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No. 30 remains in Boston for the next four-years.
WEEI columnist Joe Haggerty wrote an interesting piece this morning headlined, "A Good Day for Thomas, But What About the B‘s?”
He mentions many things; the good, the bad, the pros, the cons, and the all-important salary cap issues—regarding the alleged $5-mil per year for the net minder. It’s an interesting read and something worth taking a look at.
However, there is one teeny-tiny thing I want to talk about within his piece. It’s only one sentence, but I decided to dig a little deeper into this sentence, and share what would have went down if this had happened.
“If the B’s had waited until this summer, it’s possible that they could have saved themselves as much as a million on the all-important salary cap hit.”
After I read this, I was a bit shocked. I had to re-read it once more…and once more again; asking myself the same thing ,over and over, “If they waited until the summer?!”
Perplexing is an understatement. The only thing that I could come up with for an answer is, “He’d be in another city.”
Detroit.
The first day of summer is Jun. 21, 2009.
The first day of NHL free-agency is Jul. 1, 2009.
So, that is a lot of time between now and then. A lot can happen.
Tim Thomas is arguably the front-runner for the Vezina Trophy this year. He leads all NHL goalies in goals-against-average (GAA) and save percentage (SV %). His career-high 33 wins this season ranks him sixth in the league, and with just 51 games-played this season, that’s a staggering winning-percentage.
So, if he wins the Vezina, guess what? The price tag goes up!
The Boston Bruins have turned this city into believers ever since the tight playoff series against the Montreal Canadiens. What was supposed to be four or five games and out, the Bruins stretched the series to the max, before finally losing game seven.
This year, the believers stayed true and the B’s have far from disappointed. Just one win away—or a Washington loss—from clinching the Eastern Conference, Boston (110 points) will have home-ice advantage throughout the playoffs.
Just three points behind the San Jose Sharks (113 points) for the Presidents Trophy as the best team in the NHL, the Bruins are a top team for Lord Stanley's Cup.
So, if the Bruins make it to the promise land with Timmy Thomas as the anchor, guess what? The price tag goes up, again!
How much more? Well, that’s anyone’s guess, but I still firmly believe that Detroit would have made a big splash for Thomas, come Jul. 1.
Minnesota Wild extended the contract of 31-year-old goalie Niklas Backstrom on Mar. 3, 2009. He’s having a heck of a season—ranking in the top-eight in the NHL in every major goalie category thus far. However, he’s now getting paid $6-mil per year over the next four years while never having made it out of the Western Conference quarterfinals.
The Chicago Blackhawks signed former Washington Capitals netminder Cristobal Huet to a 4-year, $22.5-mil contract on the very first day of free agency of 2008. Huet, now 33-years-old, is having a mediocre season at best, splitting time with 36-year-old veteran Nikolai Khabibulin.
There is in fact a dire need for proven goalies and the Detroit Red Wings are a prime example.
Although the Red Wings may have the most prolific offense in the league (3.60 goals-per-game), their goaltending ranks 21st in the NHL, with an average of 2.95 goals-against per-game.
Chris Osgood, now 36-years-old, ranks 45th in the NHL with a .884 SV %, and 41st in GAA with 3.17. He is owed just $2.55-mil over the next two seasons—a small price to pay as back-up to someone like Thomas.
Now splitting most of the time, Ty Conklin has emerged into more of the everyday goalie than his original back-up plan. The 33-year-old is putting up respectable numbers this year—far superior than Osgood’s—and will become an unrestricted free-agent at the end of the season—one of Detroit’s 11 free-agents.
To survive on offense can only get you so far.
To rely on strong goaltending will get you further.
Now, we just have to “hurry up and wait” to see if players like Kessel and Krejci can remain in the Black and Gold uniforms. Boston has roughly $10-mil in cap-space for the upcoming 2009-10 season—about the same as Detroit.
So whether it is three million, four million, or five million per season—to hold onto a rock in net like Thomas is well worth it.
Mark Marino is also a columnist/Bruins community leader for bleacherreport.com. You can also listen to him on Saturday's at 2:25pm est, on 1250/900 AM in N.H., or at WGAMRadio.com
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Comments
I'm not a fan of this move at all. Not even a little.
I'm happy for Thomas, don't get me wrong. But the Bruins failed here. Big time.
Had they waited until after the postseason, and Thomas had a great postseason, then fine. But Thomas has never carried a team to a postseason win. He was mediocre last season.
He's had a great season, but he's a notch below the top-tier goalies.
Too much of a reactionary move. The Bruins reacted to his great season. They should have waited...
Not sure how good he'll be at 38. 2 years would have been better if he would have taken it.
-Not sure if the price tag would have been any cheaper after the playoffs, that was my main point. Especially if/when he wins the Vezina - and if they make it to the Cup Finals.
-He's gotten better each year. Granted he's 34, but he doesn't have that much NHL wear-and-tear.
-Sean, if they waited until the post-season, he'd be 35. When a player signs a contract between the ages of 26-34, a team can buy that player out for 2/3 his salary and have that salary taken off the salary cap. (See: Glen Murray)
-If he's 35+, they can still buy him out, but it will still reflect that team's salary cap, for each respective year.
-This shows that the Bruins organization doesn't think that Tuukka Rask is ready.
PS. He was far better than mediocre last season. If it was Auld/Rask that started as many games as Thomas, then I give it a 5% chance they make it to the post-season. Moreover, if it were either goalie other than Thomas in that MTL series, I give it a 0.1% chance they make it past 5 games.
I would have gladly paid more for him and dealt with the repercussions (the buyout clause) if he played well this postseason. If he didn't play well, I wouldn't have worried about his price tag, because I wouldn't have signed him.
Sean, what would have you done then, if he didn't play well this playoffs? Assign Rask as the new No. 1? Bring Manny back as the No. 1?
What if he did play well? You'd really want to pay more than $6-mil for the first two seasons; $5-mil for the third; $3-for the fourth?
If they paid more than $6-mil for 2009-10, then that means Boston would have single-digit-figures with the salary-cap -- roughly $9-mil then. Try to re-sign, Kessel, Krejci, Hunwick, Axelsson, Bitz etc with that kind of money.
Sort of like the Pats: You want to build your team around your QB. Same scenario.
I call it the Byron Dafoe rule. You can't overpay for a goalie until he's dominated in the playoffs.
Dafoe was a tremendous regular season goaltender, but was terrible in the postseason (maybe the stats agree, maybe they don't...but I saw it with my own eyes...he was horrible).
You don't win a Stanley Cup without a great playoff goaltender. Nobody knows whether or not Thomas is a great playoff goaltender yet.
I'd rather throw my team into cap hell to re-sign a guy who has proven he can do it in the playoffs than tie myself to a goalie for four years at big dollars before I know for sure...
Put it this way, you can re-sign Kessel, Krejci, Hunwick, Axelsson, Bitz, and anyone else you want to sign, if Thomas gives up 6 goals a game in the playoffs, it won't matter.
Forgot to answer your question. If Thomas played poorly in the postseason, I'd dump him and Manny. I'd pick up a vet to back up Rask, and I'd go with Rask as my #1...
The Bruins saved millions by signing Thomas now. Let's not forget that he is going to probably win the Vezina regardless of how far he takes us in the postseason. That = $$$. Rask still needs min one full year of being a backup until he is ready. I really like this move by the B's. Thomas is legit.
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