Leafs, Sweatt Remain Apart On New Deal

by on July 12, 2010 in Leafs Prospects - 801 Comments

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Just a month ago, the Chicago Blackhawks were the envy of the National Hockey League.  Having finished off the Philadelphia Flyers in six games courtesy of a Patrick Kane overtime goal, the Hawks had climbed to the top of the mountain, and had risen out of what could once have been considered obscurity years earlier, to build a winning team, and break the Stanley Cup drought that loomed over the franchise for so long.

And while many general managers stood in jealousy and envy of Stan Bowman and his management team for the feat they had just accomplished, not one GM was going to envying Bowman in the days following.

For the Chicago Blackhawks, winning the Stanley Cup came at a price, and it was rather large.

Since they won the Stanley Cup, the Blackhawks have made many moves, tearing down their roster that brought them their once elusive championship.  Fan favourites were shipped out in favour of draft picks and younger players, on cheaper contracts.

One of those trades involved Kris Versteeg, a trade Brian Burke was all too happy to accommodate.

Burke acquired Versteeg in a trade with the Blackhawks just prior to the opening of NHL free agency.  The Toronto GM, looking to make a move before the market opened, and the prices dramatically inflated, traded three prospects-Phillippe Paradis, Chris DiDomenico, and Viktor Stalberg-to Chicago for Versteeg, a swift skating forward with a great wrist shot.

Perhaps lost to some in that deal, was the inclusion of Bill Sweatt, his rights anyway, that came to Toronto along with Versteeg.  Sweatt, a forward at Colorado College, represents a player with speed to burn, seemed to really shift the balance of the deal, at least in the minds of Leafs Nation, and perhaps rightfully so.

Sweatt had 109 points in 143 games with Colorado College.

However, nearly two weeks after the trade went down, and the Toronto Maple Leafs have been unable to reach an agreement with Sweatt and his representatives, something that while Burke has been quiet on, certainly has to worry him.

Sweatt’s agent was quoted as saying last week that while the Maple Leafs gave what they felt was a generous offer, the idea of going to unrestricted free agency may be too tempting.

And while we certainly aren’t fortunate enough to be privy to the negotiating process, how frustrating must it be for Burke to see the management team of Sweatt tell the public that the offer was generous, and yet still, his client has not signed it.

Perhaps like Nikolai Kulemin, the entire situation is being slightly blown out of proportion because of the city it is happening in.  Some fans I have spoken to have been quick to call Sweatt a prima-donna who overvalues himself, and doesn’t deserve to be calling his own shots this early into his professional career.

Others are more patient, agreeing that this is likely part of the negotiation process, and things will get worked out before the August 15th deadline.

At least, for the Leafs part, I hope so.

Sweatt is apparently drawing plenty of interest from teams around the league who would be interested in adding his services to their roster.  As far as the Maple Leafs are concerned, there has been no indication that they are out of the running for his services, and all signs point to the fact that they continue to work towards a deal as we speak.

Just like the argument that was made for Tyler Bozak and Christian Hanson, the same can be applied for Bill Sweatt.

While the on ice product in Toronto is certainly nothing to brag about, the current situation in Leafs land appears to be fitting for young players.

A new general manager, and plenty of playing time headline just part of the reasons why Toronto would be among the better fits in the league.  Sweatt could likely step into the Maple Leafs lineup next season, or at least be given every chance to do so.

And what can be made of the trade if the Leafs are unable to sign Sweatt, and he ends up siding with another franchise?  While we certainly won’t know for years which team won the deal per say, not being able to sign Sweatt, or losing him to another team, would seemingly tilt the deal further in the Blackhawks favour.

For their part, the Leafs involved in the deal were at the Blackhawks prospects camp, and all spoke very excitedly about getting to Chicago and carrying on the winning tradition that the Hawks have restored in the Madhouse.

Let’s hope for the Leafs sake, the players they acquired have similar designs, to restore a winning tradition to Toronto.

And let’s hope those players include Bill Sweatt

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  • GordonBombay
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  • 2 Minutes for Looking so Guru

    Clowe please.

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  • Cameron

    If Kaberle finally gets traded and he returns a big scoring winger like Clowe, I think the next issue to address is third line center. I would love to pry Dubinsky out of NY for that job.

