A few years ago, it was common for NHL fanbases to call for their favorite team to bottom out when it came time to rebuild the organization’s roster, and for good reason. The bottom-out rebuild had become trendy because most Stanley Cup champions during the 2010s had used that method of roster construction, and other teams began copying it, as is often the case.
However, late in the decade, another trend began to surface: the teams that were bottoming out couldn’t turn the corner in their rebuilds and remained in a perpetual state of losing. That leads us to the past couple of seasons, when some of those teams, namely the Sabres, have remained at the bottom of the NHL standings, while others, such as the Capitals, have successfully orchestrated softer retools.
At this point, it’s becoming evident that the bottom-out rebuild no longer works in today’s NHL.
There are many reasons it doesn’t work. Most notably, the draft is no longer a safe bet for bottom-feeders to land generational talent. Ten years ago, high picks were nearly a guarantee if you finished at the bottom of the standings, and now, with the new draft odds, it’s much harder to win a top pick.
Teams can no longer rely on a top draft pick to secure elite talent, which has reduced the incentive to tank via roster construction. After all, you still need fans to buy tickets and merchandise, and they won’t do that if your club is getting beaten every night.
This leads to another point about tearing down the roster. If you do acquire young talent who have no one else to play with and play in a culture of losing, that type of environment does seem contagious.
You can simply look at Edmonton and Buffalo in the 2010s. They couldn’t shake the stink of a losing culture, and it seeped into much of their young talent. Buffalo is a particularly egregious example, as many of their top draft picks more or less forced their way out of Buffalo to go on and win Stanley Cups in other cities.
This culture also shapes the development outcomes for younger players and explains why some young players get drafted late but, once in an NHL environment, find new levels in their games they had never reached before. It was no accident in the 1990s and 2000s that the Red Wings consistently found stars late in the draft. They had built a development machine and a culture of excellence that brought out the best in all of their young players. That dynamic can go the other way if you have a culture of losing. There is a real irony to all of it. The worse your team is, the less equipped your organization is to develop the players who might save your franchise.
Even if you hit the lottery and draft elite players, it doesn’t compound year after year the way it used to when the Penguins could grab Marc-André Fleury, Evgeni Malkin, Sidney Crosby, and Jordan Staal. The new rules from 2022 mean that a team cannot win the lottery more than twice in five years. Now, technically, that wouldn’t change things in the case of Pittsburgh, as they traded up to draft Fleury and drafted Malkin and Staal second overall, but it does reduce the incentive to ice a poor roster.
It’s also difficult to sustain the financial costs of an NHL roster in the salary-cap era while intentionally fielding a poor roster for several seasons. Back when Pittsburgh and Chicago were building their bottom-feeding rosters, they could literally sign every player to the league minimum (and they almost did) because the salary-cap floor they had to meet to be cap-compliant was much lower. Now, with an elevated floor, very few NHL teams could afford to reach the floor and ice a poor roster year after year without suffering a significant drop in gate revenue.
Speaking of money, another wrinkle in the bottom-out rebuild is that if you somehow draft elite players and develop them into NHL stars, they are set to exit their entry-level contracts and cash in big. Young stars can demand bigger extensions earlier, meaning the cheap years of their careers are behind them, and the team has to allocate massive amounts of cap space to them and can’t insulate them with other players. Stated differently, once your rebuild starts to bear fruit, the discounted years are over.
Then there is the issue that it’s tough to deconstruct an NHL roster, and even when you try to tear it down, you might end up with a team that falls into the mushy middle. This has happened to the Penguins this season: they tried to trade many of their veterans this past summer (Rickard Rakell, Bryan Rust, Erik Karlsson) but weren’t able to, and now find themselves in a playoff hunt.
It would have been foolish for Pittsburgh to give away its top players for very little, and whether they were serious about moving them is known only to management. Still, they elected to hold onto them and continue to ice a team that is competing for a wild-card spot. This is different from 20-plus years ago, when there was no salary cap, and Pittsburgh could simply call the Rangers or the Capitals to dump their star players.
Finally, there is the difference that social media and modern society make in rebuilding a team. Twenty years ago, entertainment options were much more limited, so fans stuck around to watch their favorite team, even when it was bad. This meant that management and coaches had a longer leash to rebuild and develop young players, as ownership had more patience because supporters were more committed and less distracted by other forms of entertainment. Nowadays, though, fans have a million choices for their leisure time, and if their favorite club is bad, they can do other things to fill their time.
Social media also plays into this, as fans have a louder voice than ever, which can put pressure on ownership if the naysayers get too noisy or create their own narratives. A rebuild used to be allowed to breathe for months at a time with minimal criticism, but nowadays it is litigated on social media daily. This can accelerate impatience and force management and ownership to show progress more quickly, making the long, painful rebuild a near impossibility.
