dhabums wrote:Island Nucklehead wrote:I bet Parise would play for $7.5M.
Or 6.5 in a cheaper city with far less taxes than Canada.
He should do what Mogilny did and get himself a pad in Point Roberts. The tax savings alone would pay for the place.
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dhabums wrote:Island Nucklehead wrote:I bet Parise would play for $7.5M.
Or 6.5 in a cheaper city with far less taxes than Canada.
Strangelove wrote:Dave, the Canadiens are one of the richest teams in the NHL.
They owe it to their fans at this point to get rid of the entire $7.35mil cap-hit.
dbr wrote:I don't think you see fans getting "fair treatment" from many NHL teams - especially not losing teams - if you think that fans have a right to expect this and that, anyway. Hell just look at the Maple Leafs, how many times in their eight seasons and counting playoff drought have they raised ticket prices?
Strangelove wrote:Dave, you are saying they are interested in appearing "player friendly" but not interested in appearing "fan friendly".
dbr wrote:Well it's not that simple. I'm saying "fan friendliness" isn't going to be the be-all, it would be crazy to suggest they are not interested at all in appealing to their paying customers.
Strangelove wrote:Why would they care about what the players think of them?
dbr wrote:Ask the Oilers, they don't seem too worried about sending a big fuck you to the players clearly on the outs with the organization. You think another Sheldon Souray signs there any time soon?
dbr wrote:So wait is the Darcy Tucker buyout supposed to be fan-friendly (where the Gomez buy out is not)?

Didn't get a lot of face-time with the Chicago Blackhawks this season and I'm not around the team every day like a Chris Kuc, an Adam Jahns or a Tracey Myers. But there were plenty of rumours of behind-the-scenes strife, especially when former Scotty Bowman assistant Barry Smith appeared on-ice to help with the ailing power play.
General manager Stan Bowman agreed to address it two months ago and disagreed with the idea of a rift, pointing out that Smith - the team's director of player development - worked with guys all the time. He added it didn't hurt to "have an extra set of eyes" with a power play that went 0-for-40 in one stretch.
The rumours never went away. Not being there makes it very difficult to recognize what really is going on. Tuesday night, we finally received a window into the situation.
As Joel Quenneville emphatically stated his desire to stay with the Blackhawks, assistant coach Mike Haviland was fired. This came two days after we blathered that Quenneville's good friend, new Canadiens GM Marc Bergevin, may ask for permission to talk to him about the Montreal opening.
"I had an assessment that there is some dysfunction to our coaching staff and we need a change," Quenneville said on a conference call, adding that Stan Bowman agreed. "It was not an easy decision. It was tough on Mike. I'm respectful for the job that he did. It's not the blame game here."
He later added, "I take ownership for what happened this year."
The word "dysfunction" is an eyebrow-raiser, because you so rarely hear coaches use it in relation to their staff. But, it is the exact word that's been used from the outside to describe what's been going on in Chicago.
...
ESQ wrote: I keep watching for parallels with the Penguins, but I just don't get it. Yes, loading up on high picks is an enticing way to turn a franchise around, but Pittsburgh needed to get Malkin and Crosby to pull it off. Chicago's Keith and Seabrook had been with the franchise 6-7 years by the time they won the Cup.
ESQ wrote:I still don't know how much Tamby is to blame, and how much Kevin Lowe is still pulling the strings in Edmonton, but my god that is a terribly run franchise from top to bottom.
Topper wrote:ESQ wrote:I still don't know how much Tamby is to blame, and how much Kevin Lowe is still pulling the strings in Edmonton, but my god that is a terribly run franchise from top to bottom.
I look around at the Canadian clubs and wait for them to have their epiphany. Vancouver had their's when Nonnis was let go. Make no mistake, AV had to win his job with GMMG and he did so in their discussions. Montreal has just had theirs with the house cleaning at the top, realizing that there had been several downright embarrassing decisions made. The Jets did their shakeup with the move, Ottawa may finally be on the right track
Edmonton and Calgary still don't have a clue what kind of stagnant cesspool they are treading water in.
Island Nucklehead wrote:Topper wrote:ESQ wrote:I still don't know how much Tamby is to blame, and how much Kevin Lowe is still pulling the strings in Edmonton, but my god that is a terribly run franchise from top to bottom.
I look around at the Canadian clubs and wait for them to have their epiphany. Vancouver had their's when Nonnis was let go. Make no mistake, AV had to win his job with GMMG and he did so in their discussions. Montreal has just had theirs with the house cleaning at the top, realizing that there had been several downright embarrassing decisions made. The Jets did their shakeup with the move, Ottawa may finally be on the right track
Edmonton and Calgary still don't have a clue what kind of stagnant cesspool they are treading water in.
Add Toronto to that mix. I look at the team Burke has built and I see no 1st line C,no.1 D, or a starting goalie. Carolina, Tampa, Buffalo and Montreal have better chances of making the playoffs next season unless Burke makes big moves (ie landing Lou).
Farhan Lalji wrote:
Just a thought:
If the Canucks gave Lou AND Kesler to Toronto (and a promising defenseman like Chris Tanev), do you think that could land us the following:
-Carter Ashton
-Jake Gardiner
-Luke Schenn
-Joe Colborne
-Toronto's 1st rounder this year
Again - I'm thinking out loud. I have absolutely no clue if something like that would be fair.
I guess I'm just seeing it from the perspective that Burke might be looking to make a splash, while the Canucks can play the whole "depth/kids is key" angle.

Fred wrote:Any one think that Booth may have done MG a huge favour by greasing ( with bear fat ) his own skids and a ticket out of town. Now endorsed by the champion for the National Rifle Association ( and a threat to the President of the USA ) Your favourite and mine none other than Mr Ted Nugent. Sounds like he and Tim Thomas may belong top the same club![]()
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