Senators News: September 30th

Sean Leahy provides an overview of the Sens last season and projects for this one:

There’s enough promise up and down the Ottawa lineup to believe they can make a return trip to the postseason. If the offensive leaders in Alfredsson, Michalek and Spezza don’t take big steps back and the defense improves slightly, the Senators will find their way into the Eastern Conference’s top-8 again. Anderson will once again need to play at a consistent level, with Bishop (or Lehner) providing reliable spot duty. If the youngsters like Zibanejad, Silfverberg and/or Stone are able to help make an impact offensively, there won’t be any questions about whether or not this team will be playoff-bound.

It’s hard to disagree with any of this given how vague it is, but I think Leahy misses what I see as the key issue for Ottawa which will be the offensive transition from defense to offence–will having only Karlsson and Gonchar as puck-movers be enough?

Mika Zibanejad talked about playing the wing in Binghamton:

I’ve played pretty much every position: Right wing and centre as well. I’m comfortable (with the change). I played left, right and centre at the world juniors. I played half-and-half back at home as well. I don’t mind the switching around. It’s good to be able to play different positions as well. If it’s going to give me a bigger chance to make the team, it’s good. For me, it doesn’t matter. I just want to go out there and play.

The organisation wants Zibanejad to play in the top-six and believe the wing is the only way for him to do so (which makes sense given the contracts of Spezza and Turris).

-In the same article Garrioch reports that Hugh Jessiman suffered a shoulder injury in the team’s scrimmage (Stephane Da Costa and Shane Prince [strained knee] also had issues); presumably one of these injuries was enough for Dustin Gazley to be called up from Elmira.

-Speaking of Jessiman, he talked about the opportunity with Ottawa:

They said we need size. We don’t have a lot of it. We think you can be a Dwight King kind of guy for us and if willing to take that chance, we’ll sign you. I’m not a heavyweight fighter, but I’m not afraid to stick up for my teammates and drop the gloves. Both here and (in Ottawa), I can do that. It might be a touch different role here than (in Ottawa). [When I turned pro] I was forced to not only use by body, but back when I came in here, five, six, maybe seven, years ago, there was a lot more fighting, it was a lot grittier. It was a different game. Hartford and New York wanted me to be a gritty, two-way power forward, but to do that, you have to be able to stick up for yourself and your teammates. So I had to learn how to fight. You learn the hard way. A lot of these young guys will go through this in the next year or two or three…or four, if it takes them as long as it did for me. It takes awhile for guys to bring the same game every night. It’s really hard to do. Not everybody can do it.

-The ECHL has announced training camp rosters and Elmira’s includes (players from college, junior, or pro leagues below the ECHL are highlighted in green):
Goaltenders
Bryan Kalczynski (NCAA III 2.54)
Nicholas Lareau (has not played since the BCHL in 06-07)
Nick Niedert (ECHL 2.07)
Joe Spagnoli (FHL 4.44)
Defense
Benjamin Dieude-Fauvel (ECHL 62-3-11-14)
Lucas Frey (FHL 38-7-16-23)
Artyom Gumenyuk (NCAA III 26-4-2-6)
Ivan Lyaskevich (GMHL 31-6-17-23)
Jeremy Norducci (NCAA III 23-1-10-11)
Andrew Rowe (AHL 34-8-3-11)
Jarrett Rush (ECHL 57-0-13-13)
Jordon Southorn (ECHL 50-8-13-21)
Forwards
Corey Bellamy (FHL 32-6-8-14)
Yegor Bezugly (ACHA II 6-3-6-9)
Brandon Blandina (NCAA 39-4-5-9)
Jean Bourbeau (ECHL 49-10-16-26)
Artem Demkov (ECHL 67-20-37-57)
Dustin Gazley (ECHL 72-25-60-85) – called up to join Binghamton’s camp
Matthew Harrington (FHL 43-11-30-41)
Kevin Harvey (ECHL 34-3-8-11)
Chaz Johnson (ECHL 64-20-15-35)
Alec Kirschner (ECHL 30-0-2-2)
Kevin McCarey (NCAA 37-4-8-12)
Tim D’Orazio (NCAA III 21-8-6-14)
Jordan Pietrus (ECHL 65-13-27-40)
Charles Vaillancourt (NCAA III 10-0-0-0)
Jon Vaillancourt (NCAA III 22-1-2-3)
Kyle Watson (SPHL 53-6-16-22)

Some of the league acronyms may not be familiar, so: SPHL = Southern Professional Hockey League (a feeder for the ECHL), FHL = Federal Hockey League (feeder league for the ECHL), ACHA II = college three-tiers below the NCAA, GMHL = Greater Metro Hockey League (independent junior league).

