Confirmed with Link: Rangers trade Ethan Werek to Phoenix for Oscar Lindberg

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nyr2k2

Can't Beat Him
Jul 30, 2005
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I think the goaltending depth is okay. Not great, not awful.

I was never as high on him as most people here, but I still think he can be an adequate NHL backup. I like Cam Talbot more. I think he has potential to be a solid backup.

Stajcer, as I alluded to earlier, has good potential but is maddeningly inconsistent. If we sign him, I'm interested to see what Allaire and co. can do with him. I like his potential more than both Johnson and Talbot, but he also has the highest "bust" potential, by a good margin.

I don't know anything about Missiaen. The organization must see something there though to give him the contract. I would have liked to sign Kinkaid instead, but unfortunately he went to NJ.
 

Bluenote13

Believe In Henke
Feb 28, 2002
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Eh, whatever. He struck me as a good pick at the time, and I think most scouting services and individual scouts agreed. Just didn't pan out for us unfortunately. It sucks, but it happens.

Lindberg is a second round pick as well, so rather than focusing on Werek and what he is/isn't, I think the focus shifts to what we have in Lindberg. He could still become a decent player.



Leslie spoke to discipline problems. Is she making it up, wrong, or does she have knowledge of something your friends don't?

If every team's fanbase got upset over every pick who didn't work out as well as some of the people who picked after them, this board would be empty because we'd all have killed ourselves by now.

no. The draft is a crapchute, especially after the 1st round.

They're not afraid to cut bait and move on.

I'm fine with this trade.

Werek had to be signed by June 1st...The Rangers made the decision they weren't going to sign him, so rather than risk losing him for nothing they got back a solid prospect in Lindberg. Can't complain.


Revolving door of prospects and yet another mistake that had to be corrected doesnt bother any of you right?

How about we get it right the first time?

What if we're here two years from now when either Thomas or Mcilrath are busts or traded before they even play one game?

Business as usual in Rangerland and most are like 'whatever'.

So true. Reminds me of one of the first lessons I learned when I was managing minor league hockey teams. Ron Ingram (former Ranger defenseman, now deceased) told me "you can't fall in love with a player you are evaluating. They are all pieces of meat."

Hard, hard lesson but true.

Just last year I was hearing about how great the future was with Werek included in that. Which prospect do they change their mind on next year?;)

Mistake, IMO.

I like him too, but not ready to say it was good or bad, just kinda pissed that our guys have little clue on what theyre doing.
 

free0717

Registered User
Apr 14, 2004
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Old Bridge, NJ
Ok, I agree with the fact that we have no set in stone "future" goaltender. But Hank is only 29 and goalies have good durability. We still have time to find/draft a future goalie, it doesn't necessarily need to be addressed now.

Also you wouldn't be wasting high draft picks on goalies, I think Lundqvist going 205th overall just proves that where a goalie is drafted has no bearing on how good they turn out to be.

We can pick goalies with our 5th, 6th, or 7th round picks and we will more than likely get one that turns out to be a solid future NHL goalie

I have always had the philosophy that every year a goalie should be taken with a late round pick(5th or later). Especially a guy who is a European or College type.

Being European or College bound gives us more time before we have to make a decision to offer an ELC.
 

Orr Nightmare

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Nov 18, 2009
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Ok, I agree with the fact that we have no set in stone "future" goaltender. But Hank is only 29 and goalies have good durability. We still have time to find/draft a future goalie, it doesn't necessarily need to be addressed now.

Also you wouldn't be wasting high draft picks on goalies, I think Lundqvist going 205th overall just proves that where a goalie is drafted has no bearing on how good they turn out to be.

We can pick goalies with our 5th, 6th, or 7th round picks and we will more than likely get one that turns out to be a solid future NHL goalie

I agree, you dont waste high draft picks on goalie's but we have twice and they both backfired, Blackburn being an unfortunate incident of course..

Look @ a guy like Dom Moore, we all ran him out of town but he has been a very important player for Tampa, I will admit I wasn't sad to see him go but we gave this guy a year and dumped him. It is just very frustrating being a Ranger fan most of the time.
 

nyr2k2

Can't Beat Him
Jul 30, 2005
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What happens after next year and Biron is a free agent?

I just see a baron system in terms of goaltending and we have been very lucky that Hank hasn't gotten hurt.

This has nothing to do with Montoya but they just give guys time to develop.

Veteran goaltenders are available on the open market every year.

