We were bad enough this year with Gio to potentially pick in the top 3 of the draft.
A full year with Sutter at the helm and a healthy Markstrom is definitely going to give the Flames a different look—one that will have them well outside of the bottom-quarter of the League.
__________________
Dealing with Everything from Dead Sea Scrolls to Red C Trolls
Quote:
Originally Posted by woob
"...harem warfare? like all your wives dressup and go paintballing?"
You would have to think if your Buffalo now is the time to maximize your return for Eichel. Certainly one would think today/tomorrow would bring the most suitors
Agreed, a couple of teams dropped out today based on the UFA signings and trades. With more UFA's going off the board, GMs aren't going to wait around for the back and forth.
The more we keep adding free agents for half a decade, the more I'm coming to understand a rebuild is not coming anytime soon. If we'd held the line and not added (and appear to be adding more) veterans with pedigree, I think there's a chance this could have trended in the direction of the Flames being a lottery team next year. But, not the case, and I think it's destined to be in the 8-10 conference range short of a significant core shakeup.
So, injured or not, that puts me in camp Eichel. Go for it, futures be damned.
I agree. I think The Islanders success the last few years validated their current mindset right or wrong. Flames still need a Barzal or Eichel type to make this work though and a D man that can provide some sort of offence.
Weighing surgery vs. rehab
Virginia Zakas, Inside Injuries: Eichel believed surgery was in his best interest, yet it didn’t happen. I have to agree with the player here. A herniated disk can lead to significant neurological compromise and pain that radiates down the arm. Weakness is also a common problem as the damaged disk is hitting up against the nerve.
One surgical option is to replace the disk with an artificial one. This is a quick and simple procedure with a recovery time of 2-3 months. Rehabbing and delaying surgery risks a more serious injury that could lead to fusion surgery. That would come with more long-term complications and a longer recovery time. Even if Eichel’s injury doesn’t get worse next season, it could still bother him enough that it hurts his performance.
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Vinny01 For This Useful Post:
Full on troll here!!! I had to log back in. I’m sick and tired of the C of Red Becoming this S### show! Fully Disappointed! The in fighting. The Juvenile comments! We have become Greaser fans??? Seriously?
Sorry I might have missed this, but which teams have dropped out on Eichel and why do we think that's the case?
Per Friedman teams go in and out with interest. They talk and then get cold feet about the price and then wait and then call Kevyn Adams again. Today maybe changes things for teams that committed big salary and term to UFAs.
__________________
Quote:
Originally Posted by JobHopper
The thing is, my posts, thoughts and insights may be my opinions but they're also quite factual.
The Following User Says Thank You to saillias For This Useful Post:
Full on troll here!!! I had to log back in. I’m sick and tired of the C of Red Becoming this S### show! Fully Disappointed! The in fighting. The Juvenile comments! We have become Greaser fans??? Seriously?
Weighing surgery vs. rehab
Virginia Zakas, Inside Injuries: Eichel believed surgery was in his best interest, yet it didn’t happen. I have to agree with the player here. A herniated disk can lead to significant neurological compromise and pain that radiates down the arm. Weakness is also a common problem as the damaged disk is hitting up against the nerve.
One surgical option is to replace the disk with an artificial one. This is a quick and simple procedure with a recovery time of 2-3 months. Rehabbing and delaying surgery risks a more serious injury that could lead to fusion surgery. That would come with more long-term complications and a longer recovery time. Even if Eichel’s injury doesn’t get worse next season, it could still bother him enough that it hurts his performance.
So if he has the surgery now, best case, he's out 2-3 months. Surgery has never been done on an NHL player before, so this is assuming there are no issues.
If he waits, he could play this season, but the pain could limit his performance. At the same time, the longer he holds off this surgery, the more likely he will require an even more invasive procedure.
I think it's pretty easy to see why a deal hasn't been completed yet. These are massive question marks when you're trading the farm for him.
I don't even give a crap anymore if it's actually a good long term trade for the Flames. I want that adrenaline rush of hearing about a massive deal and being absolutely hyped about it from at least today until October. inject into my veins NOW, do not care about the consequences for tomorrow!
The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to Inglewood Jack For This Useful Post:
Full on troll here!!! I had to log back in. I’m sick and tired of the C of Red Becoming this S### show! Fully Disappointed! The in fighting. The Juvenile comments! We have become Greaser fans??? Seriously?
You're too late we're past the infighting and it's turned into our love Pitlick.
Bradley has healed us with a meager 4th round pick.