From The Rink: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:


Pro Quality. Fan Perspective.
Login-facebook
Around SBN: College Football Rankings - BlogPoll Top 25

The harsh lesson of Nabokov and Turco

If there ever was a time when an NHL free agent needed the help of Doc Brown and the Delorean, it'd be today. In fact, Evgeni Nabokov and Marty Turco probably would have taken out McFly and Doc themselves and whisked their way back to, oh, a week ago to send a note to their younger selves:

Sign the deal. Now.

Goaltending is obviously the most unique position for any hockey team. There's only one, so there's only 30 starting jobs in the league. It's not like a defenseman or forward who can be signed as a low-end guy and work his way up the lineup. As Heidi Klum would say, you're either in or you're out (well, kind of; you could still get back-up minutes). For Nabokov and Turco, they gambled and lost -- for all practical purposes, they're out. If you look at goaltending across the board, there's really nowhere they can go unless they drop their contract demands and a team wants to have veteran support for their young goalies (such as Columbus with Steve Mason).

In the salary cap world, supply-and-demand controls free agency more than ever. And with long-term contracts becoming more commonplace, teams can easily get hamstrung by their previous commitments long before free agency even opens up. Let this be a lesson to free agents in upcoming seasons -- if the market really isn't looking good and a favorable situation opens up to you, it might be worth swallowing your pride and taking less dollars instead of playing chicken with your career.

Star-divide

Several weeks ago, word came that the San Jose Sharks were interested in talking with Evgeni Nabokov; I theorized that they'd ask him to take a significant hometown discount. Obviously, Nabokov thought he could make more on the open market. Perhaps he'll land somewhere in a platoon position or get a big paycheck in the KHL, but chances are he won't find the same talent in front of him.

Similarly, the Philadelphia Flyers made overtures at both Nabokov and Marty Turco and both decided to test the market. Turco reportedly turned down a three-year, $6 million deal before the Flyers resigned Michael Leighton. Now, chances are Turco won't get to play on a Stanley Cup contender and his options will be extremely limited.

Antero Niittymaki landed in San Jose. The Atlanta Thrashers picked up Chris Mason while Dan Ellis went to Tampa Bay. Even third-tier free agent goaltenders found homes, such as Alex Auld and Andrew Raycroft. And yet, the cream of the crop priced themselves out of a job.

Just about everyone saw this coming, from fans to bloggers to mainstream media. How did Turco and Nabokov not realize it? Did their agents give them bad advice or did they simply refuse to see it was coming? If the Stanley Cup Final featured Ryan Miller and Roberto Luongo, perhaps it'd have pushed teams to invest their dollars in goaltending. However, the recent years have shown that goaltending doesn't take up a significant percentage of successful team payrolls and it was a buyer's market this particular year.

Supply and demand: it's a pretty basic principle that you learn in any elementary economics course. Perhaps it's time the NHLPA gave their players a primer on this before heading into free agency. While Nabokov and Turco have every right to make their contract demands, the bottom line is that they really weren't in a position of strength. Unfortunately for them, they're hindered by their position; I really don't see this trend happening regularly for forwards or defense, but if I'm part of next year's goalie crop, I'd be very careful about counting the number of open positions and free agents before I turn down any offers.

0 recs  |  Comment 3 comments  |  Add comment |

Story-email Email Printer Print

Comments

Display:

Nabby not finding a home yesterday was very depressing. Color me biased, but I’m hoping something good happens for him.

Ever get the feeling we are on a collision course with reality?
"They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security" -- Benjamin Franklin
"It's getting harder and harder to differentiate between schizophrenics and people talking on a cell phone. It still brings me up short to walk by somebody who appears to be talking to themselves." -- Bob Newhart

by Angy on Jul 2, 2010 9:43 AM CDT reply actions  

I’d like to see him do well too, obviously. I just have no idea where he’d fit now.

If he wants to stay in SJ, I know a beer league team that can use him!

by Mike Chen on Jul 2, 2010 12:04 PM CDT up reply actions  

Theodore also sits on the sidelines adding to the logjam.

If Boston and Chicago had plans to move their “unwanted” goalie, that may have to be rethought.

by cubanpuckstopper on Jul 2, 2010 12:10 PM CDT reply actions  


User Tools

Welcome to SBN's blog on all things hockey
Start posting on From The Rink »

Join SB Nation and dive into communities focused on all your favorite teams.

Connect_with_facebook

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recent FanPosts

Small
Five for Howling where are you now?
3315867591_e37fb6d625_small
Eric Chouinard and the Shadow Over His Career

+ New FanPost All FanPosts >

Rink Side Radio

Listen to internet radio with Joe Fortunato on Blog Talk Radio

Blog extras

SBNation.com Recent Stories

Vancouver Canucks' Willie Mitchell, centre, reacts as Calgary Flames' Michael Cammalleri, left to right, Jarome Iginla and Olli Jokinen, of Finland, celebrate Iginla's goal during second period NHL hockey action at GM Place in Vancouver, Tuesday, April 7, 2009.  (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Jonathan Hayward) link

Is Willie Mitchell A Socialist?

Photo +5 updates

SB Nation's Mock NHL Expansion Draft: Winnipeg And Quebec Select Their Teams

NEWARK NJ - JULY 20: General Manager Lou Lamoriello owner Jeff Vanderbeek Ilya Kovalchuk and head coach John Maclean of the New Jersey Devils speak with the media during a press conference announcing his contract renewal at the Prudential Center on July 20 2010 in Newark New Jersey.  (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) link

Introducting 'NHL Monopoly'

More from SBNation.com >


Bloggers-in-chief

Marleau_awkward_mustache_small Mike Chen

Editors

Bob_small Bob Wage

Kurri_small Derek Zona

Cc_cory_small Cory Lavalette

Dscf0010-50__small Cassie McClellan

Joe_2_small Joe Fortunato

Moderator(s)

Calvin_small PPP

643c0d9c_small saskhab