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Gustav

VHLM Commissioner
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  1. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Berocka in A Gustav 30 in 30, #14: Ello Gov'nor   
    I cherry-pick a BoG post to make myself look good.
     
     
    You may have heard of a little thing called the "Board of Gustav" in the past, and you also may have noticed that I wrote 13 whole articles about myself and the time I spent in the VHL before I ever got around to mentioning it. Have whatever opinions you'd like about how I/we sit there behind the scenes and work around the clock to create schemes to screw over your player specifically, but the fact is that I had to earn it.
     
    Anyway, I was brought into the BoG almost immediately after I became GM in Davos. At some point in January of 2020, Bek reached out to me to offer me a spot, and I accepted. I wish I had something more exciting to say about that, but I'd finally been picked for something without it being a big deal (VHLM expansion) or a controversy (my VHL hiring). Awesome.
     
    There were a few big topics at hand when I joined the BoG. This wasn't all that long after the SBA affiliation drama first went down in public, and there was a mostly-finished thread on the matter that still had updates from time to time. It was there that I was able to read some of the behind-the-scenes talk, which was interesting in a few ways that I don't think I'm at liberty to elaborate upon. But as a whole, I don't remember there being anything terribly exciting that was happening at that moment. Experience now tells me that BoG expansion typically happens when the current BoG stops doing things (at which point anyone no longer active is also usually removed), and this probably was no exception then.
     
    I remember hanging back a little bit at first, because I still had a bit of imposter syndrome over being included in the group that had been doing VHL administrative stuff for years on end. The first thread I put up was a little stupid (a minor suggestion to officially change graphics guidelines to explicitly allow multi-week claiming, rather than just quietly letting people do it in the first place. No one really cared and I got laughed at a bit for this). I like to think my next suggestion was a bit more helpful, though, and I did some work to solidify the affiliation that we had with the EFL. At the time, the EFL was going through lots of changes brought about through direct influence of SBA leadership, most of which had also made their way onto the BoD of the EFL. So, the EFL ended up with just about the same leadership as the league that didn't like us, and had even started adopting some of the same infrastructure (their portals had merged by this point). I think this was cool for the EFL, but I was also fairly concerned about what it meant for our league--one complaint the SBA had about our past affiliation was that it was fairly casual (so there was no reason to bring it back? I never fully understood that extension of it). If one affiliation was blocked from coming back, partly because it wasn't very strong, then what would happen to our other affiliation that also wasn't all that strong and was now a partnership with mostly the same people? Because of this, I found my first niche by advocating within the BoG for stronger EFL affiliation and reaching out to @Turner (then-head of the EFL) about related things. The first thing I ever made happen in the BoG was mutual acceptance of each other's theme weeks--there was a time where affiliate PT claims were eligible for the additional doubles week between the EFL and SBA, but not between the EFL and us. So it was small, but it was still a thing that I pulled off.
     
    The one thing I specifically made happen early on in BoG that I'm most proud of concerned the player store and some of the options contained therein. Would you believe that a PT doubles week used to be double the price it is now? What if I told you that you would have to spend $7.5 million on a full doubles week or $10 million on the biggest uncapped TPE package? What about $3 million on the point task upgrades, for nothing more than just capped TPE? Also, what if you were a first-gen player in the VHLM and couldn't make the two uncapped first-gen purchases with your first VHLM contract? One thread I opened addressed all of these issues, proposing drastic cuts to player store prices. Depreciation fighters were then (and are now) easily the best purchase for a high earner, but a mid-level earner could reasonably make other choices under an improved pricing system. Unfortunately, it took about 9 months of bureaucracy and inefficiency for this to finally be pushed through, but most of the numbers I initially suggested remain the prices for those items today. The next time you buy a doubles week for half of what it used to be, slip me a TPE or two.
     
