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PostPosted: Tue Jun 27, 2023 10:49 am 
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Hawks re-signed Nick Foligno to a 1yr $4M. I think they are still under the floor cap by about $3.5-$4M.


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 27, 2023 12:11 pm 
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DAC wrote:
BigW72 wrote:
RFDC wrote:
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CHICAGO — As the Blackhawks get ready to make a selection with the first overall pick in the NHL Draft on Wednesday, they’re acquiring a player who had that distinction over a decade ago.

Per numerous reports, the first from Eliotte Friedman of SportsNet Canada, the team will acquire forward Taylor Hall from the Bruins.

Per Frank Seravalli of Daily Faceoff, the Blackhawks will also get the rights to unrestricted free agent forward Nick Foligno in exchange for restricted free agent defensemen Ian Mitchell and Alec Regula.

My son seems to think this trade is a big deal. I don't follow closely enough to agree with him and they've got stupid money tied up with Seth Jones.


Hall played on the 3rd line in Boston and every attempt to move him up to play with Boston's elite talent this past season resulted in lackluster production. He's 33 and has been a 50-60 pt player the last few seasons. It's been 5 seasons since he paced for more than a point/game. He definitely is not worth the 6 M cap hit and there have been questions about his worth ethic in the past. I think the Hawks should have gotten a pick or something coming back. Not a terrible trade but nothing I'm excited about.


They'll end up flipping him at a trade deadline, half salary retained. They'll get value then.


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 27, 2023 12:11 pm 
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Chet Coppock's Fur Coat wrote:
Was Mitchell that much of a bust, or was it just a numbers game amongst defensemen?


My thought is that it's a bit of both.


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 01, 2023 9:03 am 
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Free Agency starts today.

I don't expect any big splashes or long term contracts as if you're the Hawks you have no need to commit to anything this year and you can just keep cash available for a very big splash next year when Auston Matthews tries to run back to the US and away from the toxic Toronto media and fan base.

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 01, 2023 9:06 am 
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Hockey players are tough. They're not afraid of anything. Except Toronto sportswriters.

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 01, 2023 10:04 am 
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Seth Jones still has 7 years left on that deal with a no trade clause. It is almost like the Blackhawks are required to have a terrible contract at all times.

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 01, 2023 12:20 pm 
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conns7901 wrote:
Seth Jones still has 7 years left on that deal with a no trade clause. It is almost like the Blackhawks are required to have a terrible contract at all times.



Stan Bowman is a moron. Whomever hires him, is a bigger idiot than he is.


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 01, 2023 2:23 pm 
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The Chicago Blackhawks have signed forward Ryan Donato to a two-year contract that runs through the 2024-25 season, the team announced Saturday on Day 1 of NHL free agency. His cap hit is $2 million.

Donato, 27, registered 27 points (14 goals, 13 assists) in 71 regular-season games last season for the Seattle Kraken and added two assists in 14 postseason contests. He had a career-best 16 goals and 31 points in his first campaign with Seattle.

Donato is a versatile forward who can play up and down the lineup. He will likely be a middle-six piece on the Blackhawks, who added some more forward depth to a young group.

Donato has spent six seasons in the NHL playing for four different teams, which includes Boston, Minnesota, San Jose and Seattle. Chicago will be the fifth. He was selected by the Bruins in the second round (No. 56 overall) of the 2014 NHL Draft.

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PostPosted: Sun Jul 02, 2023 10:38 am 
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Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Free Agency starts today.

I don't expect any big splashes or long term contracts as if you're the Hawks you have no need to commit to anything this year and you can just keep cash available for a very big splash next year when Auston Matthews tries to run back to the US and away from the toxic Toronto media and fan base.



I would love for them to sign him, my concern is how much he is gonna want.


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PostPosted: Sun Jul 02, 2023 11:20 am 
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I don't want a bitch who runs away and cries at the thought of journalists. Fans are going to recognize you at our restaurants, too. Fuck off to Raleigh like everyone else if you don't like it

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 03, 2023 9:51 am 
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Curious Hair wrote:
I don't want a bitch who runs away and cries at the thought of journalists. Fans are going to recognize you at our restaurants, too. Fuck off to Raleigh like everyone else if you don't like it

That's the great thing about going to Chicago. It's a good hockey city, but all of the anger at underperforming players gets directed to Soldier Field.

Compare that to Toronto where you can score 40 goals in a season and that still isn't enough because the Leaf fans are dealing with the pain of futility since 1967.

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 03, 2023 9:59 am 
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I don't want a bitch who runs away and cries at the thought of breakfast time Frank. Posters are going to recognize you and your mults, too. Fuck off to Midwest Sports Fan Board like Terry’s Peeps if you don't like it

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 03, 2023 10:37 am 
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Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Curious Hair wrote:
I don't want a bitch who runs away and cries at the thought of journalists. Fans are going to recognize you at our restaurants, too. Fuck off to Raleigh like everyone else if you don't like it

That's the great thing about going to Chicago. It's a good hockey city, but all of the anger at underperforming players gets directed to Soldier Field.

