The Intangibles of Jiggy

Since joining the Toronto Maple Leafs, Brian Burke has worked feverishly to distance the club from the atmosphere of mediocrity which pervaded during the years of mismanagement that came before.

While upgrading the playing staff and reducing the age demographic of the locker room are the two most apparent hallmarks Burke has placed upon the Leafs, his backstage upgrading of the administrative, coaching, scouting and medical departments have the potential to leave considerably longer legacies.

After all the right combination of the above are what set good organizations apart from great ones.

Subsequent additions such as Dave Nonis, Dave Poulin, Steve Kaspar, Rob Cowie, Andy Playter, Marty Dudgeon and Andy Belza are all likely to play key roles in the evolution of the club and its players in the years to come and the exhaustive list (especially in the amateur scouting department), shows just how extensively Burke has purged the system.

Aside from his front office hires, perhaps Burke’s most significant coup was wrestling Francois Allaire from his former employers in Anaheim and naming him the Leafs goaltending consultant.

Amid a myriad of flaws, the Leafs weakness in net has been an overbearing Achilles heel for the best part of a decade and the addition of Allaire in June 2009 illustrated Burke’s dedication to building from the net out. A model he further proved committed to when he added Swedish phenom Jonas Gustavsson to the Leafs after a lengthy courtship that concluded, without coincidence, a mere month after Allaire was named to the coaching staff.

Small wonder Gustavsson jumped at the chance to work under the tutelage of Allaire. While few goaltending coaches come as indomitable as the Quebecois, fewer still come with his reputation. As the architect who shaped lanky rookie Patrick Roy’s raw talents into a Hall of Fame career, Allaire is a coach who demands respect and never was this more apparent than when Vesa Toskala failed to show it.

A throwback to the era of JFJ and a detrimental egotist to boot, Toskala’s inability to work with Allaire hammered the final nail in his wretched Toronto career and probably the last chance to redeem his status as a legitimate NHL number one.

Yep, it’s a case of checking your ego at the door if you want to work with Allaire. For all his fieriness on the ice, Roy was an attentive pupil in Allaire’s class and by-all-accounts; Gustavsson is proving an equally dedicated student.

But the exit of Toskala also brought another name into The Monster’s developmental curve, one whose influence could prove invaluable in a crucial sophomore year for Gustavsson.

Salary-dumped in the trade that rid the Leafs of Toskala, J-S Giguere is a player who attributes his career successes, including a Stanley Cup, to the influence of Allaire and contrary to Toskala, one who has nothing but respect for Allaire’s ability to not only impart his wisdom to developing goalies, but also reviving the careers of jaded veterans.

Of course, as any good coach will tell you, sentiment is best left for retirement and Allaire was quick to outline the terms of his reunion with Giguere.

Speaking the day after the trade Allaire said:

“He’s not just coming here to play goal, He’s coming here as a role model, to Jonas (Gustavsson), to James Reimer, to all our goalies. He’s a guy our young players can (aspire) to, to see what it takes to make the NHL, on and off the ice.”

Call it a job description; as a former Conn Smythe winner Giguere is a goalie who still feels he has what it takes to be a number one somewhere in the NHL, but he also knows how to work with Allaire and with last months exit of goaltending coach Corey Hirsch to St. Louis, Giguere will be increasingly relied upon as an locker room extension for Allaire.

And could there be a better choice?

Considering the Leafs are on the hook for the final $7 million instalment of the four year $24 million deal penned by Burke in Anaheim, many see the Montreal native as an anchor to this summer’s spending ambitions while few expect he will be a Leaf upon next seasons conclusion.

The latter assumption seems a fair appraisal. With Gustavsson hoping to cement himself as a bona-fide NHL starter and the Marlies looking to host a battle royale in audition for Gustavsson’s backup circa 2011-12, the depth chart of Gustavsson, Rynaas, Reimer and Scrivens looks flusher than the Leafs have perhaps ever been in net. As a consequence the services of Giguere (and his wage expectations) will likely be superfluous pending an explosion of youthful puckstoppers this year.

Subsequently a safety net, albeit an expensive one, Giguere should prove a tremendous upgrade over the corrosive play of Toskala.

Indeed transcending corrosive, to backtrack on the contemptible era of Giguere’s trade-mate; Toskala’s abysmal performances provided a thorn in the side of Gustavsson’s development last season. Souring the atmosphere and stinking up the blue paint, Toskala did little to lighten the workload for the then-rookie. Subsequently falling out with Allaire, Toskala provided an increasingly disruptive backdrop amid a season of challenges for the 25 year old Gustavsson whose process of adapting to North American hockey coincided with the worst start to a regular season in Leafs history. An onerous distinction made possible by the fellow Scandinavian he was splitting ice time with.