    Aside from this, the issue of the day in the earlier S70s was huge amounts of league growth and the handling of multiple expansions in both the VHLM and the VHL. By the time I'd joined, some of this was already done, but I got to be part of the planning process for the addition of Miami to the M and the addition of four teams (Chicago, London, LA, and Warsaw) to the VHL. The way this happened in either case wasn't that we figured out ourselves that we needed to expand--rather, the commissioners told us--but it still felt cool that we had the chance to be part of it. Particularly, I remember the Warsaw team name and the London logo being sort of up in the air (we were warned by @Victor that the London logo looks really stupid to anyone living in the UK, but it was free and no one had an actual issue with it). Some of us also had some issues with the logo choices. It's absolutely fair to say that the league has trended more into the complex, modern e-sports sort of logo as time has passed. And whether that's something you like or not, some of us wanted sports logos that actually looked like sports logos--I was one of a few who wanted things like (for example) the Chicago logo to a.) not have as much stuff going on and just look like something I'd actually wear on a hat, and b.) not have a huge block of text over it that tells me what I'm looking at. The logo should be clean and recognizable on its own! But third-party artists are usually unwilling to negotiate. We had a bit more control over Miami as a whole, though, coming up with the name in BoG and evaluating the logos. The artist for the Marauders logo actually gave us a few rounds of stuff, and we ended up with something that was (in my own opinion) a little less stupid.
     
    I've been on the Board of Gustav for a long time, and I've been part of lots of different things that are their own different stories. But before some of the bigger changes the league has seen, back when we were still in what lots of us considered the good old days, there was time I spent getting used to things in the administrative world. This was my first real foray into being important, having a role where I was expected to contribute to league policy and define how stuff worked. And while the biggest development of the early S70s was finding ways to make the league's new teams look cool, it was still a big part of league history that I remember being part of. I think some of these early developments did a lot to teach me how to engage in making things happen, so that when even bigger things happened later, I'd be prepared to help out.
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
    #13: How I Messed Up Davos
  2. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Spartan in A Gustav 30 in 30, #14: Ello Gov'nor   
    I cherry-pick a BoG post to make myself look good.
     
     
    You may have heard of a little thing called the "Board of Gustav" in the past, and you also may have noticed that I wrote 13 whole articles about myself and the time I spent in the VHL before I ever got around to mentioning it. Have whatever opinions you'd like about how I/we sit there behind the scenes and work around the clock to create schemes to screw over your player specifically, but the fact is that I had to earn it.
     
    Anyway, I was brought into the BoG almost immediately after I became GM in Davos. At some point in January of 2020, Bek reached out to me to offer me a spot, and I accepted. I wish I had something more exciting to say about that, but I'd finally been picked for something without it being a big deal (VHLM expansion) or a controversy (my VHL hiring). Awesome.
     
    There were a few big topics at hand when I joined the BoG. This wasn't all that long after the SBA affiliation drama first went down in public, and there was a mostly-finished thread on the matter that still had updates from time to time. It was there that I was able to read some of the behind-the-scenes talk, which was interesting in a few ways that I don't think I'm at liberty to elaborate upon. But as a whole, I don't remember there being anything terribly exciting that was happening at that moment. Experience now tells me that BoG expansion typically happens when the current BoG stops doing things (at which point anyone no longer active is also usually removed), and this probably was no exception then.
     
    I remember hanging back a little bit at first, because I still had a bit of imposter syndrome over being included in the group that had been doing VHL administrative stuff for years on end. The first thread I put up was a little stupid (a minor suggestion to officially change graphics guidelines to explicitly allow multi-week claiming, rather than just quietly letting people do it in the first place. No one really cared and I got laughed at a bit for this). I like to think my next suggestion was a bit more helpful, though, and I did some work to solidify the affiliation that we had with the EFL. At the time, the EFL was going through lots of changes brought about through direct influence of SBA leadership, most of which had also made their way onto the BoD of the EFL. So, the EFL ended up with just about the same leadership as the league that didn't like us, and had even started adopting some of the same infrastructure (their portals had merged by this point). I think this was cool for the EFL, but I was also fairly concerned about what it meant for our league--one complaint the SBA had about our past affiliation was that it was fairly casual (so there was no reason to bring it back? I never fully understood that extension of it). If one affiliation was blocked from coming back, partly because it wasn't very strong, then what would happen to our other affiliation that also wasn't all that strong and was now a partnership with mostly the same people? Because of this, I found my first niche by advocating within the BoG for stronger EFL affiliation and reaching out to @Turner (then-head of the EFL) about related things. The first thing I ever made happen in the BoG was mutual acceptance of each other's theme weeks--there was a time where affiliate PT claims were eligible for the additional doubles week between the EFL and SBA, but not between the EFL and us. So it was small, but it was still a thing that I pulled off.
     
