Post by Matt-Colorado on Jun 6, 2017 20:42:53 GMT -5
All, here is a place where we can all collectively dump our ideas for UFA retention/extension for discussion.
I've been jotting down my thoughts on this few more than a few seasons, I have listed 3 different methods to pitch.
The premise is simple:
In the NHL, a player playing for one franchise for majority of a 20 year career seldom happens, but it does happen. We all know the names of those guys who spent 15+ years with one team: Yzerman, Richter, Lidstrom, Clarke, Sakic, Lemieux, heck even Chris Phillips spent 17 years with Ottawa. So far Crosby, Ovechkin, the Sedins et al have yet to play a game outside of the teams that drafted them--because they get lucrative deals done before they get to free agency.
What it comes down to is a method that is fair, not gameable, and is also not insane to code--so at the end of the day, if our least favorite idea winds up being the only one that can be coded, we get what works.
1- Franchise tag method, my favorite:
-Steven Stamkos is going to be a free agent when UFA starts in 7 days.
-Philadelphia spends x franchise points to tag Stamkos.
-At this point, Stamkos hands Philadelphia an asking price which is the average of the top 5? 10? player salaries for that category: F, D, G.
-The asking price is based on the previous years salaries.
-Philadelphia then has 1 week to sign Stamkos to another contact, based on his asking price. The week buffer is to provide the retaining team time to create salary cap if needed.
=This method is one where the market that we as GMs have created dictate our franchise player's salary. Increases the value of FP and enables us to retain our best player at a price that isn't team friendly but not insane.
2- Sign before UFA begins:
- The playoffs have ended, Philadelphia spends x franchise points (a lot of franchise points) to enter negotiations with Stamkos with an asking price based on his current years card, as in, the card used in his UFA year.
- Pays a certain % more than the asking price to sign Stamkos before UFA begins.
Works in favor for the team if Stamkos had a down card (for example Boston and Cory Schneider next year), and in Stamkos's favor if his card is based on a 65 goal season.
=A touch of realism where you pay a player based on past years performance.
=Is theoretically the best way to guarantee you keep your player, therefore it should be the most expensive FP-wise, and somewhat of a gamble using the current year's card.
3- Test the market method:
- Steven Stamkos is a pending free agent
- Philadelphia spends x franchise points to have Stamkos come back to Philly after agreeing to a salary with team 2, allowing Philly to match.
- Philadelphia then has a week to decide / find salary. (Free agency keeps advancing through the waterfall bidding phases during this week, team 2 has their remaining cap space plus x amount to bid in rounds while Philadelphia decides.)
=My least favorite idea, the most risk involved salary-wise, given our tendency to go rogue in the top two tiers of UFA (myself included) and it probably prevents the bidding team from bidding on tier 2 players as UFA goes on while their money is tied up.
Have at it gents, I for one am very excited to start this discussion and see what happens. I agree with most of you, that if this is possible it should happen sooner than later.
What ideas do you have?
I've been jotting down my thoughts on this few more than a few seasons, I have listed 3 different methods to pitch.
The premise is simple:
In the NHL, a player playing for one franchise for majority of a 20 year career seldom happens, but it does happen. We all know the names of those guys who spent 15+ years with one team: Yzerman, Richter, Lidstrom, Clarke, Sakic, Lemieux, heck even Chris Phillips spent 17 years with Ottawa. So far Crosby, Ovechkin, the Sedins et al have yet to play a game outside of the teams that drafted them--because they get lucrative deals done before they get to free agency.
What it comes down to is a method that is fair, not gameable, and is also not insane to code--so at the end of the day, if our least favorite idea winds up being the only one that can be coded, we get what works.
1- Franchise tag method, my favorite:
-Steven Stamkos is going to be a free agent when UFA starts in 7 days.
-Philadelphia spends x franchise points to tag Stamkos.
-At this point, Stamkos hands Philadelphia an asking price which is the average of the top 5? 10? player salaries for that category: F, D, G.
-The asking price is based on the previous years salaries.
-Philadelphia then has 1 week to sign Stamkos to another contact, based on his asking price. The week buffer is to provide the retaining team time to create salary cap if needed.
=This method is one where the market that we as GMs have created dictate our franchise player's salary. Increases the value of FP and enables us to retain our best player at a price that isn't team friendly but not insane.
2- Sign before UFA begins:
- The playoffs have ended, Philadelphia spends x franchise points (a lot of franchise points) to enter negotiations with Stamkos with an asking price based on his current years card, as in, the card used in his UFA year.
- Pays a certain % more than the asking price to sign Stamkos before UFA begins.
Works in favor for the team if Stamkos had a down card (for example Boston and Cory Schneider next year), and in Stamkos's favor if his card is based on a 65 goal season.
=A touch of realism where you pay a player based on past years performance.
=Is theoretically the best way to guarantee you keep your player, therefore it should be the most expensive FP-wise, and somewhat of a gamble using the current year's card.
3- Test the market method:
- Steven Stamkos is a pending free agent
- Philadelphia spends x franchise points to have Stamkos come back to Philly after agreeing to a salary with team 2, allowing Philly to match.
- Philadelphia then has a week to decide / find salary. (Free agency keeps advancing through the waterfall bidding phases during this week, team 2 has their remaining cap space plus x amount to bid in rounds while Philadelphia decides.)
=My least favorite idea, the most risk involved salary-wise, given our tendency to go rogue in the top two tiers of UFA (myself included) and it probably prevents the bidding team from bidding on tier 2 players as UFA goes on while their money is tied up.
Have at it gents, I for one am very excited to start this discussion and see what happens. I agree with most of you, that if this is possible it should happen sooner than later.
What ideas do you have?