
If Roberto Luongo's new contract was for 24 years and $128 million, he would still be worth every penny. The Vancouver Canucks did wonderfully for themselves and their fan base by getting him at half. Priceless is the professional athlete who just shuts up and plays his position as well as anyone on the planet.
The 30-year-old Luongo had three wishes: to get paid, to not bankrupt the Canucks from fielding a contender and to go very long-term. So what if the contract doesn't end until the Jamie Moyer stage of his career?
Wednesday, everyone had a lot to say about what Luongo will be at 43 and what he is now at age 30. But a little history reveals why the All-Star goalie may have been so resolute in his demands.
Despite being the most-hyped goaltender of the last 15 years, he has delivered on his immense potential. Of course, there is the rather large matter of carrying a team to a Stanley Cup, but even his critics are forgiving. They acknowledge Luongo has been an NHL goalie for nine seasons, a member of a functional NHL franchise for only the last three.
While universally hailed as the game's top prospect a decade ago, Luongo was demoted to the minors by the New York Islanders so the owners at the time could avoid paying him bonus dollars. The goalie, all of 20 years old, proved he was the better man. He just shut up and played hockey.
Luongo was traded by Mike Milbury on Draft Day 2000 with Olli Jokinen to Florida for Oleg Kvasha and Mark Parrish. (The Islanders also passed on the opportunity to draft a few future 40-goal scorers, but we're trying to keep this column a reasonable length). While the rest of the league either laughed or gasped, Luongo -- steely determination a cliché invented for athletes like him -- just shut up, went to South Florida and played hockey.
So when Florida joined the Islanders as the second asinine team to trade Roberto Luongo, the goalie decided to take a personal interest in his future with the Canucks. No, this isn't franchise player as management nudge -- simply a goaltender wanting to stop pucks and the insanity.
Good for him. Good for the Canucks. Good for their fans. Entering the prime of a Hall of Fame career, Luongo negotiated 12 years for $64 million -- an annual salary cap hit of $5.33 million. Rick DiPietro, his apparent heir at the Islanders, got $67.5 million for 15 years ($4.5 mill) without proving much. Neither deal prevents the Canucks or Islanders from building Cup-contending rosters. Only Luongo, always in the conversation as the No. 1 goalie for Team Canada, is currently healthy enough to do something about it. Canucks management, so emotionally invested in the man from Quebec they named him captain, now begins losing sleep over the nightmare of a long-term injury to The Franchise.
Make no mistake, the league office abhors these long-term deals. Gary Bettman was not shy about his distaste for the DiPietro deal, but opted for silence when established superstar Alex Ovechkin was inked for 13 years. Recent contracts by Philadelphia (Chris Pronger) and Chicago (Marian Hossa) were downright knee-slappers in their circumvention of the salary cap.
You don't need Brian Burke to underline the $1 million Luongo will receive in each of the last two years to see the salary cap scam (imagine that, a sports team looking for an edge). Try as they might, league lawyers will not find the Luongo deal in violation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Their next chance to change the rules arrives in 2011.
Celebrate, Canucks Country. You have the best player on your team -- the goalie most real GMs would take in their fantasy draft -- for at least the next decade.
Roberto Luongo was born to be a goaltender. Look at him: long arms, long legs, Gumby-like flexibility, Andy Pettitte-like focus. Now, just as he wanted, he's a Canuck for the rest of his playing days.
















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
9-03-2009 @ 11:58AM
Travelchic59 said...
Very good read, CB. I often wonder where the Islanders would be now if they had kept Luongo and did not make that lop-sided trade. He really is a premiere goalie. Lucky Vancouver.
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9-03-2009 @ 12:25PM
Tavares said...
This just shows us dumb the DP contract really is. DP is not even close to being as good as Luongo.
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9-03-2009 @ 12:37PM
Peter Figur said...
Being injured does not mean that you have not proven anything.......it just means you are injured. Ricky does his best to get on the ice. Lets not fault him for that. I think maybe we have all forgotten what a great goalie he can be. He just needs to get healthy. Injuries are a part of sports. Lets not put fault on the athlete for that.
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9-03-2009 @ 12:44PM
Rob Avaltroni said...
As an Isles fan, his trade stings as much as any one still to this day. Asinine is the best way to describe it...sometimes I think it's the best way to describe me for shelling out the cash to go see my Isles play. :)
Thanks for another great one, Chris.
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9-03-2009 @ 1:34PM
Me said...
Seems to me if the guy was so great he would have won in the playoffs. Oh well now he is entering his "prime" as a proven regular season goalie. Maybe he will start to win in the post season.
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9-03-2009 @ 1:34PM
Upstate Isles Fan said...