    The one thing I specifically made happen early on in BoG that I'm most proud of concerned the player store and some of the options contained therein. Would you believe that a PT doubles week used to be double the price it is now? What if I told you that you would have to spend $7.5 million on a full doubles week or $10 million on the biggest uncapped TPE package? What about $3 million on the point task upgrades, for nothing more than just capped TPE? Also, what if you were a first-gen player in the VHLM and couldn't make the two uncapped first-gen purchases with your first VHLM contract? One thread I opened addressed all of these issues, proposing drastic cuts to player store prices. Depreciation fighters were then (and are now) easily the best purchase for a high earner, but a mid-level earner could reasonably make other choices under an improved pricing system. Unfortunately, it took about 9 months of bureaucracy and inefficiency for this to finally be pushed through, but most of the numbers I initially suggested remain the prices for those items today. The next time you buy a doubles week for half of what it used to be, slip me a TPE or two.
     
    Aside from this, the issue of the day in the earlier S70s was huge amounts of league growth and the handling of multiple expansions in both the VHLM and the VHL. By the time I'd joined, some of this was already done, but I got to be part of the planning process for the addition of Miami to the M and the addition of four teams (Chicago, London, LA, and Warsaw) to the VHL. The way this happened in either case wasn't that we figured out ourselves that we needed to expand--rather, the commissioners told us--but it still felt cool that we had the chance to be part of it. Particularly, I remember the Warsaw team name and the London logo being sort of up in the air (we were warned by @Victor that the London logo looks really stupid to anyone living in the UK, but it was free and no one had an actual issue with it). Some of us also had some issues with the logo choices. It's absolutely fair to say that the league has trended more into the complex, modern e-sports sort of logo as time has passed. And whether that's something you like or not, some of us wanted sports logos that actually looked like sports logos--I was one of a few who wanted things like (for example) the Chicago logo to a.) not have as much stuff going on and just look like something I'd actually wear on a hat, and b.) not have a huge block of text over it that tells me what I'm looking at. The logo should be clean and recognizable on its own! But third-party artists are usually unwilling to negotiate. We had a bit more control over Miami as a whole, though, coming up with the name in BoG and evaluating the logos. The artist for the Marauders logo actually gave us a few rounds of stuff, and we ended up with something that was (in my own opinion) a little less stupid.
     
    I've been on the Board of Gustav for a long time, and I've been part of lots of different things that are their own different stories. But before some of the bigger changes the league has seen, back when we were still in what lots of us considered the good old days, there was time I spent getting used to things in the administrative world. This was my first real foray into being important, having a role where I was expected to contribute to league policy and define how stuff worked. And while the biggest development of the early S70s was finding ways to make the league's new teams look cool, it was still a big part of league history that I remember being part of. I think some of these early developments did a lot to teach me how to engage in making things happen, so that when even bigger things happened later, I'd be prepared to help out.
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
    #13: How I Messed Up Davos
  3. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from diamond_ace in My Post-Circus Monkey Thoughts on the Draft   
    I haven't forgotten about my 30 in 30 series, I promise--it's just 1 AM on Monday and I haven't written a media spot.
     
    Thankfully, this week gives me lots and lots of things to talk about. I wrote up what was meant to be a highly sarcastic joke thread in the thunderdome the other day, but judging by the fact that no one liked it or said anything in response, I think I may have gone a bit too sarcastic and just made everyone grimace. So, to clear the air a bit, here are my honest thoughts on my biggest VHL development of the week--Lazlo Holmes becoming the latest hot prospect in Prague.
     