In such hindsight, the $3 million price increase between Giguere and Toskala is small beans considering the former comes with a reputation of calmness and has the potential to fulfill a mentoring role Vesa Toskala could never come close to assuming.

Giguere can also play a bit too; which will come as a relief to those tired of watching Gustavsson mop up games long-lost last fall.

Suiting up for 15 contests in the blue and white after the trade, Giguere posted a 6-7-2 record with a team leading 2.49 GAA and an impressive .916 save percentage. While his superior numbers were the product of playing behind a Leafs defence and PK much improved over what Gustavsson had endured, the former deposed Ducks starter showed he could still get the job done.

Of course, few feel Giguere will amount to anymore than training wheels in the early part of next season, timesharing the Leafs net until the organization sees fit to let The Monster run with it. Entering into a developmental year with only the faintest glimmer of playoff aspirations, the Leafs can swallow some bad play from the sophomore Gustavsson while having Giguere to steady the ship if the Buds have a shot at the post season.

It’s a healthy situation for Gustavsson and Giguere and one both will be looking to capitalize on. Gustavsson will benefit from having genuine proven competition. Meanwhile Giguere can play mediator to Allaire, advisor to Gustavsson and shop himself behind a theoretically settled Leafs defence as a capable veteran.

With the dressing room trending younger Giguere may be one of only 3 or 4 players north of 30 years old next season and while he still feels he can be a number one, he is unlikely to let personal ambitions get in the way of helping Burke and Allaire develop the next crop of Leafs goaltenders, as well as schooling a youthful group of forwards on the nuances of distracting his league contemporises.

Subsequently Giguere is providing intangibles for which there is no price tag. On such a young team, Burke couldn’t have acquired a more trusted and classy veteran asset.  While Giguere’s time with the Leafs maybe limited too little over a year depending on the Leafs standing come the trade deadline, his experience has the potential to be a tremendous foundation for both Gustavsson and the Baby Buds.

At a $6 million cap hit, one can point at Giguere as an overpriced Huet or Theodore, but in actuality with a mere season left before he enters free agency, Jiggy could prove one of Burke’s shrewdest on-ice investments.

A role model to root for, even if he leaves most of his legacy in the hands of The Monster.

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  • KeviN

    @ Jordan:

    i know its been a long day, but what exactly are you trying to say?

  • http://twitter.com/MLHS_RSWilliams Richard-Steven Williams

    Jordan wrote:

    Add another to the overrating group. Bobby ryan is everything you can PRAY Kadri becomes someday. Open your fucking eyes everyone and stop acting like damn blind idiots. Fat fucking chance Kadri comes in and scores 35 and 30 goals in his first 2 full seasons, because Ryanwill probably be better……oh wait, no he wont because hes a leaf prospect, I forgot

    Sounds like we’re getting desperate, throwing the baby out with the bath water and throwing prospects and picks around with abandon. Man I hope Kadri becomes the better player.

  • Whatmeworry

    Snots wrote:

    We do tend to over-rate our prospects don’t we?

    On that note, I’d Like To Teach The World To Sing….In Perfect Harmony…join me everyone !!

    Very much so… and we tend to underrate every player we want to acquire, and once he becomes a Leaf (Phaneuf anyone) he becomes the greatest thing since sliced bread.

  • http://twitter.com/MLHS_RSWilliams Richard-Steven Williams

    I don’t think we over rate our prospects. Usually we rate them right, then management trade them away (read: Tuuka Rask, Brad Boyes…)

  • DefenseWinsChampionships

    Whatmeworry wrote:

    Snots wrote:
    We do tend to over-rate our prospects don’t we?

    On that note, I’d Like To Teach The World To Sing….In Perfect Harmony…join me everyone !!
    Very much so… and we tend to underrate every player we want to acquire, and once he becomes a Leaf (Phaneuf anyone) he becomes the greatest thing since sliced bread.

    @ Richard-Steven Williams:
    To be fair, I always thought Phaneuf was a beast.

  • Tim Horton

    Jordan wrote:

    Add another to the overrating group. Bobby ryan is everything you can PRAY Kadri becomes someday. Open your fucking eyes everyone and stop acting like damn blind idiots. Fat fucking chance Kadri comes in and scores 35 and 30 goals in his first 2 full seasons, because Ryanwill probably be better……oh wait, no he wont because hes a leaf prospect, I forgot

    To be like Ryan, Kadri wouldnt have to break the 30 goal mark until his 3rd NHL season or at least 2 more years of AHL under his belt…Because Ryan didn’t make the NHL until he was 22…just saying.

