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July 24th, 2007, 10:51 am
The Sharks announced their new logo today, along with several accompanying logos, to be used either as patches on the sleeve, or for merchandise. If you are a Sharks fan, chances are you’ve already seen it- it’s been leaked for a couple of weeks now. It’s quite similar to the old logo. The triangle is more curvy, the shark itself is going more down than to the right, and there’s more teal in the shark. Also a yellow-orange is introduced as an accent color, which I kind of hate. Too much like the Ducks. I like this shield crest the best:
This isn’t the right logo for the jersey though. It would be cool as a small front logo on a shirt or something. I might need to get myself a new hat, I lost mine last year. But looking at the online store, they’re still using the old logo, and don’t have any merchandise with the new designs. Way to bungle a sales opportunity, guys.
July 23rd, 2007, 9:43 am
Now that Grier is off on a much-deserved vacation for the next week or two, it’s time for me to pick up some slack. And because there is so little Sharks news happening, I’ll have to turn to league-wide news and controversy. This is something I’ve been thinking about for a while, and I finally have a little bit of time to write about it.
So Rudy Kelly at BoC wrote a post called “Anger… Rising” (great title, by the way) about Adam Proteau’s article naming Lubomir Vishnovsky as one of the offseason’s 5 worst signings. First of all, I agree with Kelly that Vish shouldn’t be on the list. He’s an oft-overlooked defensemen, mostly because he plays for the Kings, who aren’t any good.
Actually, I think I agree with Proteau on only one of his 5 ‘worst’ signings, and that is Todd Bertuzzi. $4M per year is a nice lottery win for Bert, who’s managed to do just about nothing good in the league since the Steve Moore incident. He was part of a huge trade that brought Roberto Luongo to Vancouver, hurt his back, then was quickly run out of town in Florida. He landed in Detroit, where he played uninspiring minutes the entire postseason. Maybe he’s worth throwing a couple mil at, in hopes he can return to his dominating style when he had Brendan Morrison and Markus Naslund at his side. Doubling that number is nothing more than wishful thinking, idiocy, or both.
Here’s four others, in no particular order
- Chris Drury – 5 years, $35.25M ($7.1M per year). I think I’ve made my thoughts on Drury fairly clear before. I like him. I think he’s a fine player, and a leader. He’s a good faceoff man. But he’s never scored 70 points in any one of his 8 full NHL seasons. Spending that kind of money on a second line center is stupid. Ranger stupid.
- Scott Hartnell – 6 years $25.2 million ($4.2M per year). Hartnell’s had 6 years in the bigs, and hasn’t even topped 50 points. He’s only 25, so I can imagine future upside, but we’d have to see a major rebirth to explain that kind of money.
- Cory Sarich – 5 years, $18M ($3.6M per year). Played less than 20 minutes per game his entire career, only been a plus player once, never scored more than 20 points in a season. If you said “who the hell is Cory Sarich?” I would understand. Only my obsession with hockey and my brain’s freaky ability to retain names kept me from saying the same thing.
- Bill Guerin – 2 years, $9M ($4.5M per year). This makes Keith Tkachuk (2 years, $8M) seem like a bargain. Guerin is 38 years old. Why the Isles didn’t throw this money at Jason Blake is beyond me. Guerin will help a struggling team win nothing. You want a better leader for less money, go get Mike Keane.
One thing I’ve thought about is in these long term contracts the team might be hoping that the player ‘grows into’ it, and the last couple of years in the contract they are a bargain. First of all, this might very well be offset by overpaying the first few years of the contract. Secondly, that’s assuming that these players will still be that good in a few years. I don’t know of many players you can be that sure about.
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July 21st, 2007, 12:38 pm
Just to keep the pot officially stirred – I read an interesting rumor posted by Eklund on hockeybuzz.com that the Sharks are close to making a deal for (wait for it) Wade Redden. He says the asking price might be Marleau, which doesn’t make much sense. Ottawa could not afford to keep Marleau, so he would purely be a rental where the Sharks would make every effort to sign Redden right away to keep the #1 defensemen Wilson covets. I am guessing there is a third team involved here that wants Marleau (Edmonton? Montreal?) that has the pieces that will make sense for Ottawa in this deal.
We shall see…if Redden comes, remember you heard it here first! Let’s hope it can happen without giving up the Captain.
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July 19th, 2007, 2:08 pm
Sean Avery. He’s got it all. Big time hockey career that has taken him from Hollywood to the Big Apple. Talent and grit that allows him to score or fight, whatever suits his mood. A hot girlfriend, Elisha Cuthbert, that sweet piece from 24 and a host of slasher films where you see her running in the wood, boobies bouncing in the breeze.