    I don't actually feel seriously negatively about this, but I was mildly disappointed to see that I fell to 10th overall. It's the lowest I've ever been drafted into the VHL (even in S75 when I could still auto-pick my own player and tried my hardest to trade down as far as I possibly could). I know I was a good bit behind in TPE for reasons not entirely clear to me (leaving a couple career tasks undone so far and not donating accounts for some of the difference, but not all), but I was still a max earner and have been for over 5 years straight at this point. It makes me wonder what more I have to do to prove that I'm the right one for the job in lots and lots of places I could be right now had those teams had a bit more faith in Lazlo. That said, I've found Prague very chill so far. I've been in the server since @diamond_ace brought me in when the team was founded, and digging it out of my "everyone I'm not currently playing for" folder has felt nice. At one point, I was one of the more active members of the server despite not being on the team. Two things I love so far: Our activity has mostly been in the public channel, something I was always hugely in favor of as a GM. I will forever stand by my opinion that this is THE number one way to have an active locker room. I have always thought (and since confirmed) that @Tetricide is a very cool and very real person to talk to, and I'm excited to be part of his rebuild. An honorable locker room mention (and a very nice point in favor of what I just said about public channels) is @samx, who I've always gotten along well with and who I'm glad is still active in Prague.  I'm assuming that it's been assumed that I'm going to play in the E this season, and I've decided that I'm just going to suck it up and go along with it. I'm apparently not the monster earner that the top end of my draft class is, Prague isn't in a spot where I'd be contributing to their ability to compete at all, and I am actively hurting my player's future if I decide that maybe whatever marginally active teammates I end up with could benefit from playing alongside a recognizable name this season (the absolute horror!). I think I can still reasonably hold all my E-related opinions without it becoming hypocritical that I stayed down, though, because I did it despite not wanting to but because I don't really have a reasonable choice when you think about it. I'll stop there for now, but consider that the next time you bring up the "oh you can enjoy it either way" argument. Being part of a rebuild is going to be exciting, I think, because I'm one of the first pieces that the roster will be built around. As a player, I have the (underrated) ability to influence my teammates, and I like to think that the right sort of person might be able to be charmed into really loving it in Prague as well. In the past, I've faded out of activity in some of my team servers, but I see the chance to help reform Prague into a super active place to be and I'm excited that I get to be part of defining what that looks like. I hope it's a lot of fun for as long as I'm there.
  4. Very Nice
    Gustav got a reaction from Victor in S94 VHFL Group 14 - Complete   
    Already selected; Victor just abbreviated the initials earlier. 
     
    I actually didn’t know until then that it was supposed to spell CGY. But it’s all good; let me know when you change it. 
  5. Cheers
    Gustav got a reaction from Greg_Di in S94 VHFL Group 14 - Complete   
    Already selected; Victor just abbreviated the initials earlier. 
     
    I actually didn’t know until then that it was supposed to spell CGY. But it’s all good; let me know when you change it. 
  6. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Thunder in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  7. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Velevra in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  8. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from jacobcarson877 in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  9. Like
    Gustav reacted to Ahma in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    Can I claim an exception to this?
     
    DAVID!
     
    BGOM's still live on! @Alex has been keeping up with the tradition.
     
    You as a GM in Davos was such a fun time, just a shame we couldn't win
    and those S70's rosters with @Josh @McWolf @Rin @gorlab @Berocka and co. was a ton of fun!!
     
    Long Live The God in Purple! DAVID! Purple blood for the Purple God!
     

  10. Fire
    Gustav got a reaction from Ahma in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  11. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from xsjack in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  12. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Alex in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  13. Fire
    Gustav got a reaction from FrostBeard in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  14. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Berocka in A Gustav 30 in 30, #13: How I Messed Up Davos   
    If you don't recognize this image, you've missed out on quite a bit.
     
     
    It's been a long time since my last installment of this series. Part of that is that I got lazy, part of that is that I got busy, and another part of that is just that I know I'm going to have to jam-pack this article. I took a few of these off of talking about my time as a GM, but anyone who knows me also knows that being a GM meant more to me than that first offseason. I wasn't sure how to break up that information, though, so I hope it makes logical sense that this article deals with my first attempt to compete--a fairly short-lived one that I started building up in S71 and kept going through S74 or so when all the assets I'd stacked up decided to unstack. 
     
