Dear John Tavares,
Yesterday was a
difficult day for Islanders Country. Actually, the last few months have been
very difficult. Even more so than the shortcomings of the team for several
years. After hearing
quotes from your team mates about how you were staying on the Islanders, the
quotes, articles and tweets saying you were leaning towards the Islanders, it
was a complete shock to most of us that you would ride your departure from the
team right into the July 1st open to free agency.
Now, don’t get
me wrong. You’re an elite pro hockey player. Probably the biggest free agent
available in NHL history. I also understand it’s your career and pro hockey is
a business. Sometimes, fans forget that. Their love for the team runs so deep,
they let their emotions rule them in situations like yesterday’s announcement
of you signing a 7-year deal with Toronto for $11M per.
I read your
statement, comments and watched your Toronto presser when you mentioned that
the Isles had a bright future. You had even mentioned that ‘kid who won the
Calder’. His name is Mathew Barzal. He was a team mate of yours for a couple of
years and worked hard to get an opportunity to stay in the NHL and he made the
most of it. As fans, we were so excited and proud of his energy and relentless
play last season. He was a clear-cut winner for top rookie honors.
I’m sure this
was a difficult decision to make for you. Knowing the team that drafted you
first overall in 2009 had chosen you to model their franchise around and build
a winning program with you as its cornerstone. I was there with my wife and daughter and I'm not ashamed to say, I teared up. I thought to myself, finally! Like you, the fans were very
upset at many of the moves made by General Manager, Garth Snow. While I think
he made several moves that helped bring talent to the team, via trade and
through the draft, he made several mistakes as well. The bottom line is the
Islanders were never a serious contender under his management. I defended him a
few times in my articles along with your former coach, Jack Capuano. Capuano
meant well and helped develop some of the younger guys, but was kept as head
coach for too long and that hurt the team. It also burned years off the
contracts you signed to remain with the Islanders. Looking back now, the
missteps of Snow and Capuano are even more maddening to a frustrated,
passionate fan base who have endured years of scorn and snarky comments from
media and rival fans. The same snark we are enduring now from the Toronto media
and their fans based on you leaving us to sign with them. And your mentor, Doug
Weight probably wasn’t ready. I think the team had the talent to do more than
it did, but the system failed them.
So you see, I
think much of the anger of Isles fans are feeling now is more about the way you
went out, not the fact that you chose to live out 'your childhood dream' of
playing for the Maple Leafs. When we heard all the pro Long Island and pro Islanders
quotes from you over the years, it made us proud that an elite player, our
elite player, our captain thought so highly of this now struggling, once dominant franchise. A
franchise that was the blueprint for a modern hockey dynasty. You know about
the 19 consecutive playoff series wins, the stories of Potvin, Trottier and
Billy Smith. You know of Nystrom’s goal, the intimidation of Gillies just to name a few. Oh, and the
other guy who wore your number. Butch Goring was the final piece that enabled
our team to dominate the hockey world for 4 straight Stanley Cups and came a
series win away from a 5th. Credit to Edmonton and Wayne Gretzky for besting
the Isles that season. But even Gretzky’s Oilers couldn’t win their 5 cups in a
row.
Did you hear
what Mike Bossy said to tvasports.ca? I saw the picture of you back in the day,
meditating in front of his plaque on the wall of fame outside the old Isles
locker room and it made me smile. I thought, wow, this guy really bleeds
orange and blue. Anyway, here was the quote from the clip,
“An Islanders
alumni himself, Mike believes Tavares could have been clearer in his intentions
with the team that drafted him in 2009.
‘I do not
forgive Tavares for leaving without saying so that the Islanders could have
something,’ he said.
‘There, they
have zero for a player they have drafted and to whom they gave 30 or 40 million
for eight years,’ continued the Hockey Hall of Fame member.
‘I find it
appalling for a team.”
Per Arthur
Staple, “In exchanging texts with a few Islanders players, the reactions ranged
from surprise to disbelief. I mentioned to one player that fans were posting
videos of burning Tavares’ jerseys. ‘Don’t blame them,’ was his reply.”
Even the
legendary Stan Fischler was surprised you went out the way you did.
“Dear John
Tavares: Thanks for being so available under difficult interviewing situations.
Now one question: What took you so long to make this "Toughest
Decision." Why didn't you tell @Islanders owners sooner? Much sooner; as in soon
enough so that the club you were so devoted to could make a move to compensate
for your loss? Just wondering, pal.”
