Nik the Trik said:
x.jr.benchwarmer said:
I agree that there was a possible trade to Detroit about a year ago for a pick and I think Smith. But Noonis vetoed it apparently. (This is but one reason why he is no longer a GM perhaps). But I haven't heard of any other team being remoted interested in Phaneuf over the past 11 months.
We didn't really hear that Ottawa was interested until he was traded so I'd say what we hear probably doesn't tell us the whole story.
Either way, the Detroit rumour would have had the Leafs either taking back a terrible contract(Probably Stephen Weiss') or retaining salary so if Nonis did veto it then, if you're in love with this trade, then it was probably a smart decision on his part.
x.jr.benchwarmer said:
The trade was terrific one for the Leafs, don't you agree??
It's fine, I don't think it's a deal with any real downside but let's not kid ourselves about what it was. Phaneuf is a legit NHL defenseman with a not very good contract and the Leafs traded him for on the whole a worse return than the one they got for Daniel Winnik last year.
Phaneuf isn't Clarkson. It's not a miracle they were able to trade him and, like busta and Carlton said in the thread you started on Phaneuf, there wasn't a pressing need to make a deal. They don't need the space and he wasn't an embarrassment on the ice. By most accounts he was well liked in the dressing room. Just like this deal doesn't really have a downside, neither did keeping him.
I get the desire to start fresh and add an asset with the only real cost being some bad, but not terrible conracts so on the balance I'd probably make this trade if this was the best offer out there but terrific? Nah.
I agree with the general premise that Lou "had" to make the deal, given what the Sens were offering. Rhetorically, was there ever going to be a better deal out there for Dion?
And, without attempting to undermine the collective gravitas of busta and CtB and yourself, in my earlier self-serving thread about the perplexing nature of a Phaneuf trade
, I think that the deal was a very fine one for the Leafs.
And the fact that they may have gotten less for Dion than Winnick last year points to the fact that there wasn't much if any of a market for Dion, really.
And (without going on exhaustively hopefully), the trade of Dion does open up, finally, the issue of Gardiner playing the power play on a regular basis, as well as Reilly. The Leafs future is with these two defencemen, I would argue, rather than one with Dion.
In fact, it was suggested by one blogger that the reason Dion was playing the power play as much was to try to get his points up so that he might be tradeable. It makes as much sense as anything, really, since the fact that he never accelerated over the blueline with the puck while on the power play, and didn't get a PP goal in 11 plus months, might have meant his time should be limited on the PP.
And I agree that Dion is no Clarkson (who is, really)? But I've always felt that comparing him to Clarkson was equivalent to minimizing his faults, or suggesting that he is a bona fide player since Clarkson was not.
Anyways, this is all Ottawa's problem now, in terms of cap space, and trying to maximize whatever offensive talent he has, and minimize any skating and defensive shortcomings, and playing him with a mobile defenceman, etc.
(This should be a happy time, really).