    I suppose the place to start is right where the last one left off. S70 largely consisted of me sitting, waiting, and losing. Which was fine for the most part; I'd gotten myself ready for that and was super excited for the future. If the VHL had a reputable Hockey News-type media outlet, we would have been featured on the cover of their "Introducing Your S75 Continental Cup Champions" issue, and for good reason. We had both the draft picks and the hype on our side, and I hoped I could live up to it.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S71:
    Preseason:
    Roque Davis drafted 2nd overall
    Joakim Bruden drafted 15th overall
    Mickey Dickson drafted 25th overall
    Big Chungus drafted 33rd overall
    S73 DAV 2nd traded to New York for Joel Ylonen and Walter Clements
    S71 VAN 2nd traded to DC for Derek Eriksson
    Joel Ylonen traded to Prague for S73 PRG 2nd
    Shawn Glade Jr traded to Seattle for S72 SEA 3rd + 4th
     
     
    Aside from @Ahma's Davos-faithful Fernando Jokinen, and @Brrbisbrr's Samuel Ross in net, there weren't many players left on the roster that even I recognized. Some of those whose names I knew were inactive by that point, and the mess that was Davos was up to me to figure out. There really wasn't anything wrong with our S71 draft class--just picking the best player I saw as available got us Davis, bringing @Josh back to the Dynamo (perhaps sooner than he might have hoped), as well as Bruden, a mid-level earner managed by @PadStack who probably projected as a solid backup for most teams. Other features of note in the draft included Dickson--who I'll talk about a bit later--and Chungus, who I almost never saw outside of the portal but who ended up getting a cup of coffee with the team eventually.
     
    The offseason was interesting because it was the first time I could make moves with a purpose. In a move that puzzles me to this day, I made a rental deal for the retiring Joel Ylonen (despite never thinking I would be in a spot to compete). But on the funnier end of that deal, I managed to DM every other team's ears off until I'd arranged to move him to Prague for almost exactly what I paid for him to begin with--making it the second time I had @Esso2264 on a roster of mine and he didn't make it to the start of the season. Two other trades went down--one where I gave DC a 2nd-round pick (which I could have used on the pretty-decent Xavier leFlamant) for Eriksson (who just about immediately went inactive) and another where I was contacted by Seattle about acquiring Shawn's player. I felt bad moving Shawn out of Davos (even with permission), but I also felt that there was still a bit of tension in the air between us at that point and hoped that cutting the tie temporarily would help both of us with a fresh start. 
     
    From that point, it was still sitting and waiting and losing, but at least some of the players I was managing were the result of my own choices. We hit last place in the league (again), but Davis won both the Stolzschweiger and the Valiq and I was looking forward to getting better.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S72:
    Preseason:
    SS Hornet drafted 1st overall
    Robin Winter drafted 2nd overall
    Chico Smeb, Andrej Petrovic, and S73 DAV 1st traded to Malmo for S73 RIG 2nd, S73 SEA 3rd, and Jerry Garcia
    Jack Feriancek and S72 DAV 2nd traded to Riga for rights to Acyd Burn
    S72 TOR 1st and S73 RIG 2nd traded to Vancouver for S72 RIG 1st and David OQuinn
    S73 PRG 2nd, S73 DAV 4th, and S74 DAV 4th traded to Vancouver for Jerry Wang
    Vin Calia, S72 RIG 1st, and S72 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S72 MOS 2nd, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 MOS 2nd
    ACL TEAR signs in free agency
     
    In-Season:
    Milos Slavik, Michael Hall, Derek Eriksson, S73 MOS 1st, and S74 DAV 3rd traded to Moscow for S74 MOS 3rd, Killy Foilen, and Jet Jaguar
    This insane 3-way deal that essentially involved Acyd Burn being traded for Hunter Hearst Helmsley
     
     
    Davos had just recorded a VHL-record third straight last-place finish, so pardon me for making that the reason why I decided to flip the team on its head. S72 was the first (and biggest) taste of what Ahma would come to call Big Gustav Offseason Moves (BGOMs), and while some had some disagreements as to their value, this was one of my most exciting seasons as GM.
     
    First of all, the draft was a personal dream of mine--I loved both @McWolf and @Rin, and seeing both of their players reach hot prospect status with me in position to get them got me very excited for the draft lottery. Guaranteeing that I'd have them around with a double lotto win meant quite a bit, and even though I completely whiffed on both of my second-round picks (both max earners until the second I picked them), I still considered the draft a success.
     
