Les Canadiennes de Montreal made headlines this week when they announced that they had acquired defender Erin Ambrose in a trade with the Toronto Furies.
Les Canadiennes have acquired defence Erin Ambrose in a trade with the Toronto Furies.
โก๏ธ DETAILS : https://t.co/xOJ9rS33Wv
๐ท Chris Tanouye, CWHL pic.twitter.com/zEiqpH5Nui
โ Les Canadiennes (@LesCanadiennes) December 13, 2017
Trades are already rare enough in womenโs hockey that any transaction is enough to get fans excited, and if youโre a Montreal fan, this is a trade that instantly improves an already talented team. Ambrose was recently cut from Hockey Canadaโs centralization roster but has been in their system for several years now. She was a staple on the Furies blue line and theyโve badly missed her while she was at centralization- and now theyโll have to play against her.
But Ambroseโs trade sheds light on another aspect of trades in womenโs hockey – the one-sidedness of it.
On the surface, the Ambrose trade looks like a win for both teams. The Furies picked up four draft picks in exchange for the defender – two first round picks and two third round picks over the span of three seasons (first and third in 2018, first in 2019, third in 2020).
And that looks fair for a defender of Ambroseโs caliber. But…itโs not that simple.
Players who register for the CWHL draft are required to pick locations that theyโre willing to be drafted by. If someone wants to join the draft but has a job in Boston, for example, theyโre not going to want to play for Calgary. Players must pick at least one location and can select a maximum of three.
Other locations that players can pick are: Boston, Calgary, Montreal, and the GTA (which includes both Toronto and Markham).
(Weโre going to ignore China for a second because their teams are mostly national team players and we donโt think theyโll be drafting many other imports in the future).
So thereโs actually three teams affected in this trade: Montreal, Toronto…and Markham.
Trading players for draft picks when only two teams are ACTUALLY effected by the draft… pic.twitter.com/ejFUIXzfmo
โ Liz Knox (@27Knoxy) December 13, 2017
Montreal hands-down won this deal. Yes, theyโre giving away draft picks, but the CWHL draft doesnโt have a set number of rounds – it goes on until all players who have registered for the draft have been selected. So while theyโll โloseโ a couple of picks, they wonโt ACTUALLY lose them. Theyโre likely relying on players they recruit to only select Montreal as their destination of choice, so it wonโt matter if they have those high-round picks.
Toronto wins this trade too, but itโs not because theyโll be able to steal Montrealโs draft picks; instead, they can snag players who might have otherwise gone to Markham.
Because player have to pick a โGTAโ location instead of Toronto or Markham, the only two teams going head-to-head for players in the draft are the Thunder and the Furies. Torontoโs extra picks give them a leg up over their rival, and (as Liz Knox so eloquently tweeted) basically screws Markham over.
Sorry, Markham – this trade isnโt great for you (actually, thatโs an understatement). Anyways, have fun playing against Ambrose this weekend.