For Doug Wilson, Sean Avery was not availabe as a restricted FA for the Rangers. Wilson obviously covets the trio of skills listed above and instead signed the next best thing. Sharks fans meet….Brad Norton. Let’s examine.
BIG TIME CAREER – Um…not really. He did play four games for the Red Wings last year getting into four fights. The ones I saw on You Tube show him getting his ass kicked pretty regularly by mid level tough guys. Result – negative.
TALENT – Not really from the research I gathered. There’s a reason why he’s played for five NHL teams and bounced around the IHL and AHL. Does he like to fight, apparently. 124 career NHL games and 287 PIM. Cheaper than Scott Parker I suppose, but Parker actually seemed to win his fights.
HOT WIFE – Check! Bingo – thank you Doug Wilson. Brad Norton’s wife is Tiffany Granath, model and host of Playboy’s afternoon radio show on Sirius. Heard her on Howard Stern and she is HOT! I hope she gets seats in my section! MAHALO!
http://www.tiffanygranath.com/
Sad when this is the big news of the week, but alas, it is. We look forward to watching you fight, oh brave Brad Norton. Whether you win, place or show – you will always have a hot piece of ass wife for us to stare at. Amen Sharks fans. Amen.
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July 12th, 2007, 4:38 pm
So instead of coming to a team on the cusp of winning a Stanley Cup, Souray showed his true colors and played it safe by going home to Edmonton to play for a bottom feeder team that is headed nowhere fast. Congrats to Kevin Lowe for getting someone to take part of the 20 million he has to offer. I am disappointed, but I still trust Doug Wilson and we have no reason not to. We know he takes pride on building from within, he pulled off the biggest heist in league history by landing Big Joe and he has had excellent draft after excellent draft. My man Mike is upset and he has every right – but to say the Sharks are a border line playoff team and that we have “the worst D in the division” I think is just the piss and vinegar talking.
Here are the Sharks current top six defensemen.
Vlasic, McLaren, Rivet, Carle, Ehrhoff and ??? (Wilson is going to add another veteran defensemen – I stand by this statement)
Now take a look at the rest of the division and how I rank the units.
#1 – Dallas Stars – Stars have a strong veteran group and are five deep. #2 – Los Angeles Kings – Kings have improved considerably on the blue line and will have Jack Johnson for a full year. #3 – San Jose Sharks – We have two rising stars in both All Rookie defensemen from last year. No other team in the division can stake this claim. #4 – Anahiem Ducks – Schneider for Neidermeyer is not an equal trade. The Ducks have become considerably less scary and just as old. They don’t have a young core of D. #5 – Phoenix Coyotes – Yikes! After Michalek, JovoCop and Morris, is there anyone left??
Now that Souray has signed, the rest of the UFA crop will fall into place. Sopel, Markov and Sutton will find homes now and we’ll see what Wilson has up his sleeve. So put the shitburger back Mike and don’t forget how good this team is. I still believe that Wilson has something in the works that will not only make the Sharks better, but the Sharks will take a step closer to the Cup. Whether it is trading for a Redden or adding a C+ veteran like Sopel, the Sharks will contend for the Pacific Division crown.
July 12th, 2007, 4:19 pm
Souray signs with the Oilers. Sportsnet reports it as a 5 year, $27M deal. That comes out to $5.4M per year. So I can revel in the fact that I was right, and now that we went 0 for 4 on the guys I mentioned, the Sharks need to scramble to hold on in the Pacific division.
Some thoughts while I’m still nice and bitter:
- Have fun with that 9 month winter
- Enjoy playing for a team that couldn’t sign their captain or best defensemen, and replaced the D with two players that were a combined -53 least season
- I can’t imagine the Sharks offered less than that kind of money, which probably makes Souray the 2nd player in two years to take less money to not play for the Sharks.
- Rob Davison or Doug Murray? Kind of like, should I eat a shitburger or a tofurkey for lunch?
Unless Doug Wilson pulls another Thornton-esque trade out of his ass, we’ll have the worst D in the division, while watching several other teams in the West get better. If Carle and Ehrhoff don’t step it up in a major way this season, the Sharks could be fighting for a playoff spot. Figure the Wings, Ducks, Avs, Flames are locks, with Dallas, Minnesota, and Vancouver likely.