    The story of my management in S72, though, was buying, and I had all the resources in the world to make that happen. @FrostBeard had just been hired as GM in Malmo, chose to rebuild, and graciously offered me my own player at a fair price. I took that--and then overpaid a little bit for a rights deal on @Acydburn's first-gen player. Acyd would eventually cave in to the pressure and sign on with us, and he did lots to help poke my brain in that offseason as to where to take things next. With some reshuffling, we brought in David OQuinn to help out on defense (where he would stay for three seasons) and traded for second-line forward Jerry Wang (the only other VHL player ever to be named Jerry at the time, managed by very solid member @ColeMrtz). Add to this the fact that I'd just signed @Quik the commissioner? We were looking dangerous. The roster was reasonably well filled, and I hoped that we could take things to the next level. And I still had resources to spend.
     
    A little bit into the season, Moscow's rebuild caught my eye and I pulled the trigger on a deal for Hall-of-Famer Jet Jaguar. I'd just upgraded my roster in a big way--by moving three lower-level forwards out for a mid-level one and a high-level one, I'd not only improved the roster but cleared out one of my forwards, answering some questions some of my hot prospects had about ice time.
     
    The thing was--I now had two people, both who were good enough to be a team's first-line center, both of whom wanted to be mine. Both @gorlab and Acyd were upset that I was using their player in ways that didn't match their own goals as I experimented with lines, and eventually Acyd requested a trade. Fair enough.
     
    Fair enough that I cooked up a massive three-way deal with myself, New York, and Vancouver, where Acyd would get a new home and I'd keep a top-level forward. In just one season, Davos had gone from last place to swinging a deal for all-time great Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Here's the issue, though--HHH was also a legitimate 1C and this did nothing to help with gorlab's objections to Jaguar's status remaining a question. Arguably, I'd made the situation worse, as he and @Beaviss had feuded in the past. It was my first lesson learned in that every VHLer wants the best for their player, and that one's goals as a GM should take this into account. The following offseason would begin with a strongly-worded Jaguar trade request before we talked it out a bit.
     
    But anyway, this would be the last season for Samuel Ross in Davos. He wouldn't make it far in the playoffs, but we made it there for my first time ever as a VHL GM. I'd be nominated for the Knight after the season (and narrowly lose), and I felt good about my ability as a GM. As it turns out, I also felt pretty good about making huge deals.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S73:
    Preseason:
    Mickey Dickson traded to Malmo for S74 HSK 2nd and S75 MAL 4th
    Rights to ACL TEAR traded to Calgary for S74 CGY 4th and John Poremba
    Samuel Ross traded to Helsinki for S74 PRG 4th and Owen May
    Jerry Wang, S74 DAV 1st, and S74 MOS 3rd traded to New York for S74 NYA 4th and Soren Jensen
    S74 HSK 2nd and S74 NYA 4th traded to Calgary for Charlie Paddywagon
     
     
    The season started with a few small wins--I'll always bring up that I got rid of @samx right before she went inactive, and even though I was losing Quik to free agency, he'd at least communicated that to me. Davis was by now a solid offensive defenseman build, and I still had Jaguar and Garcia on the roster for a final season. It would be tough to deal with my S66 players retiring, but I would just figure that out later, wouldn't I?
     
    The first step I took in figuring that out later was by turning around and trading Wang just a season after I'd brought him in. This, along with yet another first-round draft pick burned, gave me Soren Jensen, @Velevra's player who I practically never heard from but who would give me a solid 900-some TPA on my top line for almost 4 whole seasons. The second step I took in figuring things out later was to...give me more things to figure out later by getting rid of even more S74 picks for a rental of @DMaximus ' retiring Charlie Paddywagon. And while it was sad, Bruden had finally earned well enough that he was our #1 goaltender, so I moved Ross out to a place where he could still start.
     
    As it turned out, Jensen and Paddywagon historically underperforming in STHS output wasn't something that would be magically fixed by their moving to Davos. Nor did essentially forfeiting my entire S74 draft class seem like a very good idea when we (yet again) got knocked out of the playoffs almost immediately. I headed into the offseason with three high-profile retirements on my hands and a lot of space to fill. Luckily, I had Hornet and Winter developing, but would that be enough? Between Paddywagon retiring and Josh letting me know that he wasn't convinced he wanted to re-sign, I had work to do for S74.
     
