Opportunity in the Motor City?

Jordan+Eberle+Edmonton+Oilers+v+Detroit+Red+45BRSHTChEvl

I was reading an interesting article on The Hockey Writers website the other day called, “Red Wings in Salary Cap Trouble” and it got me thinking. With all of this talk about how Nail Yakupov’s value is so low that no team will pay the required toll to acquire him, I had to step back for a moment and ask myself if that is really true.

There’s always a team that needs cap reprieve or they’ve got a problem player on their roster and this is potentially one of those situations.

The Detroit Red Wings are in a salary cap crunch. With important Restricted Free Agent’s Petr Mrazek and Danny DeKeyser still unsigned, and with only $3.27 Million (per General Fanager ) in cap space, something’s got to give. Let’s say DeKeyser gets $3.5 Million per year on a two-year ‘show me’ deal.

Even though the Red Wings want Mrazek on a bridge deal, the arbitrator awarding the contract is neutral and with the great numbers Mrazek posted this season I can’t see him signing a contract with an AAV less than $4 Million.

So if that indeed is a true representation of what the Red Wings are facing, the Oilers might be able to help them out and this would be a perfect opportunity for them to try to pry, at least, a 2nd rounder out of Detroit as they have two of them for the 2017 draft. We know that Chiarelli is on the hunt for one to send to Boston as compensation for himself being hired by the Oilers after being fired by the Bruins… Stupid rule…

THE MULE

Johan Franzen may never play another game in the NHL again. The Red Wings can’t buy him out because he’s been on the LTIR, so perhaps they’d look to move him in the same vein as the Chris Pronger or Marc Savard trades. Paper transactions more or less but it would free up nearly $4M per year on the cap for Detroit and that’s possibly how much they need to get Mrazek under contract. His actual dollars go like this for the rest of his deal:

2016 – $3.5M
2017 – $2M
2018 – $1M
2019 – $1M

I don’t think Franzen will play again but you never know, if he was able to play for the Oilers, his experience would be of immense value to such a young team.

THE RUB

Edmonton would want to send Yakupov back and the Red Wings have promising youngsters like Tomas Tatar, Andreas Athanasiou, and Anthony Mantha coming up on the right-wing. Hardly a place there for Yakupov, right? Unless they send one of those youngsters back down to Todd Nelson’s team on the farm.

TOSS IN A DMAN

Would the Red Wings be willing to toss in a defender like Brendan Smith and his $2.75M cap hit. He’s slated to be an unrestricted free agent next summer and unlikely to be protected in the expansion draft given that status.

Unfortunately for the Oilers, he’s a left-handed shooter but even then he’s an experienced NHL defenceman and potentially acquiring him would allow the Oilers to put Nurse and Reinhart in the minors to start the year.

*I know that some of you think that having Darnell Nurse in the minors would be a terrible thing for his confidence and the Oilers could use that toughness on the back-end but here’s the deal, he doesn’t need to get better and being tougher. He needs to get better and being a defenceman and giving him mad minutes in the AHL would allow him the freedom to work on the things needed to be a better NHLer with less pressure. It would also lessen the steepness of his NHL Learning curve.*

THE PROPOSAL

To Edmonton: Johan Franzen ($3.94M), Brendan Smith ($2.75M), 2nd round draft pick in 2017

To Detroit: Nail Yakupov ($2.5M), Griffin Reinhart ($863k)

Now I hear what you’re saying and yes, if Reinhart is in the NHL, the numbers don’t work because of bonus payments but if he’s in the AHL, the numbers work. It should come out with the Red Wings having another $3.33M remaining on the cap and that is a very workable number.

Would Detroit really want to move Smith though? He’s a serviceable blueliner right now and the Red Wings defense is not looking as spritely as it has in the past.

*Something I just thought of, if Franzen goes on LTIR, his cap hit won’t count against the Red Wings. So would they really need to trade him? The worst that could happen is he would be healthy enough to come back and would actually want to. A tad different to Andrew Ference’s situation where he can find a way to participate in charity bike rides but can’t get cleared by the NHL to play… So that deal above could very well be nothing to do.*

AN ALTERNATIVE

The Oilers could go after Mike Green and his $6M cap hit and solve all of the Red Wings issues right there. What if the Oilers trade Nail Yakupov for two years of Mike Green? Edmonton has over $8.5M in cap room right now. The Red Wings would get about $3.5M in cap room relief but they’d lose their top dman on the right-side. The deal would actually be Mike Green for Petr Mrazek if you think about it because the onus is on Detroit to get Mrazek under contract.

But how would it affect the Oilers expansion draft protection list? I’d leave Green available if it meant I could protect Davidson. That’s just me though.

I don’t now, what do you think? Could the Red Wings and the Oilers come together to make something happen? Let me know in the comments below! Thanks!

The Latvian Peca

The date was August 3rd, 2005. Mike Peca was a New York Islander at the time but Oilers GM Kevin Lowe was feeling particularly active that day given just hours before he’d acquired the deadliest defenceman in the NHL, Chris Pronger, and signed him to a 5 year deal; Lowe decided to make another call to the Islanders and offer centre Mike York and a 5th rounder for two-time Selke Trophy winner Mike Peca.

