I’ve another bone to pick with the message board GMs: for years we’ve had to endure their claims that when it comes to Dainius Zubrus, he was a hopelessly misplaced, “non-finishing” top-line center. Let’s all agree that he’s not a no. 1 pivot on a playoff club. But doesn’t it stand to reason that were he more the checking line kind of guy, he most assuredly wouldn’t fetch a no. 1 pick . . . let alone two? And yet, when that’s what Buffalo returned yesterday, these same naysayers wrung their hands over the “poor” return. Hypocrites.

Yesterday was a frenzy of attempted fact gathering by fans and media related to player movement, all of it more or less pursued on line. TSN and the NHL Network were broadcasting breathless accounts of the transactions all day long. One GM recently told Sports Illustrated that deadline day “ought to be a holiday in Canada.� Locally, we in the Capitals’ community are indebted to the committed labor of Tarik El-Bashir, who was lodged all morning, afternoon, and evening at Verizon Center, regularly updating his blog with trade intelligence, and Mike Vogel, who for a period of time yesterday afternoon was brought into the Caps’ hockey operations’ inner circle. The efforts of both men made for a marvelously compelling afternoon. If you weren’t convinced before about the revolution taking place in hockey news coverage — most particularly this season — yesterday ought to have ushered in a fresh reconsideration for you.

  • BallHype - Hype It Up!
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Google
  • Facebook
  • Pownce
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Wikio
  • del.icio.us
  • TwitThis
  • E-mail this story to a friend!


Print This Post Print This Post
Posted at 12:12 pm. Filed under Blogs, Boyd Gordon, Buffalo Sabres, Entry Draft, George McPhee, Media, Mike Vogel, Morning cup-a-joe, National Hockey League, Shaone Morrisonn, Steve Eminger, TSN, Tarik El-Bashir, Washington Capitals, Washington Post.
Bookmark the permalink. Follow comments here with the RSS feed. Post a comment or leave a trackback.

5 Comments

  1. sk84fun wrote:

    Just skimmed the latest, but FWIW, Jurcina is also an acquisition from the 01 draft; all the Caps have to do is trade for Andrew Alberts and they will have Boston’s 01 D draft class :)

    The doom and gloom side is that the Caps late round D 01 pick, Oduya, is currently playing his rookie season for the playoff bound NJDevils.

    Just looked it up and July 1, day 1 of UFA signings, is a Sunday and that is a good thing for employers and work productivity for NHL fans.

    Wednesday, February 28, 2007 at 1:54 pm | Permalink
  2. usiel wrote:

    Well at least the D&G crew is entertaining.

    It was a good return for zubrus…mainly the 1st round pick. Novotny a bit of a stalled prospect for them but how could one really push anyone from Buffalo’s top 2 lines anyways. Basically a Jurcina type situation where Novotny can show what he’s got.

    I completely agree that from 2002 onward GMGM/Mahoney’s drafting has been above average. Only the 2005 snake draft with Pokulok/Finley will take a bit longer to evaluate.

    Wednesday, February 28, 2007 at 6:22 pm | Permalink
  3. maruk wrote:

    Nice post.

    I think folks should recognize that GMGM continues to get better at his job. Drafting has improved, he gets good returns in trades, and he has a keen eye on the waiver wire. Thankfully, that last skill shouldn’t be needed as much in the future.

    What this summer will teach us is how adept GMGM is at handling the UFA market, a pond in which he has only immersed a toe or two over the years.

    Thursday, March 1, 2007 at 8:30 am | Permalink
  4. pepper wrote:

    This is a key point Maruk. Its going to be real interesting to see how McPhee is able to deal with serious UFAs and their agents, and convince both that Washington is the best place for the player to spend the next few years on his quest for the Cup and financial security at the same time.

    Thursday, March 1, 2007 at 11:01 pm | Permalink
  5. maruk wrote:

    Absolutely, Pepper. GMGM hints in his open letter on the Caps’ website that he understands this, but can he make it happen?

    IMHO, this summer will go a long way towards determining if the Caps will regularly challenge for the Cup or regularly challenge for seeds #5-8.

    We have no indication yet that the final pieces to the puzzle can come from within.

    Friday, March 2, 2007 at 8:23 am | Permalink

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *
*

*



By clicking "Submit" you agree that you have read and will abide by the Comment Policy.