  • http://twitter.com/MLHS_RSWilliams Richard-Steven Williams

    @ DefenseWinsChampionships:

    That was Whatmeworry who said that. I thought Phaneuf was in sore need of a change of scenery but I was pumped to have him. I like the look of Phaneuf, Schenn and Komi. I also think Komi and Kabs is a duo that could still work if Kabs is here next season.

  • Julie Sucks

    DefenseWinsChampionships wrote:

    Hey boys. I just got back from my girlfriend’s place, what did I miss?

    What a coincidence…I’m heading over there now…

  • Whatmeworry

    Richard-Steven Williams wrote:

    @ DefenseWinsChampionships:
    That was Whatmeworry who said that. I thought Phaneuf was in sore need of a change of scenery but I was pumped to have him. I like the look of Phaneuf, Schenn and Komi. I also think Komi and Kabs is a duo that could still work if Kabs is here next season.

    It was clear from the level his play had dipped to that he was indeed in need of a change of scenery (a la Stempniak), but let’s just hope he isn’t in need of another one in about 18 months from now.

    If you want a more objective analysis of our prospects, check out HF boards prospects. It helps to put things in perspective, without the blue tinted glasses.

  • Whatmeworry

    @ Richard-Steven Williams:
    I also think Komi and Kabs is a duo that could still work if Kabs is here next season

    I hope Komi just works out period because he was a pylon last year, and it is not a good sign when your bottom pairing Dman is making $4.5mil.

  • KGL24

    kaz wrote:

    Cactus wrote:
    Jordan wrote:
    I still think Kulemin is overpaid too even more now. Setoguchi got 1.8 mil and also scored 36 pts in a horrible year and had 65 last year. Also is younger and even out hit Kulemin per game this year.
    I don’t know…Kulemin has a massive advatage when looking at their defensive game, and he has also been getting better with each year in the NHL while Setoguchi regressed big time last season.
    With that being said, I still think Seto should have gotten more $$ on potential alone, but I definitely don’t think that Kulemin is overpaid.
    Seto didn’t regress, he just got less playing time, and lesser linemates.

    I believe he really did show regression this past year. I think it was a combination of all 3 of those things in fact (slight regression, slightly less playing time + somewhat lesser linemates).

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but I seem to remember Seto getting the majority his playing time with Pavelski and Clowe this past year, no? I mean, in 08-09 he played the majority of minutes on 1st line with Thornton and Marleau and got 65 pts. And 09-10 saw him play MOSTLY with Pavelski and Clowe, like I already mentioned (lesser players than Big Joe and Marleau for sure, but not bad players by any means either) and get all of 36 pts. That’s a significant dropoff considering those are not bad players to play with and I do believe Seto’s a fairly good player. Maybe it was a sophomore (or third-year) slump, but any way I look at that, Seto really didn’t do all that well and considering who he played with on 2nd line, I didn’t expect his numbers to drop off THAT much (and you’re so soured on Stajan and making it seem like he was that rotten)! That is why I believe he showed some regression this past year.

    Believe it or not, I think you can make some comparision here to Stajan’s situation except in reverse (since Stajan got moved up to 1st line from 07-08 to 08-09 and went from 33 to 55 pts and Seto got knocked off 1st line from 08-09 to 09-10 and went from 65 to 36 pts). That said, this is just from a pure numbers standpoint as Seto is a better all-around player by all means than Stajan by a fair bit.

  • Jordan

    Tim Horton wrote:

    Jordan wrote:
    Add another to the overrating group. Bobby ryan is everything you can PRAY Kadri becomes someday. Open your fucking eyes everyone and stop acting like damn blind idiots. Fat fucking chance Kadri comes in and scores 35 and 30 goals in his first 2 full seasons, because Ryanwill probably be better……oh wait, no he wont because hes a leaf prospect, I forgot
    To be like Ryan, Kadri wouldnt have to break the 30 goal mark until his 3rd NHL season or at least 2 more years of AHL under his belt…Because Ryan didn’t make the NHL until he was 22…just saying.

    No, Bobby Ryan scored 31 goals in 64 games when he was 21. Thats 40 over 82 games, and then scored 35 last year in 81. Thats INSANE, I dont have those expectations of Kadri at all. I hope to godhe is better, but seriously, what are the chances? I would love to have Bobby Ryan, but like people have been saying all day, it takes more then Kaberle and some prospects to get a guy who has scored at the same pace as Kessel did. If we had Bobby Ryan, you guys no doubt would be wanting a package like Schenn+Kadri+Kaberle to start if we were to trade him.

