Feels an *awful* lot like you tried very hard to find reasons to trade him. I'm sorry, but this just feels like the Golden Corral of stats. Lots of choices, but no reason to think any of them are any good. Why should I care about any of these stats any more than I care about a baseball player's RBIs? Absolutely, positively, 100% no. There is a zero-percent chance of that happening. IT's something a few people and probably some journalists are going to throw around like a boogeyman, but it isn't going to come close to happening. LOL no. Once again, trading either Seabrook or Hjalmarsson is completely off the table, and we *just* got done proving that Keith/Seabrook/Hjalmarsson and a competent fourth is plenty to make the position a strength. TvR looks like a safe bet to be a useful guy, there's a solid chance that Pokka or Johns will make the leap this year, and there's room in the salary-cap budget for a cheap, reliable veteran. That statement requires putting an amount of faith in Scott Darling's future that 19 games in the NHL does not justify. Another crazybuckets statement. The problem with Luongo's contract wasn't necessarily the cap hit, it was the length. He had 9 years left on his deal when Vancouver traded him. Crawford has five more, not at all an unreasonable position to be in for a goalie who is 30 years old and for whom there is no statistical reason to believe he's anything other than in his prime right now. The entire argument for Crawford comes down to this: "He's an above-average goalie, but we can presume that Scott Darling's 19 games last year and Raanta's 14 were meaningfully predictive (but *not* Raanta's performance the year before) so we better trade Crawford because some other team might overpay (true for just about anyone on the team) and his cap hit is onerous (despite it being less than half a million more than the median for a starting goalie in the NHL)." If we're trading players because someone might overpay, because if they suddenly become bad their cap hit sucks, and because if we just assume that we can fill in their production cheaply, then there's no reason to single out Crawford. You could apply the same logic to Hjalmarsson, Keith, Toews, Seabrook easily.