| Questionable
Returns
Patrick Finding It Difficult To Get Equal Value In High
Profile Trades
By Bob Grove
More than five years removed from
bankruptcy, the Penguins long ago came to grips with the realities of
their tenuous financial situation. It means making every decision with
an eye on the budget. It means focusing an enormous amount of off-ice
energy on two political landscapes - one in Pennsylvania, where an arena
funding plan remains elusive, and the other in New York, where the NHL
drifts ominously toward a work stoppage next September.
On the ice, it means casting off
established stars, missing the playoffs and enduring painfully small
crowds. It means remaking the team, which is never as simple as grabbing
prospects in gut-wrenching trades, recalling draft picks from the AHL,
plugging them into your lineup and shaking the mixture into a playoff
participant.
The recent trade of Martin Straka
to Los Angeles for defenseman Martin Strbak and forward Sergei Anshakov
was the latest in a series of money-driven transactions. The Kings got
a proven commodity while the Penguins got a 28-year-old defenseman drafted
10 years ago and a 19-year-old who may or may not reach the NHL.
The Penguins and general manager
Craig Patrick have a plan for returning to NHL prominence, much of which
rests on stockpiling talented youngsters through the draft and painful
but necessary trades.
The selection of goaltender Marc-Andre
Fleury with the No. 1 pick in 2003 is now the key to the rebuilding
effort, and there is evidence to suggest good decision making in recent
drafts. Patrick's recent major trades, however, haven't much fanned
the rebuilding flames.
'There is some doubt about the
quality of people they are getting back in these deals,' says Mike Brophy,
senior writer for The Hockey News. 'And I say this with some reservation
because Craig Patrick is a proven, smart GM. I just wonder if he's operating
with one hand tied behind his back -
'Because salary is such a big
issue right now, it's difficult to get equal value in return. I really
think the Penguins have become the poster child for waiting for a new
collective bargaining agreement, and most people in the hockey world
want to see the Penguins succeed.'
Deals involving Straka, Jaromir
Jagr (Kris Beech, Michal Sivek and Ross Lupaschuk from Washington),
Darius Kasparaitis (Ville Nieminen and Rick Berry from Colorado) and
Alexei Kovalev (Rico Fata, Mikael Samuelsson, Richard Lintner and Joel
Bouchard from the Rangers) had the potential for the greatest returns.
Of the 11 players acquired, just
six remain with the organization. Only Fata has made an impact, although
Samuelsson was part of the trade that made drafting Fleury possible.
The players acquired in the Jagr
trade, in particular, have been slow to find their niche. Beech, a former
No. 7 overall pick, has spent most of this season in the AHL.
'I really thought Beech would
be a player, but often times when you make these trades with young players
involved, you're rolling the dice,' says Kevin Allen, hockey writer
for USA Today. 'Craig is in a very, very difficult position. When everyone
knows you're trying to trim salary, it's hard to get fair return.'
'When you're making these deals,
you're not going to get everything you want,' Patrick says. 'You do
the best you can. You're working off a list (of available players),
there are probably four or five guys on the list, and you kind of have
to figure out how to get the right mix. If you can't, you move on to
the next team.'
Pierre McGuire, former Penguins'
assistant coach and current lead analyst for Canada's TSN, says Pittsburgh
is still paying for mistakes made in the mid-to-late 1990s.
'Everybody says the financial
situation in Pittsburgh is allowing them not to compete. That's malarkey,'
says McGuire. 'Before they traded Kovalev, Jagr and Straka, they made
unbelievably bad decisions with younger players who weren't making big
money.
'Trading Markus Naslund for Alek
Stojanov; trading Patrick Lalime for Sean Pronger; trading Glen Murray
for Ed Olczyk. These are deals where the return was ridiculous. Even
going back to when they traded Straka to Ottawa for Troy Murray and
Norm Maciver, they made very bad evaluations of their own young talent.
Now they're trading established players and getting nothing in return.
They traded Kovalev, Jagr and Straka and got Fata.'
Knowing when to pull the plug
on a young player, Patrick admits, is more an art than a science.
'When you're trying to evaluate
young people - it's hard to determine when the light's going to go on,
when their game is going to fit where they should be,' he says. 'It
happens to everybody at different ages.
'When you're trying to build an
organization, you definitely agonize over every one of these circumstances.
With young guys. . . you don't know. A guy may really start to show
his game in the minors and come up here and take five steps back. Then
you wonder if he'll ever get back up again. It's tough. Sometimes you
have to be lucky. Sometimes you're not.'
After a run of poor first-round
draft decisions that began with Chris Wells in 1994 and included Craig
Hillier (1996) and Robert Dome (1997), Pittsburgh appears to have done
well in recent drafts by selecting Konstantin Koltsov (1999), Brooks
Orpik (2000) and Ryan Whitney (2002). The Penguins put five players
in the World Junior Championships in 2003 and were poised to have seven
in the 2004 tournament.
Boston College's Ben Eaves was
a Hobey Baker runner-up last season, Harvard defenseman Noah Welch has
drawn very good reviews and Koltsov, Ryan Malone, Tomas Surovy and Matt
Murley have all reached the NHL.
'The Penguins have done much better,'
says Kyle Woodlief, publisher of draft newsletter Red Line Report. 'Orpik
is going to be a player, and Whitney has tons of potential. He has incredible
passing skills - the passing skills of a guy who's 5-11 - and he's going
to be a big man.'
Pittsburgh might also get the
opportunity to add Alexandre Ovechkin, the Russian forward who is a
lock to be drafted first overall this June. 'Now they need that flag-carrying
forward,' says Allen. 'If there's ever a time to be bad, it's this year.'
Landing a lottery pick is not
the stated plan for this season, but there's no denying it would fit
nicely into the bigger picture Patrick is trying to paint.
'We were really hoping to get
closer to September of 2004 with guys like Kovy and Marty in our lineup,
but it didn't happen that way,' he said. 'It's a sad thing for the organization.
But it enabled us to sit down and know where we're going. We're working
with a five-year plan, and we feel we're close to three years into it,
and in another year or two we're going to be there.'
PSR Senior Writer Bob Grove
has been covering the Penguins since 1981 and currently serves as a
regular co-host on the Penguins Radio Network.
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