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 29th

-With Binghamton’s training camp in progress we are finally getting the normal flood of hockey news

Sylvain St-Laurent provides Binghamton’s lines and pairings: Zibanejad-Da Costa-Petersson, Hoffman-Grant-Silfverberg, Cowick-Cannone-Jessiman, Dziurzynski-Hamilton-Stone, Kramer-Pageau-Culek, Schneider-Caporusso-Prince (Peltz and Downing as extra forwards); Wiercioch-Benoit, Cowen-Eckford, Blood-Borowiecki, Claesson-Gryba, New-Martin, Campanale-Wideman.

-Sens prospect Mikael Vikstrand has been named to the Allsvenskan’s Team of the Week.

-Binghamton coach Luke Richardson reminds the prospects that:

Someone’s always watching. Every work stoppage, some players might not come back. Some of the older players might not be ready to go. Somebody might go and get injured in Europe or training too much. There might be more opportunity. You can never write off the season and be disappointed.

Robin Lehner talked about the upcoming season:

Bishop is the guy I’ve got to beat, anyways, if I want to play up there. He’s a little older than me (Bishopis 25), but I’ve had success down here with a Calder Cup and I’ve had my other good stretches here and I’ve had success in Ottawa, too. I want to get a complete season. I grew up a little bit [last season], I think. I was a certain weight when we won (the Calder Cup in 2011) and during the summer I didn’t change that much. I came in a little heavy (last) year, but I didn’t know any better. It wasn’t celebrating success, it was more not knowing. Me, as a young guy, with a young head. I went into the summer not doing anything about it and I came into camp like that and it’s not acceptable. And I know that now. I’m not going to blame [last season’s struggles] on weight. Last year was a tough year for me, but it was tough for everybody. When it’s a tough season, goalies usually suffer a lot. I’m not happy with last year, I know I’ve got to be better. It’s a learning curve.

One of the great things about Lehner is how open he is. Sens goaltending coach Rick Wamsley added:

It’s fair to say that Robin’s career has been like this. So, with fitness, it should even out. We would still love to get the highs, but also limit the lows. We want him playing, if it’s earned. We want him playing a lot. We’re selling the ‘earned’ part and judging by the condition he has come in at, he looks like he’s buying into it. At some point, if you’re going to play in the National Hockey League, the other goalie is going to be a good goalie, so at some point, you’re going to have to deal with that. Last year, Robin’s best nine games were the nine games after we acquired Ben Bishop. Competition is healthy.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 28th

Binghamton has released its training camp schedule which begins today and will wrap up October 12th.  The players have been divided up into two groups:
Team One
Matt Campanale (ECHL contract)
Pat Cannone
Louie Caporusso
Fredrik Claesson
Jared Cowen
Corey Cowick
Tyler Eckford
Derek Grant
Scott Greenham
(tryout)
Eric Gryba
Mike Hoffman
Hugh Jessiman
Robin Lehner
Brad Peltz
(tryout)
Shane Prince (CHL eligible)
Cole Schneider
Jakob Silfverberg
Chris Wideman

Team Two
Andre Benoit
Ben Blood
Mark Borowiecki
Marc Cheverie (AHL contract)
Jakub Culek
Stephane Da Costa
Jack Downing (tryout)
David Dziurzynski
Wacey Hamilton
Darren Kramer
Nathan Lawson
Jimmy Martin (ECHL contract)
Daniel (Danny) New (tryout)
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (CHL eligible)
Andre Petersson
Mark Stone
Patrick Wiercioch
Mika Zibanejad

-Blogger Nicole Sorce is following Binghamton on Twitter, so check her out for updates.

Bryan Murray talked to the media today (follow the link for a full transcription) and the most interesting tidbit was that the team was interested in sending Ben Bishop to the AHL, but will wait a little before signing him to an AHL deal in case something happens in the CBA negotiations.

