Virtual Front Porch Pages

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Ode on a Creighton Urn

Season 4 has been a nonstop thrillride, with our best-ever crop of rookies, a back-and-forth MVP race between Alf Smith and Gord Roberts, and of course one very precocious expansion team. I've thought a lot about he overachieving Millionaires and what their first-year success might mean for the long-term future of our newest franchise. Prior to the season, I'd figured that the Millionaires would ice a respectable team but finish in last place, allowing them to secure the first overall pick of the Season 5 entry draft. 

And what an interesting draft it will be! Five members of the Hockey Hall of Fame will be joining the league next season, and among these entrants are two defensemen who are unlikely to earn much playing time, one versatile winger who projects as an everyday player, and two absolute studs: Frank Foyston and Duke Keats. Foyston is a slick-skating right wing with great scoring skills and the discipline to stay out of the penalty box; he's a shoo-in to become a first-line player on just about any team. Keats, meanwhile, is a generational talent who will quickly become a number-one center and MVP candidate right from the get-go. I'll have more to say about Keats when we get closer to the Season 5 draft, but damn, this guy is a beast!

Now let's get back to the Millionaires. They were lined up nicely to draft a true franchise player in Duke Keats -- until those pesky castoffs started winning! Now what? As the coach and general manager of all five teams, I'm trying to make the best decisions for each. Championship flags fly forever, so do the Millies go for it in their first year? They don't have a lot of assets at this point, but they could flip a couple of veterans to upgrade at center and perhaps one other position. At that point, they'd be as strong as any team in playoff contention and would have a reasonable shot at the cup. But if they fail, I will have torpedoed their future by robbing them of the perfect player to lead this team to many seasons of glory. No team could benefit from a top-line pivot more than the Millies. I have a little more time before the trade deadline to determine if the Millies should be all in, but there's still going to be a lot of  uncertainty -- and the future of a franchise may be at stake!

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