Bruyns wroteCOLONI think you have to look at all teams not just how it benefits rebuilders. Lets look at some good teams like WSH, PIT, NJD, MIN, PHI etc. These are teams with good rosters who could go on a long playoff run if the breaks went their way. They also don't have a ton of valuable prospects and picks to make their team better. Now we allow retention and other good teams like NSH, DAL, ANA, COL add retained stars giving them a big advantage.
I just see this as a league that has been about maximizing your roster and allowing contenders to add retained players really hurts league parity when some good teams might not be able to compete. We just saw a 633-540 LA team miss the playoffs and any team 1-8 could have came out of the West. I think we are in a good spot, my team is getting weaker out East and while still the weaker conference right now I think teams will be getting tighter in the standings.
Sure retention will increase trades and give rebuilders a chance to move some high paid contracts. I would also say no one forced a team to acquire an Okposo, JVR, OEL or Atkinson and acquiring a player like that comes at a much lower cost. Pumping up the value of those players at 50% retention will help teams if they make good trades and that is a huge if. On the other side of the coin giving top teams more ways to make their teams even better decreases parity and instead of having a wide open West you might have two or three overpowered teams and less hope for others.
That's just my $.02 on why I don't see the need for retention, but I like it in NHLDL and if we put up a poll and say 25 of 32 GMs want it then of course I would be supportive. I do feel like starting a league with retentions is also way different then adding it in 10+ years later.
As a fringe playoff team/tweener for contending and rebuilding I get that other angles should be looked at. But this is more about building rosters in the way that you want to. With a league that has this much history, the teams that are built like WSH, PIT NJD etc. that you mentioned are built that way by their own accord. Similarly NSH et.al. have built their teams in their own ways as well. I see the angle of this potentially helping teams at the very top and helping teams at the very bottom, while the middle 50% or so actually has a higher probability of suffering regression from this change. But as one of those teams, there is opportunity to be had still. I think this also comes down to smart deal-making and not just bending over to a top team because they are willing to make an offer.
I'd be curious to see a league wide opinion as well, since it's only been a a fraction of the league chiming in so far.
Certainly agree it's way simpler to have this from the start rather than implementing after GMs have been putting together rosters for years... I like the idea, but considering both sides of this coin, I can definitely see why one wouldn't like it. Its tricky