Could Peter Chiarelli Be the Next Glen Sather?

For most of the new generation of Oiler fans, Craig MacTavish is known for his success as a coach in the 2006 playoff run, and his lack of success as a GM.  So you would have to go back some years in the fanbase to know that MacT, as he came to be known, more or less had his career, arguably his quality of life, resurrected by 80’s Edmonton Oilers’ GM Glen Sather.

Charged with vehicular manslaughter, MacTavish, a former full-time NHLer with the Boston Bruins, even spent time in jail, later accepting an invitation from Sather to try out for the Edmonton Oilers.  MacTavish would later flourish in a third-line role for the Oilers, the perfect pivot slotting in behind Wayne Gretzky, and Mark Messier, and of course, eventually moving upstairs in the Oilers’ organization.

Fast forward to today’s version of the Edmonton Oilers, current General Manager Peter Chiarelli seems be applying that same reclamation template to the current version of the blaze orange and blue, signalled by his most recent signing of Zach Kassian to a one year, one more chance contract.  Kassian sounds to be motivated and excited by the opportunity, in spite of the pay reduction.

There is a lot of potential value in a NHL reclamation project.  Typically a player of that type can be secured for a reasonable low price, (whether Kassian will or won’t succeed is a question that remains to be answered) and showing a practice we hadn’t really seen utilized by post Sather GM’s.  The ideal template is to identify a troubled young talent who is on the ropes, and nurture him back to health in a safe environment.

In some ways it harkens back to the Edmonton Oilers’ first GM who had a penchant for such projects, some of which were not always successful.

The Oilers first GM/President/Coach Glen Sather, had a string of successes with his first reclamation projects:  Craig Mactavish was rescued from jail, sobered up, cleaned up, and eventually brought some much needed two-way play to the 80’s Oilers.  He may be one of the best reclamation projects in the history of the NHL.  But Slats did have others, and its interesting to compare with what Chiarelli has on the go.

Slats’ Other Projects Over and Above MacT

Petr Klima: Traded out of the Red Wings organization in the Jimmy Carson trade of the 1989 – 90 season because (among other things), he went on a bender with Bob Probert during the 1985 Wings’ playoff run (ironically enough) against the Oilers.  Klima didn’t do much during the Oiler’s playoff cup run that year but did score a memorable goal five-hole on Andy Moog to end the longest overtime in Stanley Cup final history against the Boston Bruins.

Closest Chiarelli Comparble:  There isn’t one really but we’ll put Kassian in this spot as he is talented and a recovering alcoholic.  The two players have different skill sets, and comparable demons.

Outcome: Remains to be seen for Kassian, but Klima did more or less clean up his act and went on to score over 200 goals over the balance of his NHL career with the Oilers and Tampa Bay Lightning before retiring.

Joe Murphy: Murphy was a former first overall pick of the Detroit Red Wings (they weren’t always great at drafting and developing!) who was essentially a throw-in in the 1989 – 90 Jimmy Carson blockbuster trade.  In Edmonton, he turned his game around a complete 180, scoring 15 points in the 1989 – 90 playoffs and went on to have a productive career (528 pts. in 779 NHL games).  One of Slats’ more notable reclamation projects.

Closest Chiarelli Comparable: Hard to count this one because he has never left the Oilers organization, but, Nail Yakupov could draw a lot of comparisons to Murphy.  They were both first overall pics (Murphy, 1986; Yak, 2012).  Yak is the big tease but his appeal is rapidly losing its allure.  He didn’t learn from his episodes with Eakins how to keep drama out of the media, recently starting a war of words with Russian national coach Oleg Znarok.  He remains a challenge to coach and has very little value on the open market.  Still, Chiarelli has not discarded him from the organization (a la Schultz).  My guess is he sees something salvageable in the future, at least, significantly more than if he flogged the player on the open market now.