  • honesthockey

    Jordan wrote:

    Tim Horton wrote:
    Jordan wrote:
    Add another to the overrating group. Bobby ryan is everything you can PRAY Kadri becomes someday. Open your fucking eyes everyone and stop acting like damn blind idiots. Fat fucking chance Kadri comes in and scores 35 and 30 goals in his first 2 full seasons, because Ryanwill probably be better……oh wait, no he wont because hes a leaf prospect, I forgot
    To be like Ryan, Kadri wouldnt have to break the 30 goal mark until his 3rd NHL season or at least 2 more years of AHL under his belt…Because Ryan didn’t make the NHL until he was 22…just saying.
    No, Bobby Ryan scored 31 goals in 64 games when he was 21. Thats 40 over 82 games, and then scored 35 last year in 81. Thats INSANE, I dont have those expectations of Kadri at all. I hope to godhe is better, but seriously, what are the chances? I would love to have Bobby Ryan, but like people have been saying all day, it takes more then Kaberle and some prospects to get a guy who has scored at the same pace as Kessel did. If we had Bobby Ryan, you guys no doubt would be wanting a package like Schenn+Kadri+Kaberle to start if we were to trade him.

    Not at all. The one thing you ‘wanna trade the world for Ryan’ guys are missing is the fact that he may be available. The reason is because being is because of contract issues correct? If that’s the case then Anaheim’s hands are tied and they have zero leverage in making a deal. If he were a Leaf I would be screaming to maximize what you can before you get nothing. So my feelings would be the exact opposite of the words you are trying to put in my mouth.
    .
    BTW if Ryan were a Leaf and wanted what he wants but Burke was saying no would you be more upset at Burke or Ryan?

  • Jordan

    @ honesthockey:
    They dont have their hands tied, thats idiotic. There are 29 teams in the league that would want him. Look at Chicago how fucked they were and still got 1st rounders. If we wanted Ryan we would have to give a great package, just like the one we gave for Kessel. Equal to 2 first rounders.

  • Stanley goes to White Kessel

    @ Jordan:
    Okay then:
    .

    TO Ana: Kabs, Beauch, 2012 1st

    FOR: Ryan

    .

    Then let’s hope to fuck we are really high in the standings and that draft years sucks balls and no one gets lucky with a steal of a pick, and we don;t really want to offer sheet someone in the time between. We’re used to no 1st rounders by now – What’s the diff waiting another year to start in the top 30?

  • Tim Horton

    Jordan wrote:

    @ honesthockey:
    They dont have their hands tied, thats idiotic. There are 29 teams in the league that would want him. Look at Chicago how fucked they were and still got 1st rounders. If we wanted Ryan we would have to give a great package, just like the one we gave for Kessel. Equal to 2 first rounders.

    29 / 2 (amount of teams at the cap or internal cap) = 15 / 2 (amount of teams who could afford to drastically change their roster to make room for Ryan) = 8 / 2 (Amount of teams who could offer a package big enough to start negotiations) =4 / 0 for the amount of teams that would be willing to part with an all star like Kaberle for B Ryan) = 0…Looks like that just leaves the Leafs whatayaknow… Obviously I made this up but Its just to prove that not 29 teams are in on Silver…
    -
    Honestly after sleeping on it your arguments make a lot of sense, seeing as how its similar to the Kessel deal and I was all for that one. However kadri fits our needs more as he is a play making centre… Also I don’t think Burke is in a position where he needs to overpay to get his player again… If he has to overpay he should just walk away and await the next opportunity thats why I like Burke so much he’s very patient when it comes to pulling the trigger…

  • honesthockey

    Jordan wrote:

    @ honesthockey:
    They dont have their hands tied, thats idiotic. There are 29 teams in the league that would want him. Look at Chicago how fucked they were and still got 1st rounders. If we wanted Ryan we would have to give a great package, just like the one we gave for Kessel. Equal to 2 first rounders.

    They don’t? Then why is this even a discussion. Take head out of ass and think about why this is even a discussion.

  • Tim Horton

    Kaberle = 1st + 2nd = Simmonds + Schenn?

  • Jordan

    honesthockey wrote:

    Jordan wrote:
    @ honesthockey:
    They dont have their hands tied, thats idiotic. There are 29 teams in the league that would want him. Look at Chicago how fucked they were and still got 1st rounders. If we wanted Ryan we would have to give a great package, just like the one we gave for Kessel. Equal to 2 first rounders.
    They don’t? Then why is this even a discussion. Take head out of ass and think about why this is even a discussion.

    WOuld you do it for me? You have such strong and manlike hands!