The Hockey News, who predicted a last place finish for Ottawa this past season, see’s them as the 8th place team this time around who will live and die by their youth.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 27th

-Bob Howard is providing coverage of the Binghamton Senators post-Joy Lindsay.  He has a piece about the team where he wonders how motivated Robin Lehner will be this season (I have to wonder how insulted he felt to win a Calder Cup and then be ignored for the backup role in Ottawa in favour of the hapless Alex Auld).  Howard has a positive view of the lockout version of the Binghamton blueline.  A second article looks at the forwards.  He assumes (dubiously in my opinion) that Corey Cowick and Wacey Hamilton are automatically in the mix for Binghamton.  He doesn’t believe the team will be high scoring, but thinks contributions from Andre Petersson and Stephane Da Costa will be vital:

Both are skilled shooters, speedy and smart players but last season both players were inconsistent at best which limited their point totals and made people question their drive to play at this level.

Other than Da Costa‘s conditioning issues I haven’t heard anything internally from the organisation that reflects these sentiments, but as always time will tell.  Binghamton will definitely need younger forwards to step up and produce offensively for the team to have success.

Justin Goldman writes about Binghamton’s third goalie Marc Cheverie and he had a lot to say:

You can’t be delusional, and you need to know where you are on the depth chart. But you also have to realize there’s always an opportunity to move up or even move down, so you always have to perform. Anything can happen and I’ve seen it; the depth chart changes every day, so you have to perform every day. Even if you’re signed or under contract by an NHL club, if you’re not performing, they’ll get someone else. There are so many veteran guys without contracts right now that would love to step into an American league deal a week or two into training camp, so you’re always in a battle. This year is going to be even tougher for goalies than any other just because there are so many guys without contracts that are just waiting for an injury, or for a team to be struggling.

I mean there’s always been times in my career where it has been more frustrating than others. Sometimes you’re not getting the opportunity you wish you were getting. Last year was really tough when I moved up to Portland and then got sent down when they signed Peter [Mannino] there. So that was a really tough situation because I felt that I was playing well, but it was one of those things where they wanted experienced guys, and that’s the way I’ve sort of dealt with it when it comes to playing in the American league. For me it’s kind of hard to get that [AHL] experience because unless you get a chance to play there, it’s tough to be an experienced [AHL] guy. So that was one of the toughest pills to swallow; going up after Christmas and staying there, and then all of a sudden, on the last day you can possibly go down, you get sent down. But it was probably better for me in the long run because I got the opportunity to play in the ECHL playoffs for the first time, and going down and playing well turned out for the best.

You can’t force things and there’s so many things going on that you just have to take what’s given to you and do the best you can with it. Goaltending is such a different position in the way you manage things that you almost have to let things come to you. You never know when your number is going to be called, and that adversity definitely makes things a little bit easier to deal with, but obviously you hope that with each time it happens less and less, because you’ve already learned what can happen and how well you have to perform day in and day out to get that opportunity, so you don’t want it to slip through your fingers. Things change so much every day that you just never know what is going to happen.

I know that the Senators have seen me play, and some of their staff saw me play in college because I played with Patrick Wiercioch, who is currently in the system there. My agent informed me that they came to me for the deal, they did their research, and I was their guy. It’s always nice to be a known entity when you’re going in, and knowing what the expectations are. But you want to exceed them and hope to continue the relationship with the organization. Besides Robin Lehner and Nathan Lawson, they don’t have anyone else in the pro system right now, so it’s a really good situation to go into, and I’m really looking forward to making the most of it.

There’s one thing I worked on this summer, and it was my eyes. I was in Vail and I had the chance to work with Steve Valiquette for a few days. He talked about something called The Quiet Eye, which is something that helps you be more relaxed and be able to read shooters, and it includes little techniques about tracking the puck better. It’s kind of hard to explain without writing an essay about it, but those things I felt helped me make huge leaps and bounds with my game. I was better able to track the puck, which helped me all of a sudden be more relaxed in the net. I was making better decisions and things were coming more naturally, and it was just one of those things that snowballed for me all summer. That was the biggest thing for me, the puck-tracking aspect.

-Yesterday I examined McKeen’s 2012-13 projections.