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  • The Captain

    Burke will take Clowe over Setoguchi. It’s obvious that we are lacking a power forward. Clowe and a 2way center would be ideal.

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  • The Captain

    Clowe-Bozak-Kessel
    Kulemin-Kadri-Versteeg

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  • http://cartika.com Andrew R
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  • Burkie_s Bollocks

    @ Cameron:
    Makes more sense… as I said above…
    Setoguchi would be another RW though and we seem to have enough of those with Kessel, Versteeg, Armstrong, Orr, etc…
    Clowe would be my preference even though he is 4 years older (28 when the season starts), he is quite a bit bigger and a LW… throw in a 1st round pick (or Logan Couture, who they got from us in Toskala trade) and/or a prospect like Max Gaede (not if Couture is included)

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  • 2 Minutes for Looking so Guru

    Andrew R wrote:

    . I apologize on your behalfs to Alexander Steen and his petigree, including the great Thomas Steen for the ignorance of the comments on this forum.

    LOL. Steen wasn’t too bad, he just never turned out to be the guy we had all hoped, so he got a hard ride. Would have loved to make that Steen+Kabs for Pronger trade.

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  • BeLeafer
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  • Cameron

    To DAL: Grabovski
    To TOR: Ribeiro
    (pure salary dump for the Stars)
    -
    To NYR: Ribeiro, 2nd, prospect
    To TOR: Dubinsky
    -
    With Drury to man the checking center role for at least the next couple years, and Anisimov emerging a solid secondary center, the Rangers really lack a playmaker to work with Gaborik. It’s rumored they’re looking to bring in Demitra as well. This would be a pretty formidable group:
    -
    Gaborik – Ribeiro – Demitra
    Grachev – Anisimov – Prospal
    Avery – Drury ‘C’ – Callahan
    Boogaard – Prust – Christensen
    -
    Offensively, Ribeiro’s a big upgrade over Dubinsky.

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  • BeLeafer

    Cameron wrote:

    If Kaberle finally gets traded and he returns a big scoring winger like Clowe, I think the next issue to address is third line center. I would love to pry Dubinsky out of NY for that job.

    I would love Dubinsky too… but how to aquire him??.. Grabs?

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  • 4evrblue

    I think Clowe would be the perfect pick-up, i’ve been saying it for quite some time too, big mean newfie boy that can put up 50pts a season, he’d be perfect for our top 6 right now. Clowe + 2nd + prospect for Kabs, add a late round pick from us if need be, 4th-7th

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  • Cameron

    Or maybe:
    -
    to SJS: Kaberle + 2nd + Reimer
    to TOR: Clowe, Couture
    -
    to NYR: Grabovski, Couture
    to TOR: Dubinsky
    -
    Kulemin – Bozak – Kessel
    Clowe – Kadri – Versteeg
    Caputi – Dubinsky – Armstrong

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  • Cameron
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  • boguscharlie

    from Pierre LeBrun’s blog…(talking about John Madden) (but not why I’m posting it)
    “Johnny is evaluating the possible situations so that he can pick the right spot moving forward,” his agent, Bill Zito, told ESPN.com on Tuesday. “Once Kovalchuk happens and [Tomas] Kaberle gets moved, now there’s going to be more free-agent business. So, at this point, it’s hurry up and wait.”
    So that’s an agent talking about Kabs being traded like it’s a for sure thing…sounds good!

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  • Burkie_s Bollocks

    @ Cameron:
    Grabovski AND Couture is definite overpayment for a guy like Dubinsky…
    It’s my opinion but I wouldn’t do Couture straight up for Dubinsky… He’s still ELC protected and has more offensive upside than Dubinksy… Due to his play in the playoffs he was routinely getting bumped up to second line duty/ice-time on a fairly stacked Sharks forward group…

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  • Cameron

    @ Burkie_s Bollocks:
    -
    Hmm, looks like you’re right. i don’t know why, but I’m consistently under-valuing Couture. I think I just want to believe he’s a bust since we traded him for Toskala. Still, the point of trading with NYR is that we get a defenisve center, and they get an offensive center. So maybe have a prospect coming back our way as well (preferably a winger). Dubinsky fits the mould of what Burke is doing a little better being that he’s already established, and is a WHL boy just like Versteeg, Armstrong, Phaneuf…

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