The Outcome: Murphy ended up having a productive if not spectacular career.  Yakupov could have the same, if he gets his attitude and hockey sense adjusted.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nh7M75bnQgY

Jason Smith: Picked up as a defensive support in the 1998 – 99 season.  Prior to his trade to the Oilers, the former first round pick had not really established himself as an NHL player when he became Oilers’ property.  However, Smith eventually turned out to be one of the best defensemen of his type to don the copper and blue, a huge part of the 2006 playoff run and memorable captain of the Oilers.

Closest Chiarelli Comparable: Maroon is a small scale reclamation project but could be classified as one nonetheless.  Not a full-time player in the Anaheim organization, he has seen his career bloom on McDavid’s wing providing, physical prowess and deft touch as a power forward.  Once again, not a direct player type comparable, but both were/are needed for their physicality and toughness.

The Outcome: Still too early to tell but Maroon is proving full value, as Anaheim eats half his salary and is sure to be a 20 plus scorer on McDavid’s wing next season, especially if he improves his skating.

But while reclamation projects can be good value there can be risk.  After leaving Edmonton, Sather was burned badly on his trade for Eric Lindros as well as Theoren Fleury.  In Lindros’ case, Sather didn’t get good value (over-paid), and in Fleury’s case, New York offered too many temptations for someone who wasn’t prepared to battle them.

As for Chiarelli’s current projects, it’s too early.  But it is encouraging to see him think out of the box for solutions to the team’s problems.  As long as the risk level is low (as it has been to this point) these experiments won’t outright cost the organization anything significant.  As for Yakupov, well, that risk was taken in the 2012 draft.  If Chiarelli can salvage something, it will be a bonus.

What do you think? Let us know in the comments below!


This is our little tribute to the greatest man in the Oilogosphere, LOWETIDE! Grab this sweet tee by clicking on the pic!

SCF 2016 Game 1 – SJ at PIT – Detailed Statistical Breakdown

Game Notes PIT vs S.J


San Jose Sharks (Head Coach: Peter DeBoer) at Pittsburgh Penguins (Head Coach: Mike Sullivan)

NHL Playoff Game #411, CONSOL Energy Center, 2016-05-30 06:00:00PM (GMT -0600)

Penguins 3-2

Referees: Wes McCauley, Dan O’Rourke, Dan O’Halloran
Linesmen: Pierre Racicot, Derek Amell, Jonny Murray

Three Stars: Nick Bonino; Conor Sheary; Patrick Marleau

  • Welcome!  This is the “OilersNerdAlert” format statistical breakdown for this game.  Beer League Heroes will be publishing these state of the art analyses for each of the Final games.
  • This was an exciting game. Hope they’re all this intense!
  • The Sharks are my designated #2 team, since I have family and friends down in Silicon Valley, so … boo. Also the game information below is from the Sharks point of view.  If you’re a Penguins fan and want to see the breakdown from a PIT point of view, please comment and we’ll be happy to add a second gamepage.
  • The score ended up being (and following) the gameflows pretty much exactly – which happens less often than you’d think!
  • My man BLH is choked that Justin Schultz isn’t wearing #19, so he could make up a half and half jersey shirt. Even as a Penguin, Jultz frustrates Oiler fans!

Grab a 16-bit tee and help keep the BLH ship afloat! We’ve got all the big names playing in the Cup Final! Burns, Malkin, Kessel, Pavelski, etc! Click the pics above or right HERE to go and get yours today!