Robert Vollman looks at the worst free agent signings of the year via the collective opinion of 24 hockey stats experts (no idea how they were selected).  No Sens made the list, although Matt Carkner received the honorable sixth worst signing.  Previously Vollman went through the same exercise for the best signings, but again no Sens made the list (amusingly, “pancake” Dustin Penner was considered the best–both the experts and Penner will eat those words at the end of the season).

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 26th

Bob McKenzie Tweets that the Sens put Cody Ceci and Stefan Noesen on their CHL reserve list allowing them to be recalled whenever the season begins.

Bobby Kelly writes his preview of the Binghamton Senators’ season, but it’s not a breakdown of the team and expectations, rather it is a review of the last two seasons and a reminder that Luke Richardson wants to be a player’s coach and that Kelly thinks Shane Prince will be a key part of the team.

-I confess to being puzzled by the various petitions being sent to the NHL pleading for an end to the lockout.  Other than making those involved feel good about their efforts, the petitions have no effect on the CBA negotiations–the NHL and the NHLPA have no interest in fan opinions, just their money when the lockout is over.

Joseph Phung reviews EA Sports NHL 2013, giving it a 9.5 out of 10.  His primary complaints are:

Although the goalies in NHL 13 are generally better, they can sometimes easily be beaten with a top corner wrist shot just like in last year’s game. Some other complaints about the gameplay include the lack of penalties called during a match even when the penalty slider is set to maximum. Also, the high passing accuracy of the AI opponent feels cheap as it’s common to see them end a match with an accuracy rate of 85 percent or higher.

He’s right that the AI behaves more like an NHL team as you’ll see all players defensively boxing the front of the net.  Phung is right that the AI does not make many mistakes when it comes to either carrying the puck or passing it.

In terms of my own experiencing GMing I’m at 12 straight years of weak drafts.  The weird math for the draft lottery is slowly correcting itself (the last place team has won it over 50% of the time now, after a 1 for 5 start).  Amusingly, a goaltender has won the Ted Lindsay award every single season.  I haven’t figured out how you draft a diamond in the rough in this version, as good players are inevitably top players (which is realistic to a point).

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 22nd

Nichols writes a two-part piece and the second half reminds us just how good a prospect Patrick Wiercioch was (and is).

It’s easy to forget that Wiercioch‘s freshman year at 18 is among the most impressive by an NCAA defenseman in recent memory – 35pts in 36gp earned a WCHA Second All-Star Team selection. A season in which his shot rate was an impressive 2.94 per game, third best on the team, just for comparison sake this past year Karlsson shot 3.22 per game.

Wiercioch‘s sophomore season was also strong, although injury slowed him down and made him unable to play for Canada at the WJC.  He produced at a higher pace in his sophomore season with Binghamton, but injury makes his progress hard to judge.  Needless to say, as someone who still hasn’t filled out their frame there’s still reason to hope Wiercioch will achieve his potential.

-Here’s my profile of Kyle Turris.

-Bob McKenzie has posted his pre-season top-ten 2013 draft picks:
1. Nathan MacKinnon (QMJHL)
2. Seth Jones (WHL)
3. Sean Monahan (OHL)
4. Elias Lindholm (SEL)
5. Rasmus Ristolainen (SM-Liiga)
6. Aleksander Barkov (SM-Liiga)
7. Andre Burakovsky (Allsvenskan)
8. Jacob de la Rose (Allsvenskan)
9. Curtis Lazar (WHL)
10. Kerby Rychel (OHL)

Central Scouting has also released a list of top players, but not in an easily digestible list format.

Jimmy Devellano was fined for comments he made about the lockout and I want to examine a couple of them:

It’s very complicated and way too much for the average Joe to understand, but having said that, I will tell you this: The owners can basically be viewed as the Ranch, and the players, and me included, are the cattle. The owners own the Ranch and allow the players to eat there. That’s the way its always been and that the way it will be forever. And the owners simply aren’t going to let a union push them around. It’s not going to happen.

Yes, they are billionaires. Good on them, they deserve it, but they also make their employees millionaires. Not a bad trade off for a guy like Lucic getting what, 6 million dollars a year? I mean good on him too, but he should be grateful. Understand though that these players want for nothing…its first class this, first class that, meal allowances, travel money on the road, the whole shebang.

