rezero wrote: ↑28 Dec 2025 23:45 pm
ManitobaBlues wrote: ↑28 Dec 2025 16:17 pm
netboy65 wrote: ↑28 Dec 2025 15:14 pm
Not a crutch, but help. Sunnys and Walkers ain’t gonna cut it. Besides, who ever said he has to “lead”? I don’t recall him having a letter. People said we’d never win with Tarasenko…until we did.
If we made Blues Talk’s dream come true and trade him for BT, we still have to get HIM help. I don’t know why that’s so hard to comprehend.
We’re past the point of wanting Brady—he’s staying in Ottawa. The bigger priority now is moving Kyrou’s contract, because we’re going to need that cap space in the next couple of years.
When you look at the future lineup—Stenberg, Dvorsky, Neighbours , Broberg, Holloway, Berggren, Snuggerud, Thomas, Buch and likely Carbonneau after a year in the AHL—you can see the foundation taking shape. This is a roster that fits Montgomery’s system and identity.
Kyrou just isn’t a Montgomery-type player, and the sooner that’s acknowledged, the easier it is to build this team the right way going forward.
This is why people on this forum are not GMs. Saying we need to move his contract so we can pay players who are not as skilled as he is. Why not have any one of the young player show they are even worth being on a NHL top 2 lines first before we shed one of the only elite scorers we have on the roster. You and Harry need to learn the game. Ludicrous.
Rezero, I understand the game just fine. I played through college, and I’ve got three kids playing it now. Kyrou is 27 years old—a consistent 30-goal scorer, yes, but he’s not an elite scorer.
My point is this: we’re not winning a Cup in the next two years. So why hold onto Kyrou, Buchnevich, and Schenn during that window? Every team reaches a point where it has to shed weight to reach the next level, and it feels like that time is now. This is where Steen needs to push the organization forward.
Ultimately, all I care about is seeing another Stanley Cup brought back to St. Louis. With Kyrou, I see flashes and some improvement, but overall he’s still not the 200-foot player Montgomery wants—or needs—him to be. And if he doesn’t fit the identity you’re building toward, then tough decisions have to be made.