I think that’s
the problem most of us have. The way it went down, ya know. You in no way belonged
to us, but you meant a lot to us. You were our captain. A generation of kids
grew up after the glory years and you were their ‘Bossy’. You were the reason
they became an Islanders fan. Many of us were touched by the picture of you in
your Leaf’s sheets at 6 or 7 years old. Billy Smith made me an Isles fan as a little kid in the heart of Rangers territory and that made me a die-hard. I thought about how many kids across
the Island had a similar bedroom in orange and blue, with tributes to you,
their hero as the pride of their collection. An Isles fan on Twitter,
@Islesfan303 posted a picture of his 9-year-old’s room.
Did you see it?
Did you see it?
Mr. Fischler
pointed out a blurb, but didn’t agree with it, from the Hockey news.
Stranger things have happened and even respected critics such as The Hockey News lead columnist Ken Campbell have wondered out loud whether a long-term, gold-mine contract really is worth it no matter how much Tavares produced. “From everything that analytics and an eye test tell us,” wrote Campbell, “Tavares is a player in decline.”
As fans, we didn’t feel this way either. We know you are in your prime, a smarter player and have more ambition now than you ever had before. We know had bad you want to win. We get it. But we wanted you to spend your career with us and retire an Islander, just like you said you wanted in radio interviews. We wanted you to take the final step with us, led by Lamoriello, Trotz and your teammates to help bring the Cup back to the Island.
Stranger things have happened and even respected critics such as The Hockey News lead columnist Ken Campbell have wondered out loud whether a long-term, gold-mine contract really is worth it no matter how much Tavares produced. “From everything that analytics and an eye test tell us,” wrote Campbell, “Tavares is a player in decline.”
As fans, we didn’t feel this way either. We know you are in your prime, a smarter player and have more ambition now than you ever had before. We know had bad you want to win. We get it. But we wanted you to spend your career with us and retire an Islander, just like you said you wanted in radio interviews. We wanted you to take the final step with us, led by Lamoriello, Trotz and your teammates to help bring the Cup back to the Island.
Well, enough of
that. You did what you felt was best for you and expressed what your time with
us had meant to you. Your call to the New York press was hard to listen to. I
can only imagine how hard it was for you to do. The tone of your voice showed
how difficult it was. I heard you say
as of January when Garth Snow said you wouldn’t be traded and you had no
intentions of doing anything else but committing to help the Islanders win. But
many other members of the media and angry fans keep going back to you
mentioning your ‘childhood dream’ of playing for the Maple Leafs. As I
understood it, you said it was an opportunity you owed yourself to investigate
and I get that. But many feel you were already leaning towards "going back
home.” In all due respect, you had called the Island your home for so many
years, maybe a few of them got confused about what you meant.
A lot of them
feel there was no way you waited until 6 days before free agency about playing
for your childhood team. They feel the Islanders allowed themselves to be
played by their franchise player who said all the right things at the right
time and avoided signing with them to leverage yourself for free agency. As a
result, you left the team you played on for 9 years with nothing but a parting
quote and a sincere thank you.
Some fans
support you, some don’t want to have anything to do with your memory. It took
me some time to begin writing a reply to your departure due to the way it went
down. You understand that it was hard to swallow. You even said you didn’t
expect any of us to be thrilled about it. You were right. We weren’t and we
aren’t. Remember this quote, “Asked what his priority is in making a
decision, Tavares said: “I want to stay on Long Island... I haven’t thought
about being anywhere except with the Islanders.” - Staple
While you won’t
retire an Islander or have your #91 retired, maybe your childhood team will
heap upon you all the things you hope to earn at the second half of your career.
To help them win, to give their fans the thing they have wanted even longer
than the franchise you left on the Island. Here’s to hoping you have no more
‘gut wrenching’ decisions to make in your career and that you can play with the
talented young core put in place by Isles GM, Lou Lamoriello with the same team
you grew up watching and learning to love the game.
Mr. Tavares, on
behalf of the Islanders fans who would permit me to speak for them, I’d like to
thank you for the impact you have had on our organization and fan base. We will
always be grateful and some of us may never get to tell you how much you meant
to us.
The fans in
Toronto will rub it in our faces when our boys play you at Scotiabank Arena on
December 29th and I’m sure the other members of Islanders Country, they will
probably make themselves heard on February 28th in Brooklyn and maybe even more
at the refurbished Coliseum on April 1st.
In the
meantime, we will build around Barzal, the kid who won rookie of the
year, Lee, Bailey, Beauvillier and all the rest of our guys, new and veteran alike. Lamoriello
had a great draft and who knows, if a few signings can tighten us up and Trotz
can work his proven system yet again, we might just meet in the conference
finals.
Wouldn’t that
be something? Best of luck to you Mr. Tavares, except when you play the
Islanders of course.
Thanks for
teaching all of us a valuable lesson. It’s not the leaving, it was the manner
in which it went down. Sometimes the wait and faith you place in someone or
something isn’t always rewarded.
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