The situation is not very complicated–it’s about getting a larger slice of the NHL-pie.  I think Devellano’s attitude towards his employees (the players) is very common in our culture.  The idea that professional hockey can only exist with the benefit of current ownership is laughable–the public appetite for hockey is not beholden to the NHL, rather, the NHL (through historical circumstance) has been the beneficiary of that appetite.  If the NHL disappeared tomorrow another professional league would rise to take its place.  There’s nothing special about the league, what’s special is the sport.

Devellano also makes some interesting comments about the public perception of Gary Bettman.  In his rambling way he admits that Bettman’s condescending attitude and inability to make his case to the average fan is a big part of the problem.  I don’t think public perception makes any difference in his position however, so it’s largely irrelevant.

Jared Ramsden breaks down the WHL’s eastern conference.

Radoslav Vavrina writes comprehensively about the upcoming Czech Extraliga season.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 20th

-The Binghamton Senators released their training camp roster (camp beginning September 27th).  Along with all the expected players there are some unsigned invitees: Scott Greenham (G), Daniel New (D), Jack Downing (C/RW), and Brad Peltz (LW).  New and Downing are both listed incorrectly in the release (the former as a forward, the latter as a defenseman).  Brad Peltz (7-190/09) seems to have left Yale (NCAA) early to try and turn pro.  New attended the Sens development camp in 2010, while Greenham attended it in 2011; Downing played more than half this past season with Binghamton (47-9-8-17).  Stats: New (NCAA 36-2-12-14), Peltz (NCAA 9-1-0-1), and Greenham (NCAA 2.47 .905).  Greenham already has an ECHL contract in place (with Bakersfield), so is presumably attending in the hopes of a call-up to Binghamton should the occasion arise.  Both Peltz and New are looking for spots in Elmira.

Corey Pronman has listed his top-100 prospects and a few Sens made the list:
15. Mika Zibanejad
43. Cody Ceci
51. Jakob Silfverberg
70. Mark Stone
87. Shane Prince

Take it with a grain of salt, but all his Sens picks are conventional (including the trendy choice of Prince).  You take something like this and throw it into the hopper of other lists to get a sense of general opinions about Ottawa’s prospects.

-Here are my profiles of Milan Michalek and Kaspars Daugavins.

-I applaud the OHL’s attempt to cut down on one-dimensional enforcers, although I don’t foresee the NHL adopting their policy in the near future.

Kevin Forbes writes a useful QMJHL season preview for those who want to keep an eye on the Q.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 17th

Milan Michalek is having minor surgery to repair an abdominal injury suffered during training last month.

-I’m not the only one bemused by how eagerly GM’s were signing players under the old CBA, as Lyle Richardson notes the frenzy just prior to the lockout.

-In Elmira (ECHL) news the team has re-signed Artem Demkov (67-20-37-57).  If the lockout eats into the start of the season expect four or five players to be loaned from Binghamton to the Jackals (who now have 11 players signed).

-I have some early thoughts on EA Sports NHL 2013.  As a long time player of the game I spend most of my time playing in GM mode–I like the idea of building a team through the draft and the way EA has allowed for that has been tweaked over the years.  My thoughts thus far:
-the current version solves the problem of AI GM’s dumping of NHL all-stars in the minors due to cap restrictions (it was amusing to see Sidney Crosby play half his career in the AHL)
-the draft makes more sense in terms of how players are assessed, although the draft lottery is poorly stilted (so far 80% of the time the 30th place team has not had the first overall pick) and it’s exceedingly difficult to get broad, useful feedback from scouting; it’s also (thus far) been heavily slanted towards weak drafts (I’m at seven years in a row)
-free agency makes more sense; in previous versions the best players were almost always available as free agents due to unrealistic salary demands
-EA seems to have solved an issue they’ve had for a decade where the best way to score was always a cross-ice pass for a one-timer (if my memory serves this was virtually the only way to score in 2003)
-the declining level of goals scored is carried on faithfully in the game (realistic, but depressing)
-one glitch that continues from previous years is that prospects will disappear in the off-season (never a top prospect, but depth players will sometimes vanish)
-player development for prospects has been slowed considerably
-trading has been simplified in that what other teams’ want are highlighted and they actually follow those indications when trades are proposed (I was always amused when I tried to make a trade with the type of player a team wanted only to be turned down because they wanted that exact kind of player)
That’s all that springs to mind at the moment.  I’m definitely enjoying it.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 16th

-The lockout is here, but how long it lasts remains to be seen.  I still don’t envision the league missing many games, but that sadly hasn’t prevented it from having an impact on workers tied to the arena.