Then there is self-preservation, which is often the primary motivator in management, leading to avoiding the long rebuild or not fully committing to a teardown. GMs notoriously shorten their own timelines and make job-saving trades that often turn out to be poor moves for the organization and for themselves (Kevyn Adams in Buffalo, for example).
The modern reality of a rebuild is that it is no longer about losing for a long time and collecting top picks. You can do that and still go nowhere, as evidenced by many teams in the last ten years. Rebuilds have become about timing long-term contracts.
They’ve become about layering prospects so they arrive in consistent waves year after year, keeping your depth intact when your internal players become too expensive to retain. They’ve become about patience and development, avoiding giving up on players too early, moving them prematurely, getting impatient with your current roster, and making a bad move. And finally, they’ve become about protecting your assets, draft picks, roster players, and cap space.
The teams that win now are no longer the ones that lose their way to the top; they are the disciplined ones that build the right way.
It can absolutely work when done correctly. The key is drafting well and patiently developing players in the CHL, NCAA, or AHL.
Jack Hughes is a prime example of rushing a prospect. He was too slight to play against men. There was no benefit for him playing in the NHL as a teenager.
Then, add an established veteran goalie and defenceman.
And offer sheets need to be used way more often.
The Hawks were forced to do the same thing with Kevin Korchinski. Because of the rule that was in place that said that players couldn’t play in the AHL until they were 20 and they were too good for Juniors and couldn’t play in the minors so the Hawks had to bring him to he NHL. They since amended that rule since and if they didn’t want to go to college they were basically toast. Korchinski needs to put on weight and strength and we all thought he would just naturally grow. He hasn’t yet and maybe if they try and help in get bigger does it change him somehow? Too soon to tell but it should all be about putting the prospects where they belong and let them play against their own speed of competition. Hopefully now the rules are fixed so kids don’t get put in limbo. It might let teams grow their talent better. I really haven’t seen an article by this guy that has anything to say. He did an article on the Hawks that basically had very little facts in it.
The article is the biggest pile of rubbish I’ve read on this site. Every point the writer makes is flawed.
I smell something that starts with C and ends with PT.
Would Montreal count as a full rebuild?
I still remember EDM being awarded #1 pick in the Draft year after year and it seemed rigged. Taylor Hall/RN-H/Yakupov/McDavid
The Hawks are a good example of this articles thesis. While they are only a slap-shot away from a wild card spot, they are a million miles from being cup contenders. And I cringe when I think about them having two first round picks in the upcoming draft, it’s ringing in my ears all the comments and stories about “hot prospects.” There comes a time when it’s time to win and contend.
With Buffalo surging right now, maybe this wasn’t the right time for this article. 😉
In theory, I don’t like the tear down model due to asking fans to pay top dollar to watch a garbage product. But the success of any organization depends on who’s running it, regardless of their approach.
A full teardown and rebuild absolutely works especially when it exploits a market inefficiency. The problem was that when half a dozen teams were doing it the same time, it’s not going to work for everyone. That’s true in other sports too. You need good GMs running the show for it work. If you have a bad GM, the problem is the GM, not the process.
Now that the Caps and Kings got a swift retools done, (NB: they haven’t won anything yet, so there is no success to point at) this is the new fashionable trend? Then 10 years from now, people will write articles saying that the soft rebuild doesn’t work, and point to another team who succeeded by doing the full teardown rebuild as evidence. Author mentions the Caps. The Caps philosophy was to keep most of their picks and build up farm depth, so I guess this article is promoting the Brian McClellan philosophy as the best way of running a team…. but it was built on a foundation built by the George McPhee philosophy of the full teardown that let him draft Ovechkin and Backstrom and build up the Caps as a desirable destination, as opposed to the desert that it used to be when owned by Abe Pollin.
Sports is cyclical. Teardown rebuilds are just the down part of the cycle.
Don’t let the folks in Anaheim read this, they still think sucking is fun.
According to whom? What a pile of garbage. Seems to be working perfectly fine for Anaheim, Chicago, Montreal, Ottawa, Philadelphia, San Jose, Utah… they’ve all got solid cores now and have shown considerable improvements in the last couple of years.
Yeah this article is basically a non starter as All the teams you mentioned have seemingly turned a corner. Will they keep getting better? That’s the real question isn’t it? I know if the Hawks had kept all their Cup team guys they would have been mediocre at best and wouldn’t have Bedard for sure. And he’s the key piece along with Knight and Arty. None of whom would be there now.
Just because some don’t work, doesn’t mean every single one doesn’t work. Not an accurate title.
With a healthy rising salary cap more teams can afford to resign key players. As long as that is happening a team will have to invest in some drafting & developing of players.
Excellent point. The Cap was a major factor in rebuilds being the popular way to approach team building. This guy doesn’t even mention it.
I disagree with this article, youre not guaranteed success Buffalo for example or trying to rush contention too early in the rebuild, Chicago and San Jose have too many good young assets which is a great example of full blown rebuild done right