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July 12th, 2007, 2:24 pm
From this article:
The Daily News also has learned that Sather is shopping center Matt Cullen, with a trade back to the Carolina Hurricanes very much on the front burner. Should the Rangers shed Cullen’s contract (three years left at $2.8million per), they’d trim nearly $3million from this season’s cap hit.
That could simply provide flexibility for potential in-season moves. But it just as easily could be the first step in a plan to clear enough cap space to sign free-agent defenseman Sheldon Souray, whom the Devils and Islanders have pursued. Unloading defenseman Paul Mara’s $3million salary undoubtedly would be another requirement.
The planets would really have to align for the Rangers. Why would teams take on those salaries? Especially teams in the East, knowing full well the Rangers want to use that money to improve their team? I stand by my previous post, but I’m still hoping against hope that Souray will find his way here.
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July 11th, 2007, 1:02 pm
New York Post reports the Devils and Rangers appear to have abandoned the Souray sweepstakes. The Devils have turned their attention towards resigning restricted free agents Paul Martin and Zach Parise. Martin was quoted saying he heard Souray was coming West….
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July 10th, 2007, 12:47 pm
After my post yesterday, I took a long hard look at the Sharks salary cap situation and tried to put myself in Doug Wilson’s shoes. Here is a list of the players who are either restricted or unrestricted free agents next season and my guess and what salary they will command. The Sharks currently have 25 million committed in salary for next season.
Steve Bernier – 1.5 million Christian Ehrhoff – 3.0 million Marcel Goc – 1.5 million Joe Pavelski – 1.5 million Patrick Marleau – 6.5 million Milan Michalek – 3.5 million Patrick Rismiller 1.5 million Ryan Clowe – 2.0 million
This is 21-22 million in salary – assuming Wilson keeps all these core players. This also doesn’t include Setoguchi and Wishart, who I think will be on the big club by 2008-09. I would assume Curtiss Brown will not be back. This makes for a 47 million dollar roster in 2008-09 – so Wilson not making a pitch for a big ticket free agent does make sense – he wants to keep his core intact. You figure the cap will be 53-54 million, so he would have 7 million of wiggle room – so adding a Souray type salary could work but it would push the Sharks to the cap limit and force Wilson to make some tough choices next year and part with some young talent.. I still think Redden might be the perfect fit for this season. Wilson loves the Sens blueprint and Redden can run the point on the power play. As I stated before, the Sens have a similar situation to the Sharks next year – they have major core players up for contract – Spezza, Heatley, Fisher, Vermette, Schubert, Mezaros, Emery and Redden. They will have around 30 million in cap room, but you have to figure Spezza and Heatley will fetch around 8-9 million on the market. There is no way they can resign all these players, and the one that makes sense to part with is Redden, With Corvo, Volchenkov and Phillips under contract, Redden is the odd man out. He is making 6.5 this season and if he likes it here, he could resign during the season. It would probably cost us a young forward (Bernier) and a pick – worth the risk.
So – the reality check is the Sharks may have 15 million to spend in 2007-08, but they have so many players up for new contracts that they can perhaps only afford a player like Redden – a rental that could help us win now and perhaps take the road of Big Joe and stay for less money if he likes it here.
Taking a moment to sit in Doug Wilson’s shoes has made me feel better about him not overspending on the UFA market. I still think he will make a move to improve the roster for now while keeping an eye on resigning our core. What do you think??
July 9th, 2007, 11:45 pm
Over a week has past since the unrestricted free agent period came upon us and Doug Wilson has been either unable or unwilling to land a big fish. The player I assumed would be his main target all along, power play specialist Sheldon Souray, is the only big name left on the open market and I have come to accept that he is going to the Rangers. It appears Souray is waiting and waiting and waiting for the Rangers to clear the cap room necessary to sign him – this would involve them dealing a forward (Cullen or Straka come to mind) or renouncing their rights to Avery and not signing Shanahan – which I find hard to believe. I think the Rangers have messed with their roster too much and are playing a dangerous game with their goalie by forcing him into a potential arbitration situation that would allow Henrik to walk away next year as a free agent. Where are their priorities? Adding Souray may seem flashy but talk about too many cooks in the kitchen – how will Jagr, Souray, Drury, Shanahan, Avery and Gomez all co-exist?? I think not well.
So if Souray wanted to come to San Jose, he would have done it by now. Instead he is playing a dangerous game of poker with the Rangers, hoping they can get some cap room. From the outside, it appears Doug Wilson is waiting to see what happens with Souray before he makes his next move.
How long must we wait for the promised improvements Doug Wilson?
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