If heās available should the Flames do whatever they can to get Skinner?
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FlamesNation mailbag: Offseason options

ByĀ christian tiberi
May 13, 2019, 12:00 EDTUpdated: May 13, 2019, 12:05 EDT
With the offseason rapidly approaching, the Flames have to solve the big question of why things didnāt work out as expected. Theyāre going to go through an offseason with many different answers to that question. So, which ones are worth exploring? Which arenāt?
If you trade Sean Monahan, you should look to get another point-per-game first line centre who is also young and comes with a very reasonable contract. The only other players that come to mind with those descriptions is Nathan MacKinnon, Mark Schiefele, and Alex Barkov. Neither of those players will get traded, simply because teams donāt trade players like that and come out on the winning side of the deal.
I think Mikeās evaluation of Monahan hit the nail on the head. You should read it if you havenāt already, but hereās a summary: Monahan has his warts, and thatās fine because you generally have to lose for an entire decade and strike out on three other first overall picks before you find a player without them. Monahan still does incredibly valuable things that contributes to the Flames winning, and has shown throughout his career that what heās good at ā scoring goals- overshadows what heās bad at -defence- by a large margin.
Chances we are looking hard at Duchene?
Yes to Jeff Skinner, and yes to Matt Duchene. They usually put up at least 40 points a season, and can offer flexibility in a lineup that got too rigid and predictable towards the end of the season. You could load up one line or spread out the offence more effectively if you have one of these players in your lineup. You might even be able to do both at the same time.
And theyāre both UFAs, which is why I wanted to answer these questions together. The Flames have the opportunity to add two very, very good NHL players without giving up anything other than cash assets. The hold up is, as usual, cap space. The Flames already have an expensive offseason RFA period approaching and are pretty close to the cap ceiling. If they want one of Skinner or Duchene (they can probably only afford one), theyāll have to offload some money. You can run your own cap dump scenarios if youād like to -weāve done plenty in past mailbags- but theyāre all unlikely to happen, sorry to say.
Both players are also UFAs for the first time in their career, and are probably looking for a big sum of money over a long period of time. As enticing as either of them are, I donāt think the Flames will voluntarily dive into cap hell this early into their contention window. If they look to add an elite player, theyāre looking through the trade market.
Is the light going on for Sam Bennett?
I think the light is on, itās just not as bright as many had hoped.
Sam Bennettās finished his fourth season with the club and hasnāt really shown much growth from year one. When he does look like heās finally taking that next step, he often putters out. His consistency is really whatās holding him back, but itās been like that since day one of his career. Itās weird and frustrating. Playoff Sam Bennett is so engaged and fun to watch, but heās only like that for bits and parts of the regular season. Weāre probably only fooling ourselves if we think Bennett having a few good games is an indication that heās finally figured it out.
In an RFA year, the Flames have to decide whether thatās enough to continue on with the Bennett project. His playoff performances do get you excited about that sliver of potential, but when youāre up against the wall cap-wise, you have to pay him for what he usually is rather than what he occasionally is. If Bennettās camp doesnāt like that, the two likely split.
Due to our new defensive acquisitions., Who are we moving and what is the likely return?
Donāt confuse the Flames building up depth with the Flames being ready to ship players out immediately. I see the Flames going after players like Alexander Yelesin and Johan-Carl Lerby as attempts to make up for only drafting six defenceman (three of whom arenāt with the club anymore) in the previous four drafts (24 picks). They have self inflicted depth issues in those departments. This is an attempt to fix that.
While Iām optimistic about the futures of Yelesin and Lerby, I donāt believe that theyāre ready to play immediately. The SHL and KHL are much different leagues than the NHL, and thereās going to be an acclimation period. Both of the Flamesā recent signings are going to get a year of assessment in the AHL (Lerby will stay in the SHL next season and come over, presumably to the AHL, the season after) and then a decision will be made.
Now that doesnāt mean defencemen arenāt on the blockā¦
Itās tough to read Brodieās league wide value. Heās a first pairing defenceman in Calgary and usually picks up 30+ points, but heās playing next to a likely Norris winner, and hasnāt seen much success away from said likely Norris winner. Even with likely Norris winner, he still has his issues. How many teams are willing to pony up for the risk that theyāre bringing on a dud? Factoring in his contract, which only has one more year remaining at a moderate cap hit, and it might feel like a rental situation to most buyers.
Teams generally arenāt going to give up their cost controlled, high end forwards for a player with potentially papered-over flaws who could bolt in a year. If a Brodie trade materializes, I think it might be for decent prospects and conditional picks. Thereās just too much risk associated with acquiring Brodie that teams are going to hedge their bets when exploring a trade, which is bad for a Flames team that wants something now.
Is TJ Brodie a goner?
I go back and forth on it. Brodieās frustrating at times, but heās also been a key part of this team for the past several years. The Flames probably wonāt mind moving on, but it wonāt be easy, or even something they seek out to do.
It really does depend on what they get for him in a trade. If itās like what I described above, they probably hold onto him. The team has more immediate needs, and if Brodie is the player that has to be sacrificed to solve them, they can live with that. Future assets arenāt enticing enough. A player who can contribute now? Brodieās gone.
Who would be a good project player the flames could get thier hands on?
The Flames really shouldnāt be wasting time with project players. The roster is ready to win now, why devote time to someone who isnāt? If the team was rebuilding, you could take the chance that maybe you find a diamond in the rough or an underappreciated player, but thereās limited opportunities and room for error on a team with Stanley Cup aspirations.
Look at the Curtis Lazar experience. Perceived as an unfinished player, he was acquired with the hopes that he would find his NHL footing and become a core piece. Acquired with about 20 games left to play, he played in exactly four, two of them coming after the Flames clinched. With every game mattering down the stretch of the 2016-17 season, it wasnāt worth the risk. The next season they tried, and neither party was better for it. Iām not pinning the 2017-18 season failure solely on him, but Lazar really stuck out for the wrong reasons on a non-playoff roster. The Flames sent him to the AHL this year and didnāt miss a beat without him.
Austin Czarnik also falls into this category a bit. There were times where he looked absolutely dynamite, but moew times where he struggled. He is also an incomplete player who still needs time to figure things out at the NHL level. The Flames healthy scratched him for long periods of time because of that. They couldnāt wait for him to blossom into the player they hoped he would become, and there wasnāt really enough opportunity to let him grow. Perhaps James Neal and/or Garnet Hathaway werenāt the solutions, but Czarnik didnāt put up a strong enough case to unseat them.
If you do want an answer though, Iāve always liked Joshua Ho-Sang from the Islanders. I think he could solve some issues if he reaches his full potential, but I donāt think the team has the patience.
Seeing as Carolina named a pig Hamilton after Dougie, what animal (if any) would you name a Flames player after?
They should adopt a shark named Hanifin because itās the same pun and also because sharks are cooler than pigs. Only problem is that a divisional rival is also named the Sharks.
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