     
    NOTABLE TRANSACTIONS OF S74:
    Preseason:
    Rayz Funk signs in free agency
    Roque Davis re-signs for S74
    Shawty Nananana drafted 31st overall
    S74 VAN 3rd traded to Calgary for Joe Proto
    John Poremba traded to Prague for S75 PRG 4th
     
    In-Season:
    S75 DAV 2nd, Joe Proto, and Big Chungus traded to New York for Owen Nolan
     
     
    My primary goal in the offseason was to stop Davis from walking out the door, and it just so happened that the greatest playoff goaltender in VHL history was hitting free agency before his final season. Bruden's activity had hit marginal levels by this point, so even though I liked his agent, I committed to a completely free BGOM and pulled the trigger on signing Funk. Davos, for the first time in my GM tenure, had a legitimate #1 goaler by any team's standard, and this was enough to convince Davis to stick with us (albeit on a one-season contract). We also managed to grab @Grape in the draft despite getting rid of every other one of our picks, and though I didn't feel quite as confident about this roster as I had in previous seasons, we were still competitive on paper and were ready to let Hornet and Winter take over with Jensen as our top forwards.
     
    No one told me, though, that having an entire top line that Simon didn't like wasn't exactly a good thing. We had decent enough TPE levels to do well enough, but things just weren't clicking and Davos found themselves in a big hole halfway through the season thanks to an abysmal offense. Things were bad enough that @Rayzor_7 reached out to me to ask that I trade for more scoring power--and he was right. No one was selling for what I had, though, and I didn't have much of a choice but to continue my trend of buying aging (and in this case inactive, despite decent TPE) players. I grabbed New York's Owen Nolan and hoped that would work.
     
    The rest of S74 was an adventure. I spent some time watching us take a nosedive in the standings...and then I watched the greatest stretch of Davos hockey I've ever seen as a GM. I don't have the exact numbers, but with a small handful of games left in the season, we'd just gone something like 18-2-0 over our last 20 and were all tied up with a few other teams for the last playoff spot. Which mattered quite a bit, because we had the best playoff goaler, after all. 
     
    And then we choked away the very end of the season. Our win streak cut out just in time for us to drop a bunch of games right at the end, and we missed the last playoff spot by one point. Such is life.
     
    This would mark the beginning of the end for Davos. Funk retired, Josh told me he was gone for sure this time, and I watched Nolan depreciate while Jensen got a season older. In just three seasons, I'd opened and closed Davos' competitive window by turning draft capital into retirements, and I didn't look like the world's best GM--without checking, I believe Funk was the last free agent signing I ever got. But as much as I took Davos to Hell in a bucket, at least I enjoyed the ride, and I hope some others who played with me during this time did as well.
     
     
     
    As a side note, I find it worthwhile to mention that before S71 even happened, I found myself taking a shot at a super-active first-gen as my AGM. I took a huge liking to Proto right off the bat and one day shot him a message offering him the job. He was great for the locker room and max-earned the whole time he was in the VHL--but we also had a few disagreements. It was nothing that boiled over into anything bad between us, but it was a short window into what would soon follow when he super abruptly left the league (citing various differences with administration). His forum account seems to have been deleted, and he seems to have moved on from the VHL for good. But he was a big part of the early buildup of Davos and its culture during my time.
     
    Right after Proto left Davos (to get hired in the VHLM, thanks to the Gustav Effect), I ended up re-hiring @Berocka, my best friend in the VHL, as my AGM after he quit in Mississauga. This would be a partnership that lasted the entire rest of my tenure, and it's one I was always grateful to have.
     
    This was also when most of modern Davos culture--much of which still exists today!--defined itself. The use of "David" to refer to the team, and also as a sort of cheer; the use of McDonald's mascot Grimace as the team's; even the various Discord emotes I made that were just meme variations of my profile picture (and even ones that combined these things, like the picture at the top of this article); all of these things made Davos what it was and I love that somewhere in the world, someone is reading this who remembers these things and looks at them as fondly as I do. The first competitive run I gave Davos might have been a failure on the scoreboard and it might have cemented a negative reputation for myself as a GM, but I wouldn't have changed a thing about how it went off the ice and the memories I made with all the people I have mentioned in this article. So, in spirit of that:
     
    DAVID!
     