Kevin Forbes believes the lockout provides a great opportunity for development leagues like the CHL.  It will make the quality of the hockey of junior, minor, and some European professional leagues step up for an abbreviated time, but it also means players who don’t belong in those leagues are taking minutes away from others who really need them.

-One of the most amusing aspects of the CBA negotiations is that while the NHL pumped out rhetoric about their financial woes and the need of a new deal, general managers were desperately trying to sign any and every player they could under the old CBA.  Unlike the missed 2004-05 season, where ownership cut back on the number of players signed (Boston had to sign an entire team post-lockout), there’s no sense of the status quo effecting GM’s or organisations.

Nichols writes a critique of an ESPN article, but I’m less interested in that than the stats behind the article he’s critiquing.  Matthew Coller used the VUKOTA system of projection in the NHL (the VUKOTA Projection System uses statistical data to project what an  NHL player would do in their next season by comparing them to similar,  post-1967 NHL players (1967 being the year that the NHL first officially  recorded statistics to calculate GVT [goals-versus-threshold] data).   This kind of projection can’t hope to succeed because it uses data over different eras (it’s also exceedingly vague).  I caution hockey fans to be very careful when using projection metrics until they look into them–context is everything.

Bruce Dowbiggin offers the interesting theory that the NHL must come to terms with the NHLPA no later than November 22nd in order to meet their commitments to HBO’s Winter Classic (which also ties in with the league’s deal with NBC).  I’m not sure how much stock to put into the theory, but I encourage you to check out the full article.

-If the lockout extends into the NHL season I will still be posting regularly about Binghamton and Sens prospects in Elmira, the CHL, and Europe.  There will be much food for thought no matter what happens.

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)

Senators News: September 13th

-The quiet that is the NHL right now can mercifully be interrupted by latest EA Sports NHL offering.

Peter Raaymakers wonders who will lead the Binghamton Senators in scoring this year, suggesting it could be any one of Stephane Da Costa, Mike Hoffman, Andre Petersson, Shane Prince, Jakob Silfverberg, Mark Stone, or Mika Zibanejad.  Every one of those suggestions is sensible except for Prince, who will likely be back with the Ottawa 67s.  Dave Young wrote the follow-up piece on the defense and suggested Mark Borowiecki, Patrick Wiercioch, and Andre Benoit as the leaders (his list includes the assumption that Jared Cowen will lead them); the idea here does not seem to be about numbers (as Raaymakers is).  Benoit will lead the Binghamton blueline in points if he stays healthy.  My own projections are forthcoming.

John Henkelman gives us his updated top-20 Sens prospects (with some comments of my own included):
1. Mika Zibanejad – the blurb suggests he needs to work on his faceoffs, which is an odd task for a winger
2. Jakob Silfverberg – assumes he will play in the top-six in the NHL this season, which is a reasonable assumption, but must be taken with a grain of salt
3. Robin Lehner
4. Stefan Noesen
5. Cody Ceci
6. Mark Stone – I agree with Henkelman that he likely tops out as a top-nine forward who can play on the powerplay
7. Mark Borowiecki
8. Andre Petersson
9. Patrick Wiercioch
10. Matt Puempel
11. Jim O’Brien – I’m not fond of the HF formula that includes a player like this as a “prospect”
12. Shane Prince – sensibly suggests that he’ll likely be returned to the junior ranks
13. Mike Hoffman
14. Stephane Da Costa – points out that the expectations were too high for him
15. Derek Grant
16. Eric Gryba
17. Jean-Gabriel Pageau
18. Fredrik Claesson
19. Ben Blood
20. Chris Driedger
Prospects of interest that didn’t make the cut: David Dziurzynski, Cole Schneider, Jarrod Maidens, and Michael Sdao.
When I first discovered Hockey’s Future years ago it was like mana from heaven–complete lists of prospects with analysis and grades for all of them.  These days, when I read actual scouting reports and paying attention to organisational comments, the shine isn’t quite the same, but it continues to be a useful resource.

Chris Phillips is suing his former agent (the same being sued by Dany Heatley)

This article is written by Peter Levi (@eyeonthesens)