The Telegram (St. John's)

ECHL more important in salary-cap world

- Brendan.mccarthy@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: @telybrenda­n

New Toronto assistant general manager Lawrence Gilman was on hand for the gathering — his responsibi­lities include overseeing the Maple Leafs’ involvemen­t with the Growlers — as the two teams made official what will a three-year deal, one that will see the Maple Leafs hire the coaching and training staffs and supply the Newfoundla­nd team with a good portion of its players.

Word is Toronto could be directly responsibl­e for half or even more of the Growlers roster, which would make 10 to 12 bodies. Gilman, just a couple of weeks into his new job, would not be specific about the number, but did agree it would be significan­t.

He also said the Leafs’ commitment to its new ECHL affiliate will go beyond the number of players and money spent on salaries, that the Growlers won’t just be a source of depth for the Marlies, Toronto’s AHL farm team.

“This is going to be an active and involved relationsh­ip,” said Gilman. “Our intent is for the team is to be competitiv­e from the outset and to put the resources behind it. We want to find players who will fit the culture of the organizati­on and might someday play in the NHL.”

Over 600 players have skated in both the ECHL and NHL. Gilman, who was assistant GM for the Vancouver Canucks from 2008 to 2015, cites the story of a former Canucks forward who has suited up for more than 900 NHL games.

“Alexandre Burrows was a very, very important player for us, but one who started his career in the ECHL,” said Gilman.

Burrows went undrafted out of the QMJHL and ended up playing 130 games in the ECHL, but eventually caught somebody’s eye, and was signed to an AHL deal by the Manitoba Moose, Vancouver’s AHL partner at the

time. Within a couple of years, he had earned an NHL contract with Vancouver.

Still, as with most cases of ECHLERS who have worked their way to the NHL, Burrows wasn’t the product of planned developmen­t, but rather the case of an overlooked player becoming a surprise prospect and rising to the top.

The Maple Leafs are taking different view of the ECHL, believing it can become more than a league to scout and that their ECHL affiliate can be something other than a place to store gapfillers for the Marlies.

Gilman says the Growlers will be part of a more structured developmen­tal arrangemen­t and act as a far-end entry point on a pipeline that spouts out in Toronto.

That doesn’t mean most of the organizati­on’s top drafted prospects are going to show up here. They’ll still go to the Marlies or

directly to the big club. However, Gilman says there will be players who haven’t been drafted or don’t have entry-level NHL contracts, but still are considered prospects by the Maple Leafs. They’ll be offered minor-league contracts that could have them beginning as pros in the ECHL. Take Marchment, for instance. The son of former NHL defenceman Bryan Marchment, the 23-year-old spent two seasons the Ontario Hockey League, but was undrafted after two seasons in the major junior ranks. But the Leafs saw something they liked, enough to offer the 6-4 forward a two-way minor-league contract and send him to the Orlando Solar Bears, which had been Toronto’s ECHL partner before Thursday.

After a solid first pro season in Orlando, Marchment moved up to the Marlies and was in their lineup in Game 7 of the Calder Cup final Thursday night in Toronto.

Three months ago, he was rewarded a two-year NHL entrylevel deal that kicks in next season.

“Here’s a player this organizati­on signed to an ECHL deal, went to Orlando, held up his part of the bargain, earned his call-up to the American Hockey League and made the jump,” said Gilman.

As is much about pro hockey the days, the NHL’S salary cap is at play here. As teams pay out big money to bring in or keep star players, they’ll looking for cheaper options, or as Gilman puts it, “more cost-efficient” talent.

He believes at least some of these will be found in prospects starting out in the ECHL.

“There isn’t a cap on what we spend on our developmen­t program. While the vast majority players come from the AHL to the AHL, there is a pipeline/supply chain issue. The more players you develop at the ECHL level, you are hopefully creating more players for the AHL level and that creates a natural push of guys at the NHL level,”’ he said, “and there should be some who come all the way through the system.

“That’s why we’re making this investment, and it’s not just in players. We’re talking about developing coaches, trainers and management people, too.”

The Growlers’ head coach is expected to be named as soon as next week and the team can begin signing players around the same time. Toronto’s roster contributi­ons won’t really be known until the end of the organizati­on’s NHL and AHL training camp, but Gilman said the Maple Leafs will “absolutely” be assisting the Growlers through the off-season in identifyin­g players who won’t be under contract to Toronto, but will have direct ECHL deals with the Newfoundla­nd team.

Gilman said it will be part of what he expects what will be a successful collaborat­ion with the Growlers and owners Dean Macdonald and Glen Stanford, who once ran the local operations of St. John’s Maple Leafs, Toronto’s AHL farm team for 14 years.

“Hockey is a business of relationsh­ips,” he said. “Glen has built a reputation as a first-rate operator of profession­al hockey teams and Dean Macdonald’s reputation speaks for itself. The fact these guys are behind the franchise was a major contributi­ng factor to us coming here.

“And we have a familiarit­y with the market. The fans are fervent, passionate. It’s a great place to put players, in part because there is a high degree of accountabi­lity.

“You want them somewhere where hockey matters. We’ll want players who can move up and move on, but we’re happy they’ll be starting here.”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO/DARRYL DYCK ?? Alexandre Burrows, who has appeared in over 900 NHL games with Vancouver Canucks and Ottawa Senators, began his pro career in the ECHL, playing with three different teams over three seasons.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO/DARRYL DYCK Alexandre Burrows, who has appeared in over 900 NHL games with Vancouver Canucks and Ottawa Senators, began his pro career in the ECHL, playing with three different teams over three seasons.

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