Game at a Glance

http://i.imgur.com/h7cr0Fu.png
http://i.imgur.com/FzkX60r.png

Leaderboard

  • Patrick Marleau, Tomas Hertl each had 1 goal
  • Logan Couture blasted 4 shots on goal
  • Brent Burns was most active on the team with 13 shot attempts
  • Tomas Hertl was the faceoff champ at 100.0% (1-0) … um, yeah, but …
  • Tomas Hertl led the team in on-ice 5v5 shot attempts at 60.0% (24-16)
  • Joel Ward trailed the team in 5v5 on-ice shot attempts at 20.0% (3-12)
  • Dainius Zubrus was the big hitter with 6

Goal Overview

Team Period Time Strength ShotType ShotDist Danger
PIT 1 12:46 EV Wrist 10.0 2.53
PIT 1 13:48 EV Wrist 18.0 1.81
S.J 2 3:02 PP Wrist 11.0 2.44
S.J 2 18:12 EV Backhand 8.0 2.34
PIT 3 17:27 EV Wrist 13.0 2.26

Who Won the 5v5 Shot Battle?

Which Battle Who Won By How Much
Shots PIT 36 to 24 (60.0%)
Average Shot Distance Against (ft) PIT 32 to 34
Corsi PIT 56 to 52 (51.9%)
Score & Venue Adjusted Corsi PIT 56 to 52 (52.2%)
Fenwick PIT 43 to 33 (56.6%)
Dangerous Fenwick PIT 49 to 28 (63.2%)

http://i.imgur.com/j3rdRtu.png
http://i.imgur.com/hFcAwUV.png

Detailed Metrics

Shot Metrics
Strength CF CA CF% SACF SACA SACF% FF FA FF% DFF DFA DFF%
EV 52 56 48.1 51.7 56.5 47.8 33 43 43.4 28.4 48.8 36.8
All 58 67 46.4 57.4 67.2 46.1 37 52 41.6 33.5 58.1 36.6
Other Metrics
Team PP PPG PIM FO Hits Giveaways Takeaways
Penguins 3 0 6 53.2 36 10 10
Sharks 2 1 8 46.8 36 8 4

How the Players Did (On Ice Shot Attempts)

New chart! Shows how the players did directly comparing raw Corsi with DangerousFenwick. Look for big discrepenacies one way or the other.

http://i.imgur.com/U5TZLbJ.png

http://i.imgur.com/shPtb30.png

Danger Tables

Forwards are sorted by decreasing CF%. Defensemen and pairs sorted by increasing DFA60. Forward lines by decreasing DFF%. Positions are as listed by the NHL roster page, not necessarily where they played.

Centres
Centre EVTOI OZS%2 CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
T. Hertl 15:56 46.7 24 16 60 60 59.3 48.7
J. Thornton 15:36 50.0 23 17 57.5 57.6 57.7 47.7
J. Pavelski 16:11 50.0 23 19 54.8 54.9 55.6 46.8
L. Couture 13:05 33.3 14 13 51.9 51.4 40 51.5
P. Marleau 13:37 37.5 13 15 46.4 45.9 35 44.1
N. Spaling 09:21 40.0 10 12 45.5 44.6 43.8 36.7
T. Wingels 09:19 40.0 10 12 45.5 44.5 40 32.7
D. Zubrus 08:41 50.0 9 12 42.9 42.6 46.7 38.4
M. Karlsson 12:34 28.6 6 13 31.6 30.7 23.1 16.5
C. Tierney 12:03 33.3 5 14 26.3 25.8 20 9
Wingers
Winger EVTOI OZS%2 CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
J. Donskoi 13:24 33.3 16 13 55.2 54.4 45.5 56.9
J. Ward 11:07 33.3 3 12 20 19.9 16.7 2.9
Defensemen
Defense EVTOI OZS%2 CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF% DFA60
R. Polak 14:24 85.7 14 15 48.3 47.6 38.9 31.2 25.83
B. Dillon 15:33 77.8 15 15 50 49.4 29.4 19.5 30.87
M. Vlasic 17:17 20.0 14 17 45.2 45 39.1 28.4 59.71
B. Burns 17:11 38.9 23 21 52.3 51.9 54.5 51.5 63.9
P. Martin 19:52 35.3 26 24 52 51.7 51.4 43.8 76.41
J. Braun 15:58 0.0 12 20 37.5 37.6 33.3 21.2 84.55
Defense Pairings
Pair EVTOI DFA60 AvgDistA CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
B. Dillon R. Polak 12:24 26.13 45.3 11 13 45.8 44.8 33.3 26.3
P. Martin B. Burns 15:59 67.19 26.5 20 20 50 49.5 51.7 47.6
M. Vlasic J. Braun 13:02 77.34 35 7 16 30.4 30.3 23.5 13.5
Forward Lines
Line EVTOI CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
J. Pavelski J. Thornton T. Hertl 14:17 23 14 62.2 62.2 60 48.2
P. Marleau J. Donskoi L. Couture 11:23 12 11 52.2 51.7 37.5 46.1
D. Zubrus N. Spaling T. Wingels 06:22 8 8 50 49.5 50 37.1
J. Ward C. Tierney M. Karlsson 10:04 2 11 15.4 15 10 1.3

