| |
July 4th, 2007, 9:48 am
As the signing of Brad Stuart with the Kings comes across the wire, it makes me wonder what is going on inside Sharks headquarters. Stuart settled for a one year deal at 3.5 million. How does Roman Hamerlik get 5.5 million over four years in Montreal?
The fact that the Sharks have been invisible makes me wonder what Doug Wilson has up his sleeve. Others are getting impatient and have the feeling that Wilson has abandoned his promise to deliver a Stanley Cup. He promised there would be changes, he promised that he would do everything to improve this team within reason. He got rid of Bell. He cleared the cap room. So…where is the big move? I think it is still coming and I have faith in Doug Wilson that it will have an impact and it will make sense for this franchise long term. According to reports, the Sharks have 15 million dollarrs of cap room, no money is not the problem. They will resign Marleau at 5/6 million per, so really they have 10 million. Ehrhoff and Michalek are UFA’s next season and you gotta figure Wilson is working on extensions there – probably 2-3 million each. There is a big picture here that people are forgetting about – but still Wilson will make it happen.
I think he could be talking to Boston about Glen Murray. He has two years and 8.2 million left on his deal but could be a bargain compared to what other free agents have been getting on the market. Reuniting Joe and Murray could spell for magic on the top line.
Another possible deal Wilson is looking at is dealing for Ed Jovonovski. He is making 6.5 million for the next three years, but if Souray is searching for over 7.0 million and his defense is suspect, perhaps Wilson prefers JovoCop. He could also be taking a long, hard look at Nick Boynton, who was released by the Coyotes last week.
I still think Wade Redden is a possibility because the Senators have a major problem on the horizon next season. Spezza, Heatley, Mezaros, Emery and Redden all will be UFA’s next year and they will not have the room to keep them all. If Drury and Gomez got seven million this year, Spezza and Heatley will fetch eight million plus on the open market next year, if not more. With some young D already in the fold, Redden could be the odd man out in the salary bonanza in Ottawa. Redden would look good in Teal. We shall see…
I am not giving up. I have moments of impatience, but in Wilson I Trust.
Comments Off on Another day without a move
July 3rd, 2007, 2:37 pm
Is probably Drew Remenda.
July 2nd, 2007, 5:27 pm
Reports have Ottawa shopping Wade Redden, who is due to be a UFA at the end of next year. If this is true, it is possible Doug Wilson could be looking at this instead of giving mega-cash to Souray. Perhaps an offer of Ehrhoff and a pick would get it done? If this came to pass, then Wilson could sign Brad Stuart or Andy Sutton to round out the core. Just thinking out loud…
Comments Off on One more thing…
July 2nd, 2007, 5:09 pm
Sharks fans have watched almost 48 hours tick by without seeing Doug Wilson dip into the unrestricted free agent market to improve upon last years team that fell short of said goal – Winning Lord Stanley’s Cup. I had high hopes for July 1st after how aggressive Wilson was at the NHL draft last week. He made cap room and solved two huge roster problems by getting rid of Toskala before there was a real problem in training camp and dealing Bell, who was just a waste of roster space at this point. He got two promising young players to add to the Sharks already excellent depth of young talent. He promised to be active. Doug? Where are you?
He took care of the most important matter by getting Joe Thornton before he hit the UFA market next offseason. Joe gave a hometown discount, a steal for 7.2 million a year, especially seeing Drury, Gomez and Briere get the same kind of cash without nearly the same resume as Big Joe. We had all read the rumors, Sharks were a lock to get Drury. Well, when the price kept going up and up and up, I can’t blame Doug Wilson for jumping ship. Having Drury, Marleau and Thornton makes zero sense – we needed an impact winger, which is why it is disappointing the Sharks couldn’t land Smyth. I guess a call from Joe Sakic made all the difference. According to reports, the Sharks were never really in the hunt, they made an offer but Ryan was deciding between Toronto, the Isles (who really got screwed yesterday by losing Poti, Smyth, Blake and all their dignity) and the Avs. So now, we sit and wait as all the other middle of the road UFA’s go off the board. One big name remains. One name that Mike and I have been talking about since the season ended. Sheldon Souray.
