Senators News: June 13th

-The Los Angeles Kings put NHL fans out of their misery by winning the Stanley Cup.  The Kings hammered home the point that the regular season means nothing with the victory.  The unwatchable final produced the third lowest ratings since 1995 (dropping 29% from last year) and NHL purists can pat themselves on the back for sucking excitement from the game.  I’m not sure a team has ever won the Cup with less adversity paired with a complete lack of excitement.  Even the 1995 New Jersey Devils, the poster childs for tedium, struggled to win the Cup.  Call me a pessimist, I predict the NHL will make no meaningful changes for fear of “hurting the game” or some similar nonsense.

Nichols reports that Shane Prince has been signed, although official word has yet to confirm it.

Scott reminds us that Filip Kuba could be retained, although he points to Corsi numbers to show that Erik Karlsson was more important for Kuba‘s performance than the other way around.

Bruce Garrioch speculates that the Sens are interested in retaining Matt Carkner and Jesse Winchester.  I can imagine how difficult it would be to find replacements for a fourth-line center with concussion problems who can’t score and a seventh defenseman with two bad knees who couldn’t keep up with the pace before his injury problems.  Garrioch can’t offer the same assurance for Zenon Konopka, which is about as clear a sign as you could ask for that he won’t be retained.

Wayne Scanlan wonders how close the Sens are to the Kings (assuming that’s the pattern to follow), but doesn’t really spend much time breaking down the comparison other than to say the Sens need internal growth to match them.

Rob Brodie runs down Ottawa’s first round picks throughout the organisations history (including Kyle Turris for no particular reason), which is fun only in that you can remember that Pierre Gauthier and Marshall Johnston thought Mathieu Chouinard was worth selecting twice.

Bob McKenzie confirms that Chris Kelly has re-signed with Boston which mercifully ends the pointless speculation about a return to Ottawa.

Senators News: June 11th

-Things are very quiet on the Sens front.  I expect the signing of Shane Prince this week or next, but otherwise things will likely remain quiet until the draft.

-Not surprisingly, Don Brennan wants Zenon Konopka and Matt Carkner resigned.  Scott has fun deconstructing Brennan’s argument for bringing them back and the smart money won’t see either retained.

-As a sign of how slow things are right now, Jared Crozier jumps into Chris Kelly rumour mode just as Bob McKenzie is closing that door with word he’s about to be re-signed by the Bruins.

John Henkelman looks at the playoff performances by Senator prospects and recent graduates, largely regurgitating stats and inexplicably calling Darren Kramer a defensive prospect.

-Capgeek has their provisional salary up for Jean-Gabriel Pageau (613k).

-Here’s my look at Red Line Report’s 2012 NHL Draft Guide.

Senators News: June 7th

-The Sens signed Jean-Gabriel Pageau to his ELC yesterday.  Tim Murray said “If he has a big summer this summer and comes to training camp in good shape and looks like he can play in the American league, we’ll give him every opportunity to do that. If it doesn’t look like he’s ready for that level yet, we’ll have to talk to him and go through our options. He’d be a star in (the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League), in my opinion, as an overager (next year). But hopefully, he’s strong enough and good enough to play in the American league for us next year.”  Pageau himself talked about his opportunity, “That’s a great offer they gave me and I very much appreciate it. I think that’s a good motivation for the future and for my summer. I think I have a big training season (ahead) and I’m ready to make the sacrifice to be in the organization earlier.”

-Bryan Murray (in the above link) indicated that Shane Prince would be the last prospect signed.

Tim Murray was on The Team 1200 yesterday and commented on free agency and Ottawa’s RFA’s.  In respect to the latter he said, “The RFA guys will be after July 1st but certainly we’ve got a strategy with all of them and we’ve got our comparables, as do the agents have their comparables. So they’ll all get done in due course but there’s no cut-off date and they’ll all get done after July 1st.”  Murray talked about their process with UFA’s where they use a 7-point system to assess players.  More interesting to me was his comment about the glut of forwards in the organisation, “it certainly puts us in a great position to trade quantity for quality and you’re not often in that position but as you said, the drafting has gone very well over the past few years. So we’ve had a lot of signings in the last two years that gets a little worrisome with the 50-man roster, reserve list and all that but we’re in a position where if we can plug a hole or trade quantity for quality, we’re quite willing to do it but again, we need a dance partner.”  To me quantity over quality screams Bobby Butler and more for a defenseman.

Don Brennan keeps his streak of dumb ideas alive with “Chris Phillips could replace Kuba on the number one pairing, alongside Karlsson, and the Senators wouldn’t miss a beat.”  That makes no sense on any level, as Kuba is a better player than Phillips (for the simplest of statistical comparisons, Kuba‘s 32 points this year is 6 more than Phillips‘ career-best in 06-07, while Kuba‘s -1 rating in four years with the Senators is much better than Phillips‘ -29 rating over the same period).

