In a life that’s taken many twists and turns, I hate dealing in hypothetical situations.
The “What if’s” and “should’ves and could’ves” of existence are questions and declarations that don’t really help us reexamine wrong decisions we’ve made, the unfulfilled wishes that we have or the potential situations where we might have found ourselves in a very different place, had things gone differently.
We can only learn from the past, not re-litigate it, and we can only affect our present and our future. We can figure out what went wrong by performing an autopsy/audit of how we screwed up, we can try to implement plans to do things differently and/or avoid making the same mistake(s) today and tomorrow, and then, we have to move forward.
As such, I’m not posting a very well-written article from Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff that wonders “What If the Red Wings Had Made the Playoffs?” because Detroit didn’t do that.
I don’t believe that Dylan Larkin or Patrick Kane’s nebulous off-season destinations would not be in doubt simply because the Wings earned a playoff spot.
To me, maybe it’s wistful to wonder whether we’d be talking about a Larkin trade scenario if Detroit hadn’t face-planted over the course of the second half of this past season…
But it’s not useful to try to re-play those games for the sake of anything other than to perform an autopsy/audit on what actually happened, and to examine past practices so that the Red Wings can attempt to avoid them in the future.
I feel a somewhat similarly regarding draft pick development.
It’s really easy to say that team X should have drafted player Y instead of player Z, but second-guessing and third-guessing picks that weren’t made doesn’t help with having to develop the players that you’ve got to their maximum potential. You can’t redraft; you can make better choices next time around.
Along those lines, Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen has discusses “Why Draft Picks Don’t Work in [a] Larkin Deal” this morning.
Let’s talk “present and future” regarding a Larkin trade, at least as best as we are able:
Continue reading Why the Red Wings will try to ‘lose with dignity’ in any Dylan Larkin trade