Brian
Burke has done some really great things to turn the Toronto Maple Leafs
organization around since the John Ferguson Jr. days. Somehow he
continually convinces Anaheim and Calgary to trade with him when they
always come out on the losing end of the deal. However, while Burke has come out as the undisputed winner in several key trades (the Phaneuf, Lupul, and Kaberle deals come to mind), those successes have been undermined by some costly over payments on some severely underperforming UFAs. The
signing of Komisarek, Armstrong, Connolly, Lebda and Orr were met with
some scepticism at the time, and the production from these players has
not lived up to even the limited expectations they were given.
Mike
Komisarek was signed as a feature of Burke truculence revolution after
an “All-Star” season in 2009 to a 5 year $22.5 million contract. Three
seasons later, he remains the 17th highest paid defensemen in the
league, and yet he's been a healthy scratch 6 of the 10 games since his
return from injury. Expectations on Komisarek were, at
best, to be a shut-down, impact defensemen and, at worst, a top 4
physical presence. Instead he’s a $4.5million healthy scratch/injury
replacement who, when he plays, is less effective than Jeff Finger was.
Yeah, I went there.
Colby
Armstrong has contributed nothing other than increasing Ron Wilson's
tweet count. He’s universally regarded as a good guy and a good
teammate, but he’s paid $3million a year to play hockey well, not be
everyone’s BFF. Recently, he’s come back from injury only
to take up a seat next to Komisarek in the press box. How many people
predicted Darryl Boyce and Joey Crabb playing ahead of him? Armstrong is said to be upset by this decision, but what does he expect? He has a 3 year $9million contract, and has produced only 8 goals so far in his career as a Leaf, and none this season.
Another
key figure of Burke’s 2009 truculent fetish is Colton Orr. Burke pulled
out all the theatrics in a “tie optional” press conference/rant when he
sent Orr down to the Marlies, as if it was the league's fault and not
Burke’s own for Orr suddenly being made obsolete. Orr’s $1million per
year contract isn’t crippling, and he certainly provided some great
entertainment value (cough, Carkner, cough). But nobody can argue that a
million dollar 4th-line Marlie is money well spent.
When
Brett Lebda was traded last year, Leafs Nation practically had a parade
to see him out of town. Our friends over at PPP had “No More Brett
Lebda” as their banner for months after. I get it. Lebda was a liability
when on the ice and it wasn’t until Matt Lashoff was called up that the
Leafs had a respectable bottom pairing. Give Burke credit for
committing grand larceny in acquiring an asset like Cody Franson and the
overpaid but useful Matt Lombardi for a liability. Lebda’s 2 year $2.9million contract was bought out by cash-strapped Nashville halfway
through the deal. A minor UFA signing by Burke, but again, results were
wildly different from expectations.
Finally,
Tim Connolly. He was picked up in the 2011 offseason to be a first line
centre to play with Phil Kessel. Fair enough. His 2 year $9.5 million
signing was a bit surprising only due to his injury prone past. But at
$4.75/yr, it could be argued that if Connolly was able to replicate his
post-lockout 0.82 point per game percentage and contribute to a
rejuvenated top-six, he’d be worth the money. Unfortunately, no such
thing has happened. Connolly, when healthy, hasn't lived up to anyone's
expectations, and is probably the league’s most expensive 3rd line centre. Some
may say he hasn't been healthy scratched because they're worried he
might end his career tripping on his way into the press box. Conjecture
aside, rack this one up in the “disappointing so far” category.
Imagine
what the Leafs would look like if two or three of these signings had
worked out as hoped. Leaf fans have mostly ignored these UFA misses
because with the cap rising all the way to $64million, difficult
decisions haven’t had to be made. But with key players like Grabovski,
Kulemin and Franson due for raises this coming offseason, endless
cap-space won’t always be such a luxury. With Toronto losing 6 of 7
while key UFA signings rotate in and out of the press box, Burke’s shortcomings have become more obvious. As the Leafs cling to 8th place in the East, fans certainly hope Burke’s got another lop-sided deadline deal up his sleeve.
**Update: after a Thursday loss to San Jose, the Leafs now cling to 9th place. Once again, Komisarek and Armstrong were scratched.