Senators News: June 5th

Bryan Murray implied that Filip Kuba won’t be back with the Senators, “I think we’re moving on. I haven’t heard from him. I talked to his agent before the year ended and told him sort of the thoughts I had, about what we might consider and I haven’t heard back. He’s going to get his money. I think he’s going to get similar money to what he was earning with us. And I’m not going to go there I don’t think.”  This could just be posturing on his part, but I can imagine Kuba wanting to move on.  Murray suggests that one of Mark Borowiecki or Patrick Wiercioch could step in to help replace the departing veteran, but I agree with Nichols that the latter case is largely wishful thinking.

Ken Warren echoes Sun reporters in suggesting Sergei Gonchar is being shopped, which seems pretty pointless given that he has a full no-movement clause until January 1st, 2013.  Until then, moving is Gonchar‘s decision.

-Everyone is wondering why TV ratings are so poor for the Cup final.  Grey Wyshynski thinks it’s a lack of a compelling narrative, while Steve Lepore thinks it’s a lack of star power to create that narrative.  Lyle Richardson makes the more obvious point that it’s due to the style of play, which is the one thing the NHL is unlikely to do anything about.

-Here’s my look at McKeen’s 2012 NHL Draft Guide.  Only one guide remains (Red Line Report) to be reviewed, but it has not yet been released.

McKeen’s 2012 NHL Draft Guide

McKeen’s 2012 NHL draft guide is out and here’s a look at their top-30 rankings along with my thoughts about the publication:

1 Nail Yakupov RW 5-10/190 Sarnia (OHL)
2 Alex Galchenyuk C 6-0/200 Sarnia (OHL)
3 Filip Forsberg C 6-2/180 Leksands (Swe)
4 Ryan Murray D 6-0/195 Everett (WHL)
5 Teuvo Teravainen LW 5-11/165 Jokerit (Fin)
6 Mathew Dumba D 6-0/180 Red Deer (WHL)
7 Griffin Reinhart D 6-4/200 Edmonton (WHL)
8 Morgan Rielly D 5-11/190 Moose Jaw (WHL)
9 Mikhail Grigorenko C 6-3/200 Quebec (QMJHL)
10 Jacob Trouba D 6-2/195 NTDP (USA)
11 Hampus Lindholm D 6-2/195 Rogle (Swe)
12 Cody Ceci D 6-2/205 Ottawa (OHL)
13 Olli Maatta D 6-1/200 London (OHL)
14 Sebastian Collberg RW 5-11/175 Frolunda (Swe)
15 Zemgus Girgensons C 6-1/200 Dubuque (USHL)
16 Radek Faksa C 6-2/200 Kitchener (OHL)
17 Derrick Pouliot D 5-11/190 Portland (WHL)
18 Brendan Gaunce C 6-2/215 Belleville (OHL)
19 Tom Wilson RW 6-3/205 Plymouth (OHL)
20 Matt Finn D 6-0/195 Guelph (OHL)
21 Brady Skjei D 6-3/200 NTDP (USA)
22 Slater Koekkoek D 6-2/185 Peterborough (OHL)
23 Andrei Vasilevski G 6-3/205 Salavat Ufa (Rus)
24 Malcolm Subban G 6-1/190 Belleville (OHL)
25 Scott Laughton C 6-0/180 Oshawa (OHL)
26 Stefan Matteau C 6-1/210 NTDP (USA)
27 Tomas Hertl C 6-2/195 Slavia Praha (Cze)
28 Pontus Aberg LW 5-11/195 Djurgardens (Swe)
29 Colton Sissons C 6-0/190 Kelowna (WHL)
30 Michael Matheson D 6-1/180 Dubuque (USHL)

McKeen’s is less comprehensive than most guides, listing only the top 120-players (ala The Hockey News‘ top-100) with a group of players who get “honourable mentions” (20) and “sleepers” (16), although these are not included in a convenient chart or list.  There’s no discussion of specific NHL teams nor a mock draft.  In terms of their prognostication, I didn’t use McKeen’s in my draft assessments last year so I can’t comment.

There’s no reason to buy the digital copy of this issue, as you are forced to accept redundant material from two newsletters (one from January and the other from March), which inflates the price.  McKeen’s offers less material than all the other guides save THN, but is more expensive than Future Considerations and Hockey Prospect‘s regular draft issue, so it’s not something a draft junkie needs to get hold of.