Look at this year: you'll have Brian Boucher, Johan Hedberg, Jose Theodore, JS Giguere, Marty Turco and Peter Budaj headed to UFA. Those are all veteran goalies that will sign short, cheap contracts to play backup somewhere. The kind of guys you'd like to have backing up Lundqvist--capable of starting and providing decent play for an extended period if need be. And these types of guys are available every single year.

I'd rather go into a season with a veteran backup than a kid with little to no NHL experience, regardless of his minor league/junior pedigree. I don't disagree that we do need to address the goaltending position in the system sooner rather than later, but I think it's far from pressing.
 

Clowes Line

Cally's Chicken Parm
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I agree, you dont waste high draft picks on goalie's but we have twice and they both backfired, Blackburn being an unfortunate incident of course..

Look @ a guy like Dom Moore, we all ran him out of town but he has been a very important player for Tampa, I will admit I wasn't sad to see him go but we gave this guy a year and dumped him. It is just very frustrating being a Ranger fan most of the time.

I hear ya man, but I think the old Sather is gone, he seems to be getting it and like Torts says, "We're heading in the right direction"
 

BlueshirtBlitz

Foolish Samurai
Aug 2, 2010
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Revolving door of prospects and yet another mistake that had to be corrected doesnt bother any of you right?

How about we get it right the first time?

What if we're here two years from now when either Thomas or Mcilrath are busts or traded before they even play one game?

Business as usual in Rangerland and most are like 'whatever'.



Just last year I was hearing about how great the future was with Werek included in that. Which prospect do they change their mind on next year?;)



I like him too, but not ready to say it was good or bad, just kinda pissed that our guys have little clue on what theyre doing.

A second rounder traded for a second rounder with a similar game and impressive faceoff prowess.

Hardly a big deal. Yet you want to make it one.
 

Orr Nightmare

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Revolving door of prospects and yet another mistake that had to be corrected doesnt bother any of you right?

How about we get it right the first time?

What if we're here two years from now when either Thomas or Mcilrath are busts or traded before they even play one game?

Business as usual in Rangerland and most are like 'whatever'.



Just last year I was hearing about how great the future was with Werek included in that. Which prospect do they change their mind on next year?;)



I like him too, but not ready to say it was good or bad, just kinda pissed that our guys have little clue on what theyre doing.

Thank you, no one seems to have a problem with all the bust and all the misery that goes along with having Sather and Dolan run this ship.

This kid was a steal in the 2nd round and now after 2 years...lets dump this 4th line bum.
 

JESSEWENEEDTOCOOK

Registered User
Oct 8, 2010
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I like him too, but not ready to say it was good or bad, just kinda pissed that our guys have little clue on what theyre doing.

How does a minor trade like this imply that "our guys have little clue on what they're doing"? That makes little to no sense whatsoever. What if Werek refused to sign? How is that management's fault?

I agree with the idea that this team's management is not the most expensive brand of lightbulbs out there, but something as minor and currently undecided as this is pretty small in comparison to some of the other thing this team has done.
 

StepansLabyrinth

Rational Police
Jul 2, 2009
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I have always had the philosophy that every year a goalie should be taken with a late round pick(5th or later). Especially a guy who is a European or College type.

Being European or College bound gives us more time before we have to make a decision to offer an ELC.

Yeah, not to mention that systems outside of juniors are harder to scout. I feel like later picks are better with taking risks with international or small market prospects. If you find 1 Lundqvist or Datsyuk every ten years with 9 busts, you're still coming out ahead with those late-round picks.
 

Clowes Line

Cally's Chicken Parm
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People also look at Werek's numbers in the OHL and look at Lindberg's numbers in the SEL and think, wow wtf are they doing, Werek is so much better. Wrong. SEL is arguably the 2nd best/hardest league behind the NHL.

Werek showed no improvement in the OHL and putting up 50-60 points in the OHL is not gonna cut it compared to a guy like Lindberg who put up 14 points in the SEL this past year which is realllllly good for a 18-19 year old.

Lindberg also brings many things to the table that Werek doesn't, including his 69% face-off percentage and his great defensive play. I like Lindberg more than Werek, this is just MY opinion, feel free to disagree, but I probably won't listen to you :laugh:
 

nyr2k2

Can't Beat Him
Jul 30, 2005
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Revolving door of prospects and yet another mistake that had to be corrected doesnt bother any of you right?

How about we get it right the first time?

What if we're here two years from now when either Thomas or Mcilrath are busts or traded before they even play one game?

Business as usual in Rangerland and most are like 'whatever'.

I think you're being a little overly dramatic.

We traded a second round pick for another second round pick. Yes, it would have been great were Werek to work out here, but it didn't happen. That happens to every team. About 25% of second round picks turn into career NHL players, the rest bust. 3 out of 4 picks fail, across the NHL.