     

    Read my other articles for the full Gustav experience:
     
    #1: Lightning Glory Gonna Be My Name
    #2: Can't We All Just Get Along?
    #3: Who Needs Cybersecurity Anyway?
    #4: The House That I Built
    #5: Can We Fix It?
    #6: American Beauty
    #7: The Kids Are Alright
    #8: Dogs In A Pile
    #9: I Just Wanna Grill For God's Sake
    #10: This Old House
    #11: Go Directly to Jail
    #12: If You Can Dodge a Color, You Can Dodge a Ball
  15. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Triller in My First In About Two Years   
    Because I need a PT, don't want to write, and don't have a sig. It's not quite what I used to make but it's presentable.
  16. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Gaikoku-hito in My First In About Two Years   
    Because I need a PT, don't want to write, and don't have a sig. It's not quite what I used to make but it's presentable.
  17. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from xsjack in My First In About Two Years   
    Because I need a PT, don't want to write, and don't have a sig. It's not quite what I used to make but it's presentable.
  18. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Frank in My First In About Two Years   
    Because I need a PT, don't want to write, and don't have a sig. It's not quite what I used to make but it's presentable.
  19. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from hylands in My First In About Two Years   
    Because I need a PT, don't want to write, and don't have a sig. It's not quite what I used to make but it's presentable.
  20. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Berocka in My First In About Two Years   
    Because I need a PT, don't want to write, and don't have a sig. It's not quite what I used to make but it's presentable.
  21. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from dlamb in My First In About Two Years   
    Because I need a PT, don't want to write, and don't have a sig. It's not quite what I used to make but it's presentable.
  22. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from Spartan in Waiver System Discussion   
    I don't like the idea of giving teams the chance to pass at all under a priority system. Experience tells me that we'll see people declining players just because they don't feel like taking them or because they want recreates. 
     
    Some of the "what-if" scenarios I have in mind that would make me hesitant on a priority system are:
    A first-gen player with a personal connection to someone on/running a specific team Recreates in general who might want to have a say in where their player goes, for one reason or another Players already on rosters with low player counts who could benefit from more teammates but would have no choice but to wait until the waiver order cycles all the way through again GMs who already feel that the current system is lacking in that it's not "personal" enough and takes away too much control over success through skill at recruitment How would you address these points within a portal system to be fair to each of these? I think all of these cases describe people that can benefit from players maintaining a level of control over where they sign.
     
     
    Because it was asked for earlier, the initial discussion of the idea can be found here. It wasn't universally loved, and the main complaint was something similar to my last point above, that some GMs didn't like that it took away a level of control to begin with. Honestly, I'm a bit surprised that the proposal we have here would be moving way deeper in that direction.
     
    How do you feel about what's given to you currently? Do you think that with what you're able to customize, a new member would be able to get your point enough to make an informed decision on whether to join your team? Is there anything you wish you could do under the current system that isn't available?
  23. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from animal74 in S93 Hall of Fame Induction   
    LET'S GO
     
    I can die happy knowing that Hall of Not Bad has served its purpose. I was a bit annoyed that this didn't work out last season (after really no one cared to explain why he didn't deserve it), but I'm very relieved now (especially hearing how hard it's been to induct old players in the past). I don't know if I have as strong a case for the others (even the ones I think are deserving), so we'll see if this happens again. But even so, thanks to BoG for listening.
  24. Haha
    Gustav got a reaction from dstevensonjr in Minor VHLM Rule Changes   
    Aren’t all VHLM rule changes minor ones?
  25. Like
    Gustav got a reaction from OrbitingDeath in S93 Hall of Fame Induction   
    LET'S GO
     
    I can die happy knowing that Hall of Not Bad has served its purpose. I was a bit annoyed that this didn't work out last season (after really no one cared to explain why he didn't deserve it), but I'm very relieved now (especially hearing how hard it's been to induct old players in the past). I don't know if I have as strong a case for the others (even the ones I think are deserving), so we'll see if this happens again. But even so, thanks to BoG for listening.
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