I'm ok with Swedish players. Just not as key players that you have to rely on in the playoffs.Ronning's Ghost wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 11:26 pmVancouver has -- or has historically had -- two advantages to leverage with respect to Swedish players:
1) Gradin has been one of their more effective scouts, with far more hits than misses.
2) If the player is inclined to start a family, then when they look around the League, to a Swede Vancouver looks like one of the better NHL cities in which to do that. That means that when it's contract negotiation time, Vancouver has often received a "home-town" discount. Other players, as mentioned, might be more inclined to look for a more favourable tax regime, or even -- heavens forfend ! -- a chance of winning.
In the modern League, it's tough to win it all without some players outperforming their contracts. And if the team is getting a good performance to cap hit ratio out of a player, I think a good coaching and management team should be able to work around whatever limitations he has (there being few players who offer the Complete Package) with complementary players. Not suggesting EP40 is anywhere close to offering a good performance to cap hit ratio, but other Swedes have for the Canucks.
The Sedins were excellent players. But in the playoffs they were useless once the refs pocketed the whistles. Watching Daniel stand there and get speed bagged by Marchand just to hopefully get a PP out of it was an embarrassment to the jersey.
Edler was a solid defenseman, but ultimately a #3 for almost all of his career and often crumbled in high pressure games when relied on as a #1.
Naslund was the ultimate choke artist in the post-season. I was a huge fan of his when I was younger. The WCE was electric. But never able to grab that extra gear in the playoffs.
Samuelsson. Good 2nd line winger. A little better than 0.5 ppg in the post-season.....support player and deployed appropriately.
Naslund was named captain in 2000. The culture of this team became progressively softer from there on out.