Doug Wilson has to get this done. He has chased a big time blueliner for the past two offseasons, striking out with Neidermeyer and Chara. I think he has been targeting Souray all along and the fact that Hamerlik has signed in Montreal crosses them off the list. Preissing, Nagy, Handzus and Calder all signed in LA and Lombardi still needs cash to sign Cammerleri (a restricted FA) so you have to figure they are out of the Souray chase. That leaves us – the only team with over ten million in cap room to spend that hasn’t struck yet. Come on Doug Wilson. Deliver the goods. I have faith in you.
I think it is also possible he is targeting a veteran forward like Slava Kozlov and Wes Walz. Don’t totaly rule out Forsberg and…yes…Bill Guerin. I think Guerin owes the Sharks a hometown discount to come back for one more year at a discounted price for playing like garbage in the stretch. He was not the impact player as advertised and at 2 million for one year, I would take the chance he would have a chip and play hard.
So…we wait and see. I think Wilson won the game of poker and the announcement of Souray is only hours away.
Comments Off on Don’t push the panic button….yet…
July 2nd, 2007, 1:34 pm
Tom Preissing reportedly signs with the Kings.
Comments Off on One down
July 2nd, 2007, 8:18 am
Yesterday was the first day of free agency. Rumors were abound about the Sharks- they were in the hunt for Chris Drury, Daniel Briere, or Ryan Smyth. I personally think they need to worry about their blueline more. So what happened? Jack squat. They watched Drury sign with the Rangers, Briere sign with the Flyers, Smyth sign with the Avs, and Gomez sign with the Rangers too. Then instead of playing ‘unrestricted defense’ against the Ducks, we watch them sign Mattieu Schnieder, and then watch the Wings sign Rafalski. To further help our d-line, we watch Scott Hannan leave for greener pastures in Colorado. As of today, Rob Davison is in our top-6.
This may not get mentioned much with all the big-name free agent signings- but Philly pulled off a complete tea-bag of Edmonton, getting possibly the best defensive defenseman in the league in Jason Smith, and Joffrey Lupul, for Joni Pitkanen and (throwaway) Geoff Sanderson. Pitkanen is nothing to sneeze at- I’d love it if the Sharks got him instead, but I don’t think he’s a proven asset yet. He manages to disappear for stretches at a time. It does show me than TSN has the best hockey coverage- as of right now, that deal is the leading story. It’s among the 15 right-column free-agent signing stories on ESPN.com
The only item on the plus side of the column is that we re-signed Joe for another 3 years, at a pretty considerable home-town discount. Considering Gomez signed for more money than Joe, it’s hard to dispute that the Sharks got a great deal.
Four critical free agents are still available where the Sharks are concerned- Slava Kozlov, Sheldon Souray, Brad Stuart, and Tom Preissing. If the Sharks come up empty handed with this group, It’s clear that the Sharks lost ground in the West.
Comments Off on Free Agency feeding frenzy, but Sharks are dead in the water
June 22nd, 2007, 11:31 am
For the second year in the row, I will be watching the draft live. Or close to live, anyway (thank you, TiVo). There’s already been a big trade today- Toskala and Bell to the Leafs for a 1st, 2nd, and 4th round pick. Adrian Aucoin, probably the most coveted UFA defensemen a couple of years ago, waived his no-trade clause to go to the Flames, essentially straight-up for Andrei Zyuzin.
Grier and I won’t be live-blogging, because frankly, nobody cares about the draft. We’ll be posting more on the various moves this weekend probably.
Comments Off on Draft
June 11th, 2007, 4:41 pm
ESPN is reporting that the Sharks, Sabres, and Kings are in the running for Chris Drury. The Philly Inquirer has a similar story (via Yahoo). According to that, “every indication is he will end up with the San Jose Sharks”. First of all, this kind of speculation rarely turns out to be correct, and if it isn’t, no one gets castigated for it. If Drury signs with the Sabres before July 1, no one will remember the PI had it wrong. It sells newspapers.
