For Philadelphia Flyers GM Paul Holmgren, who traded two draft picks to
the Toronto Maple Leafs for winger Kris Versteeg tonight, we imagine the thought
process was simple: If you want to raise the Stanley Cup in Philadelphia this
season, why not add a guy who raised the Stanley Cup in Philadelphia last
season?
From the Flyers:
The Philadelphia Flyers announced today that they have
acquired 5-10, 182-pound right wing Kris Versteeg from the Toronto Maple Leafs
in exchange for a first-round and a third-round pick in the 2011 NHL Entry
Draft, according to general manager Paul Holmgren."Kris is an exciting young forward," Holmgren said.
He’s 24 years old and he’ll fit in with our group of players here. He’s a
quality forward that can play in a lot of different roles for our hockey team.
He can move up and down our lineup. He can kill penalties. He can play on the
power play. We think he’s a guy that over the last few years,
particularly in Chicago, has really blossomed into a good forward and we think
he’s going to be a really good addition to our team."
"Right away I was extremely excited to join this team,"
Versteeg said. "They’ve had a lot of success this season. They had a
great playoff push last year and I’m excited to try and have a good one this
year. I like to make plays and score goals at the same time, maybe go out
there and be an agitator at times too. I’m going to try and do it all and have
fun doing it."
The Flyers had been rearranging their salary cap for some
type of deal since the end of January. So why Versteeg, and what does this deal mean for the Leafs?
(Ed. Note: Comments from the Brian Burke press conference after the jump.)
Prevailing
wisdom had the target as Erik Cole of the Carolina Hurricanes, who thrived under Coach Peter
Laviolette. Versteeg appeared on the radar over the weekend via
Tim Panaccio and CSN Philly:
Yet, one player who is likely on their radar for an upgrade
is Toronto winger Kris Versteeg, whose cap hit is an affordable $3.083 million
this year and next. The soon-to-be 25-year-old left wing is a perfect fit for the
Flyers: a gritty, hard checker who plays above his 5-foot-10 size.
So instead of Cole, it’s
another left wing, and a good one: Versteeg’s a perfect complementary forward
for a team with the depth the Flyers have up front, and he has 26 points in 39
career playoff games with the Blackhawks.
He’s
also a fan favorite, thanks in part to his unparalleled
abilities as a hip-hop artist.
Versteeg is signed
through 2012. What
was that you wrote, Chuck Gormley? That "contract talks with
left wing Ville Leino appear to have stalled" as free agency approaches? You don’t say.
Meanwhile, Brian Burke has turned Viktor Stalberg, Chris DiDomenico
and Phillippe Paradis into the Flyers’ first and third round picks this summer.
Mirtle
sees the acquisition and then flipping of Versteeg as "another sign Toronto
is beginning a longer rebuild than the Leafs GM first envisioned."
We’re just
happy to see first-round pucks coming to Toronto for a change.
• • •
UPDATE: Leafs GM
Brian Burke held a conference call on Monday night to discuss the trade and
other topics. A few highlights:
• Burke said the Leafs have been in the process of shopping
Versteeg for at least a week, and using the Flyers’ offer as the benchmark. They didn’t receive
anything comparable, didn’t believe they’d get this package at the deadline and
were concerned that the Flyers would go for another option. So the trigger was
pulled.
• Burke talked about Versteeg fitting better with a "better"
team; as in a team like the Blackhawks or Flyers that is in contention. After
about five months, was it clear that Versteeg was just an ill fit for the Leafs on and off
the ice? Well, they just traded a 24-year-old top six forward (after trading
for him) with a manageable cap hit and a contract that runs through 2012 for
two draft picks. You do the math.
• Burke is already shopping the Flyers’ third-round pick, and
the target appears to be a forward that would add salary to the Leafs’ cap.
Burke said the team is very much still eying the playoffs.
• Finally, when asked about Tomas Kaberle and his no-trade
clause, Burke said his agent has asked for secrecy in the process. The agent and
the player have kept this vow; Burke said the Leafs will do the same. So is
there smoke here? Or is this just more of the same when it comes to Kaberle and the deadline?
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