Game Flows



http://i.imgur.com/iuIl6E3.png

Rink Maps

Defense Pairings – Shots Given Up

http://i.imgur.com/JF31KsK.png

http://i.imgur.com/6OXPdxu.png

Forward Lines – Shots Taken

http://i.imgur.com/Rn1QS9F.png
http://i.imgur.com/32v442K.png

Head to Head

http://i.imgur.com/L3NnbbK.png
http://i.imgur.com/9Rhu5la.png

http://i.imgur.com/Hn3ELCv.png

NHL Media Highlights

Click the link to play the associated highlight video

Marleau ties game with wraparound
Jones’ back-to-back saves
Hertl’s power-play tally
Jones’ early save
Rust opens the scoring
Jones denies Hornqvist, Crosby
Bonino’s late go-ahead goal
Penguins strike twice in 1st
Jones’ stellar toe save
Murray’s big blocker save
Murray’s shoulder save
Murray stops Hertl in front
Sheary’s perfect shot
Jones’ tip-in save
Jones robs Hornqvist

Taylor Hall, The Nuge, and Matty Tkachuk

A lesser man would tell you he told you so with regards to Hall not making Team Canada but I’ll do no such thing. I got the news in a hungover stupor on vacation that Hall was out for the Canadians and Nugent-Hopkins was in for the U24 North Americans. Interesting….

No Taylor Hall for Team Canada this time around, maybe he’ll pull an Yzerman and be ready in his late 20’s.

My Thoughts on Hall and Team Canada

The following is going to come off as pretty anti-Hall but they’re just observations. I’ll admit Hall hasn’t been my favourite player since he’s come into the league and I’ve let my opinions be known on plenty of occasions. That being said, I am starting to see his game change for the better. So he may very well work his way into my good books and onto at least one Team Canada before it’s all said and done.