Senators News: June 2nd

Pierre Dorion talked about the draft, “Our mindset is totally different. With the way the 2010-11 season ended, with us trading away a lot of assets, we approached last year as a very big draft. The biggest thing is last year we were picking sixth and this year we’re picking 15th. So you understand the quality of the prospect will not be of the same value. We drafted a lot of skill last year. What we’ve done in last year’s draft and the three previous drafts is we really improved the depth of our prospects. When Bryan and Tim (Murray, assistant GM) took over, we had three players returning in Binghamton (AHL) and a few players in junior we were going to sign, so the cupboard was really bare. We’re dealing from a position of power now when it comes to the quality prospects we have. A number of these players won the Calder Cup last year (in the AHL), a number of them played and contributed on our team this year. For instance, you look at Jared Cowen coming in from Spokane, and we don’t win the Calder Cup without him. So that experience of winning the Calder Cup was a huge factor in him being able to step into the league this year. I think at every position we have what I would call blue-chip prospects. Some are playing right now, some will be playing down the road.”  He added a thought about the NHL combine, “As far as making a big change, no team that I’ve ever worked with has ever done that based on the combine.”

Ian Altenbaugh ranks Ottawa’s prospects as third best in the NHL.  “Strengths: The Senators have top-end skill at all forward positions led by Mika Zibanejad, Jakob Silfverberg, Stefan Noesen, and Shane Prince. Despite graduating five prospects and trading another key one this season, the team still has a group of players who can provide depth at the NHL level including Stephane Da Costa, Jim O’Brien, Andre Petersson, and Robin Lehner. Ottawa has a very young NHL team so the organization has the luxury of giving their future prospects more time to fully develop properly for the NHL.  Weaknesses: The organization has no goaltending prospects behind Robin Lehner at any level of hockey and needs to address this hole. The Senators have a lack of high-end talent on defense with the graduation of Jared Cowen and the trade of David Rundblad, but do have a good quantity with lower potential.  Top 5 Prospects: 1. Mika Zibanejad, C, 2. Robin Lehner, G, 3. Jakob Silfverberg, LW/RW, 4. Stefan Noesen, RW, 5. Mark Stone, RW. Lost to Graduation: Bobby Butler, Erik Condra, Jared Cowen, Kasper Daugavins, Colin Greening. Lost to Trade: David Rundblad. Added: Cole Schneider.

Wayne Scanlan writes about the style of hockey which has dominated the playoffs, “clogged shooting lanes, skaters restricted from skating freely, with or without the puck, defencemen latching onto forecheckers like airport security personnel doing a full body search.”  Scanlan hopes that the NHL’s “posse of general managers, coaches, players and officials to discuss the state of the game and how rules are enforced,” which will help change the game.  I have my doubts.  Players are conservative, GM’s are conservative, and coaches are incredibly conservative when it comes to change.  What’s more likely to happen is that the defensive trend will continue for another season or two until ratings and attendance begins to tank, then action will be taken.

-Speaking of bad ratings, the Cup final has dropped 25% from last year and I expect that decline to continue.

-Here’s my look at The Hockey News and Hockey Prospect‘s 2012 NHL Draft Guide.

Hockey Prospect’s 2012 NHL Draft Guide

The Hockey Prospect’s 2012 NHL draft guide is out and here’s a look at their top-30 rankings along with my thoughts about the publication:

1. Alex Galchenyuk
2. Nail Yakubov
3. Ryan Murray
4. Griffin Reinhart
5. Zemgus Girgensons
6. Filip Forsberg
7. Jacob Trouba
8. Teuvo Teravainen
9. Morgan Rielly
10. Derrick Pouliot
11. Slater Koekkoek
12. Mikhail Grigorenko
13. Cody Ceci
14. Matt Dumba
15. Radek Faksa
16. Brandan Gaunce
17. Phillip Di Giuseppe
18. Pontus Aberg
19. Thomas Wilson
20. Tomas Hertl
21. Tim Bozon
22. Brady Skjei
23. Dalton Thrower
24. Patrick Sieloff
25. Matthew Finn
26. Olli Maata
27. Andrei Vasilevski
28. Malcolm Subban
29. Colton Sissons
30. Jake Dotchin

This is the so-called “Black Book” edition from Hockey Prospect‘s and despite its girth (over 300 pages) it does not include any specific organisational material nor a mock draft.  HP’s rankings differ radically from the other major publications, with a devaluation of European talent to the benefit of North Americans (particularly US players).  In terms of their prognostication, last year they were the second most accurate among total players drafted (47%), but dead last among player X selected in round X.

There’s no good reason for draft fans to buy this pricey product.  The less expensive version is sold out, but might have been worth it just for HP’s perspective.  The Black Book includes very detailed profiles, but these are no different than those found elsewhere.  The one element that makes the book unique are their game-by-game scouting reports, but it’s hard to imagine many readers need this kind of detail.