Compare that to Toronto where you can score 40 goals in a season and that still isn't enough because the Leaf fans are dealing with the pain of futility since 1967.


But wouldn't you agree that it's a pretty fucked-up system where the "hard markets" like Toronto, Montreal, and Edmonton subsidize the very operations of the easy ones like Phoenix, Fort Lauderdale, Raleigh, or Nashville? People always want to play somewhere else, but those cities' overwhelming passion for the game is the reason players can play somewhere else. This is a disparity among markets that doesn't exist in other sports. The stakes are higher for the Yankees than they are for the Rays, yes, but players want to play for the Yankees and don't want to play for the Rays. It seems like a system that can't last forever.

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The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 03, 2023 10:53 am 
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Curious Hair wrote:
Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Curious Hair wrote:
I don't want a bitch who runs away and cries at the thought of journalists. Fans are going to recognize you at our restaurants, too. Fuck off to Raleigh like everyone else if you don't like it

That's the great thing about going to Chicago. It's a good hockey city, but all of the anger at underperforming players gets directed to Soldier Field.

Compare that to Toronto where you can score 40 goals in a season and that still isn't enough because the Leaf fans are dealing with the pain of futility since 1967.


But wouldn't you agree that it's a pretty fucked-up system where the "hard markets" like Toronto, Montreal, and Edmonton subsidize the very operations of the easy ones like Phoenix, Fort Lauderdale, Raleigh, or Nashville? People always want to play somewhere else, but those cities' overwhelming passion for the game is the reason players can play somewhere else. This is a disparity among markets that doesn't exist in other sports. The stakes are higher for the Yankees than they are for the Rays, yes, but players want to play for the Yankees and don't want to play for the Rays. It seems like a system that can't last forever.

As you just pointed out, this disparity exists in both the NHL and MLB and it's not necessarily a new thing in MLB. The cities are different but each league has the HAVE's and the HAVE NOTS and for some reason, the league insists on keeping teams in markets that they think will "grow" the sport :lol:

Shit...the NFL thinks putting a team in Europe is going to be a good idea.

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 03, 2023 11:11 am 
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But as I said, the market disparities in MLB correlate with the desire to play there. The heat is on in New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, St. Louis, and players want to rise to the occasion. In the NHL, they want to chill out and be left alone, but they only have the luxury of doing so because of a few cities where players can definitely not chill out or be left alone. This doesn't even map to the NBA, where you can't dream of blending into a small market because you're a black guy who's seven feet tall.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2023 10:46 am 
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BigW72 wrote:
As you just pointed out, this disparity exists in both the NHL and MLB and it's not necessarily a new thing in MLB. The cities are different but each league has the HAVE's and the HAVE NOTS and for some reason, the league insists on keeping teams in markets that they think will "grow" the sport :lol:

Shit...the NFL thinks putting a team in Europe is going to be a good idea.


And in the NHL the majority of players want to play in the warm tax-free states. The tax savings are significant compared to the Canadian markets. Players are fleeing Winnipeg and Calgary partly because of not wanting to play in cold, boring, heavily-taxed cities. Tampa got their core players to sign slightly under-market contracts because of these factors. Ryan O'Reilly just choose Nashville over Toronto because of the calmer market, better weather, and Tennessee's tax status compared to Toronto. I think it's something that needs to be addressed in the NHL.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2023 12:19 pm 
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DAC wrote:
BigW72 wrote:
As you just pointed out, this disparity exists in both the NHL and MLB and it's not necessarily a new thing in MLB. The cities are different but each league has the HAVE's and the HAVE NOTS and for some reason, the league insists on keeping teams in markets that they think will "grow" the sport :lol:

Shit...the NFL thinks putting a team in Europe is going to be a good idea.


And in the NHL the majority of players want to play in the warm tax-free states. The tax savings are significant compared to the Canadian markets. Players are fleeing Winnipeg and Calgary partly because of not wanting to play in cold, boring, heavily-taxed cities. Tampa got their core players to sign slightly under-market contracts because of these factors. Ryan O'Reilly just choose Nashville over Toronto because of the calmer market, better weather, and Tennessee's tax status compared to Toronto. I think it's something that needs to be addressed in the NHL.



I thought socialism was good?


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2023 2:35 pm 
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Good for the people. Bad for hockey players.

You'd basically have to have every cap number reflect take-home pay or raise the cap for teams that don't have cupcake state tax laws. Either way, the current system heavily disadvantages states that don't rely on tourism or federal subsidies, or provinces that take care of their sick and elderly, unlike us.

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