But the ESPN story and my (albeit amateur) internal salary gauge says Drury will get at least $6M per year. That sounds like too much, for a guy that had less than 70 pts in the regular season. For that kind of money you can get Briere, who had more points and plays the same position. I think the market will overpay for ‘locker room leadership’ and ‘clutch performance’. And in case you haven’t read previous posts, I’m unconvinced that those things brings a decided advantage.
Pop quiz- which of these players had fewer points than Chris Drury last year: A. Kristian Huselius B. Jonathan Cheechoo C. Slava Kozlov D. Andrew Brunette
Give up? It’s E- none of the above. Guess the highest salary amongst this group. It’s Cheech, averaging $3M for the next four years. All the others are around $2M per (Kozlov is a UFA too, by the way). I’m going to have a hard time being convinced that Drury deserves a 100% premium because he’s a locker room leader and good in the clutch. Not that points should be the only determinant of salary, but let’s get real. I think Drury owes Buccigross a commission on his next contract, for all the love he’s gotten in print.
May 28th, 2007, 10:12 am
Man, this is a tough series to handicap. I really blew the pooch on my predictions for the Eastern Conference Final last round, but I did get the Ducks right. Ottawa just continues to surprise- they are ready and willing to do everything to win. They hit, play defense, have good goaltending, and score, especially that first line, which has been the best line in the playoffs.
Not really that unlike the Ducks, although it’s been the Ducks’ “second” line of Perry, Penner, and Getzlaf that has been dominating for the Ducks, though in a different way. Chris Kunitz is out, so that leaves a hole on the first line, a hole being filled by Ric Jackman Brad May. Jiggy is playing Smythe-worth goal, and that’s the first rule of the playoffs- the team with the hot goalie wins.
For me, the question comes down to whether the Spezza-Heatley-Alfredsson line can score against the shutdown line of Pahlsson-Moen-Niedermayer. We will see if Bryan Murray can get any of the matchups he wants on the road.
As for the pick- it was so impressive the way Ottawa dispatched Buffalo, I have to go with them. The Ducks’ “kids” line can’t keep it up forever, and Kunitz missing will put more of a spotlight on Selanne, who will be effectively shut down this series. Ottawa in 6.
May 22nd, 2007, 10:48 am
Here’s the link. Make sure to read Grier’s post first. Here’s a good quote from Doug: “Sometimes you have to go out and get better players, and sometimes you have to make your players better.” Given the emphasis he places on Detroit and Ottawa’s ability to break through after a couple of tough years, it seems clear his effort will be on making the most of the current group. There will not be a fire sale.
One thing that struck me is that Wilson said if you grade each of the individuals on the team, the median grade was a C+. I never really thought of it like that before, but he’s right. Some players, and he mentioned Grier and Vlasic, played ‘A’ hockey. Clearly above expectations. Wilson said Joe played B hockey, but I would probably be more charitable than that. I would find it hard to grade a 110+ point year as a B. But there are several players that did not have good years. Bell is the obvious choice there. Bernier is another.
Given how well Nabby played and his salary (and NTC), I have to think that the goaltender deal that Wilson all but guaranteed will be Toskala. The question is, what sort of thing will Wilson be looking for in return? Wilson cannot mention certain players by name before the unrestricted free agency period begins on July 1, but I was suprised that he didn’t even hint about looking for a certain type of player. A puck-moving defenseman. A locker room leader. The sorts of players Grier and I have been talking about the last few posts.
Wilson also didn’t commit on Ron Wilson returning, but the way he spoke of it, I would bet 4-1 that Ron will be back. One of the radio guys mentioned that Ron Wilson does not really seem to blame himself in press conferences, but Doug said that all the players and coaches have taken responsibility for this year’s results. Given those comments, the dearth of good coaches available now, and the length of Ron Wilson’s contract, I will be very surprised if he does not return.
It was weird how they asked the GM about Marty McSorely, a broadcaster, and Doug seemed a little miffed by the question. But he clearly knows what’s going on, maybe not all of the details. From the few words that were said, it seems McSorely will not be back. I wonder what the hell happened, and if we’ll ever get the story.
|