In the past decade, we've drafted the following players in the second round:

Ivan Baranka
Lee Falardeau
Fedor Tyutin
Darin Olver
Dane Byers
Bruce Graham
Brandon Dubinsky
Mike Sauer
MA Cliche
Artem Anisimov
Antoine Lafleur
Derek Stepan
-----------
Ethan Werek
Christian Thomas

Of the players whose futures can reasonably be determined, we have 5 NHL players from 12 picks. We can't evaluate Werek and Thomas yet. Baranka may have become an NHL player had he decided to stay, but we won't count him. We're drafting at over a 40% success rate in the second round, which is considerably better than the average NHL team.

If we were talking about another first round pick for us that didn't pan out, that would be different. Nearly 60% of first round picks pan out and become career NHL players, and I'm sure we're well below that. But in the second round, the chances of success are far lower. I'm not going to throw my arms up in frustration that we moved one second rounder for another, especially when the jury is still out on both of them.

If Thomas busts, that sucks, but I'd still tell you there's a 75% chance that it was going to happen. And that we're still above the curve with second round picks. McIlrath is not completely relevant to this discussion, as there's that huge gap between success of first and second round picks. Would you compare a failed fifth round pick to a failed second round pick? No, apples and oranges. But the difference in success rates between a fifth and a second is similar to the rates between a second and a first.

Just last year I was hearing about how great the future was with Werek included in that. Which prospect do they change their mind on next year?;)

I don't know who "they" refers to, but it's not me. I think you know me well enough to know that I'm realistic, bordering on pessimistic with my projections (and my hopes for the future).

It's easy to lump together a generic group of "they." But who is "they?" We all know there are quite a few people on HF who don't know their ass from their elbow.

I like him too, but not ready to say it was good or bad, just kinda pissed that our guys have little clue on what theyre doing.

Speaking particularly to players taken in round two, that's untrue. We're well above average. The first round is the problem. We're one of the most successful teams in the league drafting NHL players outside of round one. That we suck in the first round is obviously a HUGE problem, but only part of the discussion when it comes to our drafts.

Let's say the team has evaluated Werek since we drafted him, and now feels that he has a lower ceiling or higher bust potential than previously thought. Should we sit on our hands, and hold onto Werek, just because we drafted him? If they've soured on him as a player, I'd much rather they go and get a comparably valued player than sit back allow Werek to renter the draft. What if HE didn't want to sign with us? Again, do we sit back? I like that the team is constantly evaluating and reevaluating players.
 
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eco's bones

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Jul 21, 2005
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Revolving door of prospects and yet another mistake that had to be corrected doesnt bother any of you right?

How about we get it right the first time?

What if we're here two years from now when either Thomas or Mcilrath are busts or traded before they even play one game?

Business as usual in Rangerland and most are like 'whatever'.



Just last year I was hearing about how great the future was with Werek included in that. Which prospect do they change their mind on next year?;)



I like him too, but not ready to say it was good or bad, just kinda pissed that our guys have little clue on what theyre doing.

I don't know bluenote--we seem to disagree often enough but you usually make good points anyway. I don't think so here though. You know as well as anyone that some of these picks don't pan out the way you would want them too and often there are extenuating circumstances--such as injuries in Werek's case. I can remember a few months back--you going over the guys you targeted each year at the entry draft and some of them would have been better picks than the Rangers made but others didn't work out at all--no team hits the bullseye every time and it also may be that if Lindberg had been available in 2009 that the Rangers would have picked him instead of Werek which is to say they just might like Lindberg better than Werek anyway.
 

Beacon

Embrace the tank
May 28, 2007
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Too bad Hartford got eliminated so quickly. We could've gotten a chance to get a good look at guys like Kreider, Thomas, Werek, Hagelin at the pro level. It could've made the Werek decision, among others, much easier.
 

cheerupmurray

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May 26, 2010
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Im not saying he will, but theres a real possibility that Lindberg have a breakout season next year, I think that hes been steadily improving and might get a more important part for his SEL-team next year. He is a nice player, especially liked him in the playoffs.
 

Brooklyn Rangers Fan

Change is good.
Aug 23, 2005
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A point that's being missed here: it takes two to trade.

Has anyone considered that this deal may have gone down some other way than the Rangers deciding they had to dump Werek at all costs - and that Lindberg was the best return they could fetch? What if LINDBERG is the key player here from management's point of view? What if they've been after him since the draft? Or if they've grown more and more enamored with him during his post-draft year? What if they've been targeting him all along and as it turned out Werek wound up being the price required to acquire him...?