  • Taylor Hall wasn’t “snubbed” as some media and fans like to put it. He didn’t have a good NHL season and he doesn’t fit the mold of the players that Mike Babcock and his GMs prefer. Simple as that. Moral of the story: It’s better to slump at the beginning of the year than the end of it.
  • What kind of players does Babcock prefer? Well Subban, Letang, and Perry were all left off as well. Flash and dash can stay home.
  • Some say Hall is being punished by playing on a bad team. If that’s the case, why is Matt Duchene making the team? The Avalanche haven’t been a pillar of success recently.
  • He’s had a good couple of World Championships. Really?
    • The last two WC’s have been played on a larger ice surface thus allowing Hall way more room to use his best assets, his skating and playmaking. So he gets to carry the puck longer and he gets more time to set things up. Of course it looks like he’s playing well.
    • This year all of his points but one were accrued against the likes of France, Slovakia, Germany, and Bulgaria…
    • He only scored 1 point in his final four games which were played against Sweden, Finland (x2), and the USA…
  • A lot of folk on the Twitter machine say that Team Canada is making a mistake not naming Hall to the team but if you haven’t noticed, the men tasked with creating the roster have a bloody good track record when it comes to winning international events, no?
  • So it’s no surprise to me that the team went with Thornton and Marchand (Both whom I said would be better options than Hall back in March), Duchene (Who looked much better than Hall in the Gold Medal Final at the WC vs. Finland), and Giroux (This selection I’m a little perplexed by due to the surgery he’s just undergone that will keep him out for up to 12 weeks).
  • To me it looks like Hockey Canada was going with the hot hands. Marchand was a scoring and shooting beast this year and Joe Thornton had an outstanding season at the age of 36. I can’t speak for Duchene and Giroux though.
  • But I am surprised that Corey Perry didn’t make it. Maybe his dirty ways have caught up to him a bit.
  • Ryan O’Reilly not being named was also a little shocking.
  • Team Canada named 11 centers? There’s a positional shift coming I believe. The days of the “Natural” (fill in the position here) are slowly dying off. In the future players will have to be able to play all positions minus the netminder.
    • You can see it when we talk about Tkachuk vs. Dubois.
      • Some people will pump Dubois’ tires because he can play centre AND wing. It’s not such a bad thing. It’ll force players to be better skaters, better thinkers of the game and better 200ft players.
    • We also see it with defensemen. What happened to the strictly offensive defender or the dman that was specifically a shut-down player.
      • Now it’s “two-way” blueliners that can skate, move the puck, and think the game at a higher level. Physicality is fine but not required as much as it was in the past.

Team North America

  • Mark Scheifele, Jonathan Drouin, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, and Auston Matthews were the final forwards named to the U24’s.
    • Scheifele I have zero problems with. He was a defensive stud for Canada at the WC’s. Played a very smart game with Ryan O’Reilly, and Mark Stone.
    • Jonathan Drouin’s selection must infuriate a lot of people given he only played during the playoffs. But even so, he was one of the best players in the playoffs and completely filled the hole left by Stamkos’ absence.
    • Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ experience and two-way game get him on this team but I reckon it was barely. He’s still rehabbing a hand injury, so here’s to hoping he’s got that sorted out by the beginning of the tourney.
    • Auston Matthews… This is going to be fun. Who else sees him playing with Gaudreau and Eichel?
  • Matt Murray will be the no.1 goalie going into this. He got his NHL team further than John Gibson got the Ducks. That position went from the team’s no.1 question to no question at all.
  • The entire team is going to be a lot of fun and I think that if one were to be a betting person, they’d bet on a Team Canada/Team North America Final. I haven’t checked but is that even possible?

The Draft

  • Matty Tkachuk was hurt the entire Memorial Cup but still found a way to scored the overtime game-winning goal to win the tournament for London… Gotta love the balls on this guy. Would’ve loved to watch the game… Lucky Zach Laing…
  • Former writer of the blog, Kris Hansen had a good comparison between Matt Tkachuk and Pierre-Luc Dubois. Stylistically, no but situationally, yes.
  • I’m torn on what the Oilers should do with that pick. I’m a draft geek at heart and using it on Tkachuk would not bother me one bit. Trading it outright would piss me off and trading down with it would leave me unsettled given the high probability the pick and/or player acquired could fail.
  • Recently on Oilers Now with Bob Stauffer, Jim Matheson said, and I’m paraphrasing so don’t quote me, that unless PK Subban was part of a deal; he couldn’t see the Oilers dealing down. Now that doesn’t mean the 4th overall for PK Subban, just a trade involving those pieces.
  • If I’m not mistaken, the Oilers trading down at the draft has not been a story book filled with wonderment and happy endings as it is. I say take Tkachuk and laugh all the way home about it.
  • Here are my top 5 options for the Oilers at no.4 overall
    • Matthew Tkachuk (LW) – grit, smarts, and size.
    • Pierre-Luc Dubois (C/LW) – powerhouse that plays multiple positions.
    • Mikhail Sergachev (RD) – apparently has the highest ceiling and is a lefty but plays right side.
    • Alexander Nylander (LW/RW) – creative mastermind that can play either wing.
    • Olli Juolevi (LD) – cool and calm, very good puck mover.
Get your 16-Bit McDavid and support the #connorforcalder movement! Click the pic and get your tee today!