Gotta disagree with you on this one, CB. The 15-year deal to DP was a brain malfunction, and I feel no differently about the 12-year deal to Luongo. Make no mistake, I think Luongo is the more durable and flat out better of the two netminders. It has nothing to do w/ ability. But I disagree with the whole concept of these long-term contracts, and that goes double for goaltenders. That "friendly cap hit" can easily become a headache with one or two complicated injuries, and a team can easily be stuck with a player who wants to just "go out there in play" but is physically just not the player he once was. Now you're stuck with a contract you can't move, and that's NEVER coming off the books. Goalies especially...there just aren't that many that can have Patrick Roy or Marty Brodeaur length careers at an elite level.
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9-03-2009 @ 1:46PM
Daniel said...
Great signing by a team with great management. It must be nice to be a Vancouver fan right about now. You have to respect a player as talented as Luongo who as you said CB, "just shuts up and plays." I wish him all the best in the future with the Canucks.
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9-03-2009 @ 1:48PM
19 Isle in NJ 22 said...
CB- Often I agree with you ... and in the spirit of Luongo's pure talent and ability I still do ... But IMO any contract over 8 years in length is as "asinine" as the Isles trading Luongo to Florida in the first place. Especially the fact that Luongo is 30 years old.
He isn't now just entering his prime. He entered his prime when he produced for Florida in the 2003-04 season: 73 games, 7 shutouts, 2.43 goals-against average and .931 save percentage.
Luongo certainly has earned a long term huge $$$$ contract. I just think it's folly for ANY team, in ANY sport to sign ANY player for absurd lengthly contracts that take them past their 25 year HS reunion.
I recalled an article in SI over 5 years ago that showed the rapid decline in production from players at various ages in all 4 major sports. Even the elite players are not immune. They used Wayne Gretzky as an example too.
After 30 years old players begin to degenerate from all the abuse and wear and tear. Goaltenders in the NHL start a rapid decline after 35 ... but elite goaltenders have a larger margin based on their abilities.
Sure Luongo will be a bargain in year 11 and 12 ... but if he becomes just average in year 8... what's the point?
Vancouver gave Luongo security ... Maybe Luongo can backstop a Cup. I believe both did the right thing for the short term... but cap space doesn't clear for the Canucks to halfway through the contract. So we'll see how this plays out.
Roberto has always been my fave goalie not on the Isles... Hope he succeeds some day on a personal level.
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9-03-2009 @ 2:12PM
DP said...
Interesting article about a player I really know little about, I guess that's because he sticks to playing hockey and leaves the words to others.
great comments on Isles and Panthers being dysfunctional franchises that made asinine trades - -understatement.
As for the cost/and length of his contract, I think he's proved his worth as a starting goalie and the Canucks will just have to pray that he does not suddenly become injury plagued
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9-03-2009 @ 2:32PM
ejk5715 said...
totally agree with you cb. as an islander fan for 32 years the trade of luongo is the one that still bothers me. i always check the paper to see what he has done and wonder what if...
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9-03-2009 @ 5:04PM
FRANKIE IS GOD said...
its funny the Islanders got laughed at for signing ricky to a 15 year deal at 23. Now everyone is doing it.
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9-03-2009 @ 8:24PM
Steve said...
Ummm....the difference is that Luongo is 10X better than DP.
9-03-2009 @ 7:06PM
Pete said...
There needs to be more athletes like this, not in hockey, but pro-sports in general!
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9-03-2009 @ 8:20PM
Gemmett71 said...
Great article. Especially pointing out the worry that will now exist regarding a serious injury to Mr. Luongo.
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9-03-2009 @ 8:32PM
Steve said...
Great article, Chris. Luongo is a class act and would be the starter for any other national team besides Canada. You are a great addition to this site. Keep up the great work!
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9-03-2009 @ 10:40PM
Alex O said...
Great Read as Always CB, One of the many many reasons to hate Milbury
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9-03-2009 @ 9:10PM
hathead68 said...
Good read CB. Agree with some comments that after DP's 15yr deal, then everyone started signing their best players long term. Maybe if we did'nt sign Yashin for 10 yrs ... now THAT was BAD! But good for Luongo, he's a tremendous talent. Hopefully DP gets to prove his worth.
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9-03-2009 @ 10:24PM
mickeyboy7 said...
Thanks for reminding me once again of the bad old days when my Islanders were in the incredibly bad hands of that fan friendly shoe swinging idiot Mike Milbury. I have to laugh everytime I see Mr. Expert on NBC. I just can't decide if he was a worse coach or GM. And talk about long term deals. It seemed like he had a civil service contract with Mr. Wang. In for life.
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9-03-2009 @ 10:43PM
Jah Love said...
I like the loyalty and continuity, BUT these long contracts can take the carrot away for some, be too much responsibility for others, and yet others can't weather the storm. Increments of 5-10 years is more than enough probably.
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9-04-2009 @ 5:17AM
claytor said...
Most will say Lou hasnt done much in the playoffs, but thats mostly because he never sniffed the playoffs until he went to Vancouver. The team seems intent on committing to a good run, they kept the Sedins, Sundin should come back, and he wasnt half bad for an old man, plus a crop of up and comers with real talent on both ends.
This is merely his way of having the cake and eating it too. He gets paid, and is with a team committed to winning for a change. Nice play.
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