during what is still clearly a rebuild season? These are players who drive play in the right direction and can actually make plays, and can move up the lineup for short spells without missing much of a beat.
If they're too good for the fourth line, that is a great problem. If they're getting killed at evens, swap them for Soshnikov, or Brown, or Hyman who can also play up and down the lineup. Clinging to Smith basically restricted us to playing plugs on the bottom line (see Soshnikov valiantly making plays happen alone, only to watch them die pitifully).