Memorial Cup: Huskies eliminate Rebels, face Knights for championship

The Rebels knew that tonight’s Memorial Cup semi-final was going to be the biggest game of their season and many of their lives, but didn’t come out playing like it.

It took only 10 minutes for the Huskies to get on the board, when Timo Meier found Francis Perron on the power play and he wired one past Rebel G Rylan Toth.

One minute and seven seconds later, the Huskies got back on the board when Martin Dzierkals sent a soft backhander to the net which managed to squeak by the Rebel netminer. A third goal in the second period came to the Huskies in thanks to a power play tally by Nikolas Brouillard and the game was out of reach.

Rob Wallator/CHL Images

However, that wasn’t due to a phenomenal effort by the Red Deer Rebels. In a typical Alberta fashion, the Rebels did everything they could to fight through adversity and come back in the game.

Unfortunately for the Rebels, who outshot the Huskies 37-27 by the end of the game, they ran into a goaltender who wouldn’t take no for an answer. The Rebels managed to score in the third, when captain Luke Philp found the back of the net.

With their win tonight, the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies advance to the finals against the London Knights Sunday afternoon at 2:30 PM MT.

“I don’t think any of you guys out there thought with us being hosts and being beat out in the semi-finals that we could play against these top teams,” said Rebels Head Coach Brent Sutter. “We deserved to be in this game tonight with our two and one record.

“We played with this team tonight too. We made a couple mistakes in the first period that put us behind – we didn’t quit – we kept battling and I thought their goaltender was the best player on the ice. That’s the way she goes”

Huskies goaltender Chase Marchand certainly was the best player on the ice tonight, as he turned aside 36 shots from the resilient Rebels.

“I thought we played a good game,” said marchand. “Our defence played great, they boxed out the guys and allowed me to see shots.

“We’re looking forward to the rematch [with the Knights].”

Like what happens to every Junior hockey player, there is always that one final game. Tonight, the Rebels Haydn Fleury was one of those guys as the 2014 seventh overall draft pick will vy for a spot on the Carolina Hurricanes next season.

“It’s certainly disappointing to be in this position

“We spotted them two quick, and we couldn’t really bounce back this time,” said Fleury. “We had the scoring chances and the shots on goal to do that, but the bounces just didn’t go our way.

“Coming here as a 15-year old was surreal, and the Sutter’s have been great to me. Next August I won’t be coming to Red Deer, I’ll be going down to Carolina – I’m going into Carolina next year to make their team.”

As we look toward the Memorial Cup Championship match Sunday afternoon, the CHL’s Top Ten ranked No. 1 Rouyn-Noranda Huskies face off again against the No. 3 London Knights. A matchup Huskies Head Coach Gilles Bouchard is looking forward too.

“We want to be better game after game,” said Bouchard. “We have a group of players who work very hard and compete very hard.

“If you want to win some day for sure we have to respect this. We have to compete and battle in every situation for 60 minute with consistency is what would be most important for Sunday.

Come Sunday, the Knights will have had a total of five days off since their last game and after taking a trip to Banff yesterday, they will be skating everyday up until the championship bought.

 


I am credentialed and covering the 2016 Memorial Cup in Red Deer. You can follow me on twitter here for live updates from all this year’s games.

