On its own, upgrading from Hamonic to Spence is a much bigger net positive than most probably give it credit for on the surface.
On its own, upgrading from Hamonic to Spence is a much bigger net positive than most probably give it credit for on the surface.
Yes, a certain degree of that comes with the territory, but the reason so few choose to sign in Toronto has just as much to do with that than income taxes.
Yes, a certain degree of that comes with the territory, but the reason so few choose to sign in Toronto has just as much to do with that than income taxes.
Primary among them being that we know how much of a priority management has placed on being “harder to play against”, and in their minds he probably fits that mold to a tee.
Primary among them being that we know how much of a priority management has placed on being “harder to play against”, and in their minds he probably fits that mold to a tee.
Not saying there isn’t value in a 22 year old who’s established himself as a bottom 6 role player, I’m just skeptical he has any significant value at this point.
Not saying there isn’t value in a 22 year old who’s established himself as a bottom 6 role player, I’m just skeptical he has any significant value at this point.
There’s almost certainly a disconnect in what the average Sens fan sees his value as vs what his value actually is around the league.
If it means selling low on him for only a 2nd round pick as an e.g., might as well ride it out.
There’s almost certainly a disconnect in what the average Sens fan sees his value as vs what his value actually is around the league.
If it means selling low on him for only a 2nd round pick as an e.g., might as well ride it out.