I'm not saying that this is necessarily what happened, but much of the analysis going on here is very focused on who we're letting go rather than who we're bringing back. You've got to give to get - and maybe they really wanted to get Lindberg?
 

nyr2k2

Can't Beat Him
Jul 30, 2005
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A point that's being missed here: it takes two to trade.

Has anyone considered that this deal may have gone down some other way than the team deciding it had to dump Werek at all costs? What if LINDBERG is the key player here? What if they've been after him since the draft? Or if they've grown more and more enamored with him during his post-draft year? What if they've been targeting him all along and as it turned out Werek wound up being the price required to acquire him...?

I'm not saying that this is necessarily what happened, but much of the analysis going on here is very focused on who we're letting go rather than who we're bringing back. You've got to give to get - and maybe they really wanted to get Lindberg?

It's a valid point, and a definite possibility. tuponlol also made a good point regarding contract limits and signability windows earlier in this thread.

There's any number of things that could have triggered this deal. Hopefully we find out more in coming days.

And please, not "news" from Jess Rubenstein. :laugh:
 

Clowes Line

Cally's Chicken Parm
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A point that's being missed here: it takes two to trade.

Has anyone considered that this deal may have gone down some other way than the Rangers deciding they had to dump Werek at all costs - and that Lindberg was the best return they could fetch? What if LINDBERG is the key player here from management's point of view? What if they've been after him since the draft? Or if they've grown more and more enamored with him during his post-draft year? What if they've been targeting him all along and as it turned out Werek wound up being the price required to acquire him...?

I'm not saying that this is necessarily what happened, but much of the analysis going on here is very focused on who we're letting go rather than who we're bringing back. You've got to give to get - and maybe they really wanted to get Lindberg?

Great point, I for one am very happy with this trade, every thing I see in Lindberg, I really like and I look forward to seeing him blossom into an even better player.
 

Leetch3

Registered User
Jul 14, 2009
12,955
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this thread is becoming laughable...

trading a 19 year old former 2nd round pick that projects to be a 3rd or 4th line forward for another 19 year old former 2nd round pick that projects to be a 3rd or 4th line forward doesn't mean that the first player is a bust and isn't even in the same galaxy as trading a former 1st rounder for a 6th round pick cause he is so bad.
 

Brooklyn Rangers Fan

Change is good.
Aug 23, 2005
19,237
8,238
Brooklyn & Upstate
Catastrophic? Hardly. We moved an overpaid dman for an overpaid forward because we were hurting for offense...and we saved a little cap room in the process.

And trading Korpikowski isn't going to set us back months, let alone years. He wasn't going to get top 6 minutes on the team and we have no shortage of bottom 6 guys in these parts.

Really much ado about nothing.

ah, i see you were being sarcastic. lol

It's a valid point, and a definite possibility. tuponlol also made a good point regarding contract limits and signability windows earlier in this thread.

There's any number of things that could have triggered this deal. Hopefully we find out more in coming days.

And please, not "news" from Jess Rubenstein. :laugh:
Hey, all I did was post the quote for those who were lazy. ;)
 

Ghost of jas

Unsatisfied
Feb 27, 2002
27,188
13,601
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this thread is becoming laughable...

trading a 19 year old former 2nd round pick that projects to be a 3rd or 4th line forward for another 19 year old former 2nd round pick that projects to be a 3rd or 4th line forward doesn't mean that the first player is a bust and isn't even in the same galaxy as trading a former 1st rounder for a 6th round pick cause he is so bad.

Yes, but his name is Oscar, so therefore, he can't be a good player...oh, wait, wrong board.
 

Fitzy

Very Stable Genius
Jan 29, 2009
35,227
22,131
As I recall, Lindberg was one of those guys I was really wishing that we had when I watched him play in the WJC.

I'm not so worried about the #s, his are better than Tedenby's the year after he was drafted, and not far off from Josefson's. We'll see how it goes.
 

RangerFan10

Registered User
So, we give up a 3rd line player who is now 24 years old and had 40 points for a lazy piece of *****. Sounds like a dumb trade to me.

btw, we hope this kid will produce what Lauri has already done.

I am not devasted by losing Lauri, I am just saying we should have done better than Lisin.

That was as one sided as a trade gets. We give up a first rounder player who is forming into a solid player for nothing at all...great use of a chip.

Can you please touch my second point...
I mean hindsight is 20/20. The trade made perfect sense at the time. I don't know why everyone gets so hung up when we lose a small trade like that. Korpi probably would've been out of NY by now...at least we got SOMETHING for him
 
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