My work at this year’s Memorial Cup:
Knights surge past the Rebels 6-2 in the tournament’s opening game – Beer League Heroes, May 21.
Conner Bleackley shines in first game in over two months – Copper and Blue, May 21.
Should the Oilers be looking at drafting Kale Clague? – Beer League Heroes, May 22.
Top lines from the Knights and Rebels dominate at the Memorial Cup – Copper and Blue, May 23.
Rebels top line of Helewka, Philp and DeBrusk lead the host squad to a 5-2 victory over the Huskies – Beer League Heroes, May 23.
Wheat Kings dethroned in “disappointing” loss to the Knights – Copper and Blue, May 24.
Tyler Parsons shines as Knights beat Huskies 5-2 to book berth into Memorial Cup final – Beer League Heroes, May 25.
Rebels eliminate the Wheat Kings and book a berth in the semi-finals – Copper and Blue, May 26 

Team Canada: Wait … what?

Team Canada and the various World Cup of Hockey teams named the rest of their rosters today.

For Oilers fans, there was good and bad news.

The Mighty Nuge

The good news? RNH was named to Team North America. The Nuge did not have a good year last year, but as a defensively responsible centre on the verge of regaining the offensive prowess he showed as a rookie, I think this is a great add. I’m not overoptimistic or biased at all, nope.

As an added bonus, we now get to see RNH with McDavid, Eichel, and Auston Matthews.  That he’s on the team with those guys is a good reminder of just how young he still is!

Team North America just became my ‘cheer for’ team! How about you?

I’ve Hallen and I Can’t Get Up!

The other side of the coin is that P. K. Subban, Taylor Hall, Kris Letang, and Corey Perry were not named to Team Canada. Instead, Giroux (after surgery and a lousy playoff campaign), Duchene, Muzzin, Pietrangelo, and Marchand got the nod.

In Hall’s case, despite this:

— zach laing (@Loweded) 27 May 2016

And this:

Taylor Hall: An Elite Player?

Oh well. I guess consistently being among the top two or three players on the last two gold medal winning Team Canada World Championship teams isn’t enough to overcome the ‘bad in the room’ label, or whatever the hell it was this time.

I mean (as an example), Marchand had a great season, but

Hall has scored 73 points more than him, in 40 fewer games (tweet by @tsimpson76).

Or perhaps it’s because Marchand is better defensively.  Or is he? Are you sure about that?

Last 3 years:

With Bergeron 59.3% CF
W/Out Bergeron 47.6% CF

(tweet by @Archaeologuy)

Silver lining: Hall will be fresher and healthier for the regular season, and it’s going to be an important one.  But still, if I were him, I’d be pissed.

And P. K. Subban left off the team? Not sure there’s a better right handed D in the game today, but hey … prima donna or whatever the excuse was, right?

Interesting factoid: every Team Canada defenseman is from the Western Conference.

USA! USA! IN DEAD LAST! USA!

Honestly though, both of those pale in comparison to leaving Phil Kessel off the Team USA roster. Bad hot dog influence was it?

If Team Canada’s roster was seemingly the work of chimps, the US looks to have hired a group of Kakapos*.

Would it surprise anyone if they finish in dead last?  Well, probably. But they’re not very good, that’s for sure.

The Best of the West for the Rest (or something like that)

In other news, I’m happy for Ales Hemsky, who was named to the Czech team. And still scratching my head over Korpi for the Finns.

You can find the full list of rosters here: http://www.tsn.ca/2016-world-cup-of-hockey-rosters-1.446950

As for these often strange roster decisions overall, I like Manny Elk’s summary on this one:

Feel free to voice your outrage (or your approval) in the comments section!

 


 

About the Kakapo … I have no idea if this is true (it’s hardly a reliable source), but it’s a hilarious description:

These flightless parrots are absolutely adorable, but because they evolved in an area with no predators and ample food, they had no reason at all to develop their brains. Without a reason to work on a defense strategy, the kakapo has defaulted to an absolutely horrible method of defense. If you scare it, it will either hold completely still, or climb up a tree and then jump out –but since it can’t fly, it merely lands in a pathetic heap on the ground.

(from http://www.neatorama.com/2012/09/26/Four-of-the-Worlds-Dumbest-Animals)