With Horcoff out the rest of the season, the Oilers may fall to the bottom 5 in the league... The Ducks own the Edmonton's 1st round pick!!!
Uh, Ohh!
Uh, Ohh!
Who would be stupid enough to do that?maurice93 said:It would be like trading a first round pick for Tom Kurvers!!
21pro said:With Horcoff out the rest of the season, the Oilers may fall to the bottom 5 in the league... The Ducks own the Edmonton's 1st round pick!!!
Uh, Ohh!
The kicker to the story is that the Kings were doing worse than the Seals and were probably going to get the 1st overall pick. So Sam sent some reinforcements to LA to improve them (I'm thinking Ralph Backstrom or maybe Rogie Vachon). Sure enough LA ended out ahead of the Seals and Montreal got the perjurer, Guy Lafleur with Oakland's first pick.guyroch said:The Habs' astute General Manager, Sam Pollock, was keen to find a way to trade with the California Golden Seals to obtain their first round draft pick. He persuaded Seals owner Charlie Finley to trade the Seals' pick and Francois Lacombe in return for Montreal's first round pick and a veteran Ernie Hicke.
He chose Lafleur with his overall no.1 pick
Actually, it was Boston who selected Dryden in the 1964 draft. After he refused to report and decided to attend Cornell, Bruins traded him for the named players. Unless, that is what you meant to say in your post - sorry if it was.bobistheowl said:In 1964, recently named Montreal Canadiens GM Sam Pollock made this trade with the Boston Bruins:
Guy Allen and Paul Reid to Boston for Alex Campbell and the rights to Boston's third round pick in the 1964 draft, #14 overall.
It was seven years before that pick played in the NHL, playing six games at the end of the 1970-71 season. His name? Ken Dryden.
When a team drafts a player, they retain his rights. If they trade him before signing him, it's called trading the rights to him. Dryden had already been selected by Boston before the trade was conmumated. That's the difference between trading a draft pick, trading rights to a player, and trading a player. Trading the pick gives the receiving team the option of whom they wish to select. Trading a player includes the terms of a contract already in force. There was a reserve clause at that time, (ie: no free agency), and the team did not have to sign him or lose him, as is the current NHL rule.blueline said:Actually, it was Boston who selected Dryden in the 1964 draft. After he refused to report and decided to attend Cornell, Bruins traded him for the named players. Unless, that is what you meant to say in your post - sorry if it was.
That is pretty much what I said, but thanks anyways.bobistheowl said:When a team drafts a player, they retain his rights. If they trade him before signing him, it's called trading the rights to him. Dryden had already been selected by Boston before the trade was conmumated. That's the difference between trading a draft pick, trading rights to a player, and trading a player. Trading the pick gives the receiving team the option of whom they wish to select. Trading a player includes the terms of a contract already in force. There was a reserve clause at that time, (ie: no free agency), and the team did not have to sign him or lose him, as is the current NHL rule.
the coles notes version would have been good enough - wow.21pro said:some lawyers charge by the word. not always the best way to operate.
I still don't know why you didn't understand my first post. Boston could not have traded his rights unless they had first drafted him, or acquired his rights from another team, before trading his rights to Montreal. It's not what I meant to say. It's what I did say, and what you quoted me as having said. The third round pick, #14 overall, and Ken Dryden, were the same person. I just mentioned the rights to the pick and Dryden's name in different sentences, for dramatic effect, like guyroach did with Guy LaFleur in the post following.blueline said:Actually, it was Boston who selected Dryden in the 1964 draft. After he refused to report and decided to attend Cornell, Bruins traded him for the named players. Unless, that is what you meant to say in your post - sorry if it was.