LA would never trade Doughty for Staal.hobarth said:Bender said:hobarth said:Nik the Trik said:I think, or hope anyway, that one of the things that people come to see over the next few years is that this idea that watching a bad team is always ultimately pointless and depressing while watching a good team is fun is really only true when the "bad" team you're watching is an expensive one that's been sold to us as a good team.
In a year or two, we're going to get to watch a Leafs team led by guys like Marner and Rielly and Nylander and while that team is likely to be bad at first, we're going to get to see flashes of the team and players we'll eventually see. Probably my favourite moment of all of last year was the highlight goal Rielly scored against the Oilers. Now imagine watching a team that has five or six guys capable of something like that. Even if they ultimately miss the playoffs, that will be a team I'll be excited to watch on a nightly basis.
So I agree with Bender and the rest who pointed out that the question posed here is ultimately an empty one(in this era of parity, the best way to win a cup is to build a team capable of being a good team for as long as possible) but I disagree with the idea that I'd always prefer to watch a good team to a bad one. The Leafs over the last 10 years haven't been depressing because they've been bad, it's because they've very rarely given me real hope that things would eventually improve.
I wonder about this, I think a large portion of Leafdom or hockey fandom are draft choice junkies, they live and thrive on the draft, compiling their own mock drafts and dwelling on others. They are happiest when players are traded for draft choices and were probably ecstatic that TO traded down twice during the last draft because TO had more draft choices, with them draft choices seem to have taken on a life of it's own and the purpose of draft choices seems to have been lost.
I believe that having draft choices is one of the best ways to build and maintain a team but we see it every trade deadline, teams give up 1sts, 2nds and other draft choices looking for that edge that might put them over the top and sometimes prospects and draft choices. This has repercussions not now maybe, not next year maybe but in 5 years probably and I think there's a difference between a winning team and a competitive team.
Well right now we're going crazy about the draft because our only hope is the future. If Marner ends up being our #1C for 10yrs and we have a team that's challenging legitimately every year then I without question wouldn't care as much about following the top picks of the draft.
But what Nik says isn't wrong at all. I agree with his sentiment wholeheartedly - if the team shows improvement and we know we're going through a learning process and as Babcock says, we know there'll be pain then that's a very good management of fan expectation. When they brough in Kessel, Phaneuf, Gus and Giguere they were sold to us as a team that would finally make it, and we know that obviously wasn't true at all, even when fans saw regression the management team kept going for several more years believing this core had what it took.
I don't really understand how your point on "Leafdom" and the draft have to do with the original question posed - it's not really a fair question and doesn't allow for any nuance anything between an extremely simplistic black and white answer that may or may not have any basis in how team are run or how the process works. There is absolutely nothing wrong with trading picks and prospects if you feel that adding a player at the deadline will give you the best shot at the cup. Sometimes it pays off and sometimes it doesn't and the same goes for hanging on to your picks, maybe all of them bust out and you missed your chance at winning the cup because you didn't have the cahones to give up a pick.
The problem with your idea is that unless you're looking at it from a case by case basis in what you're giving up vs. what you're getting then you really can't in any way comment on what strategy is the only one worth pursuing for the team in regards to being able to compete for the cup legitimately and being sustainable year over year.
Then you have voted that winning the cup is more important than worrying about sustainability, my opinion is mine, yours is yours. The nuances have come out in the discussions, I call that nit piking rather than accepting the poll as a general question. To me Rielly would be a degree of toleration for the outright pursuit of the cup because of his potential, TO isn't in a cup contention situation so he is a far more important part of TO's team now and into the future but maybe LA with Doughty could afford to move him for a player that would put them in the driver's seat during the playoffs, an Eric Staal perhaps.
If somebody can't accept the notion that the chance of winning the cup would never be worth the trading of Rielly then I would assume they would vote for sustainability.
I get that everyone has their own opinion but not everyone gets to have their own facts. Like I said, sustainability and winning the cup are not mutually exclusive. Boston, LA, Chicago, Detroit and Anaheim have been competitive for years and they all won at least one Cup since 2007.
You can be for winning a Cup and not interested in giving up Rielly, but that's the judgment call you make when presented with the option. If you don't do one thing because you don't believe it will work regardless of the reasons for or against then there's probably an issue there.
Since we're talking in unrealistic expectations then maybe if you were offered Crosby for Rielly and Gardiner you'd turn it down.