The rest is history and Peca only spent the one year in Edmonton but if you remember Mike Peca’s career, he was a tough as nails shut-down centre (hence the Selke trophies) that concentrated his talents on keeping the puck out of the net as opposed to putting it in the net. He was quite valued around the league spending time in Buffalo, Long Island, Vancouver, Edmonton, Toronto, and Columbus. Not only that but he was part of the 2002 Olympic team that brought Canada the gold medal.

THE LATVIAN PECA

Why am I talking about Mike Peca when the picture above is of Zemgus Girgensons? Because when the Latvian was just draft prospect in 2011/2012 he was compared to Mike Peca. A hard-hitting, incredibly intense pivot who’ll probably be a great no.3 centre and maybe a good no.2 centre.

So far, he’s had his highs (played in the All-Star game in 2014/15) and his lows (seeing his TOI drop from 19 minutes to 15 minutes per game this past year). The 14th overall pick in Yakupov’s draft year of 2012 has seen his stock fall off a cliff with the Sabres since they acquired Ryan O’Reilly and the selections of Jack Eichel and Sam Reinhart.

The Latvian Peca is an RFA this season and things aren’t looking pretty for him in Buffalo. He’s apparently been reduced to competing with Johan Larsson for the third line centre role or accepting a place on the 4th line… Pretty sad if you ask me.

Therefore I want to float this idea past you and get your feedback.

The Oilers should attempt to acquire Zemgus Girgensons to play third line centre.

In this scenario a right-wing from the Oilers would have to be moved because Leon Draisaitl would be tasked with taking one of those spots and Girgensons would take his centre spot. A problem I have with this is that, and I’ve said this before, Jesse Puljujarvi should be put on a line that is getting mad offensive zone starts and cherry opposition and unless Yakupov is unloaded somehow, the Grinning Finn is set to start the year in Edmonton. Basically, the Oilers should not follow the Dallas Eakins model and do the opposite with Puljujarvi as they did with Yakupov.

We’ll see how the Oilers feel about Yakupov when the puck drops in October and the line-ups are announced eh?…

WHAT DOES HE DO?

The one thing that Girgensons does well is that he stops goals from taking place, the issue being he prevents them from being scored on his own team too. He’s a mad shut down forward. Highly skilled on the defensive side of the game like the previously mentioned Mike Peca.

His possession numbers look healthy and as you’ll note below, his teammates have a tough time keeping the shots off the board when they’re separated from him. That being said, Buffalo has been nearly as bad, if not worse, than the Oilers recently.

Gotta keep those dots down around the 50% mark folks

Now check out this chart below that tells us about his expected goals against per 60:

Without Girgensons, the Sabres’ players selected (for the most part), are worse off! But like I said, this Sabres team right now is quite poor. But just imagine how much worse it would be if “Z” wasn’t there.

THE SITUATION IN BUFFALO

A quote from The Hockey News paints a clearer picture regarding his status with Buffalo at the moment:

As beat writer Mike Harrington reports, the team and the player are in a bit of a spot when it comes to a new contract. Girgensons naturally wants a multi-year deal, but the new brain trust of coach Dan Bylsma and GM Tim Murray is still trying to figure out where Girgensons fits on the team.

I think some Sabres fans will see him as an important cog but in reality he’s most likely expendable given his diminished role. He could sign with the Sabres for $2M per year short-term in an attempt to work his way up cheaply towards a bigger payday. Surely the Sabres would prefer to see him do that as well given the contracts of Jack Eichel, Sam Reinhart, possibly Jimmy Vesey, Hudson Fasching, etc. will be coming up in the next two-three years and it would be much easier to move a value contract at that point.

THE RETURN

Now to swing this back to the Oilers, we know that Leon Draisaitl cannot be saddled with the responsibility of shutting down the other team’s best centres right now. Even Ryan Nugent-Hopkins shouldn’t be getting that job full-time and no doubt he will. Adding Girgensons will give the Oilers a specialist of sorts. A younger Boyd Gordon sans the ridiculous face-off skills.

The Oilers could send Yakupov over but that’s a much too convenient play in the minds of Oilers fans. If it sounds good in your mind, that probably means it’s horrible to the other team’s fans. So this is what I suggest.

Sabres may still be in the market for a LHD. So what about Sekera? He was previously a Buffalo Sabre before bouncing around to Carolina and Los Angeles. The reason I say Sekera is three-fold.

  • If Brandon Davidson continues his rise, he’ll be a top 4 shut-down dman. No doubt about it. Fancy statters would agree there.
  • It would relieve the Oilers of a player holding a no-trade/movement clause and going into an expansion draft year, that would be a very valuable play.
  • It would cull the herd the Oilers have built up on left-side defence…
  • It would give the Sabres a very nice looking top four of Kulikov/Ristolainen/Sekera/Bogosian.

Reasons I wouldn’t send Andrej Sekera are:

  • The Oilers need veteran dmen like Charlie Sheen needs hookers and blow. Experienced defenders that can skate and move the puck are very high value.
  • Trading him a year after signing him long-term would be somewhat a dodgy manoeuver. Might send the wrong message to future free agents (*cough* Brent Burns *cough)
  • ‘Rej might just be the only guy on the team that can effectively play with Mark Fayne, so we’re stuck with him until Fayne is gone at least. Ha!

I wonder what Buffalo Fans would want for Girgensons. The man is such a huge draw for the blue-collar types. I want to say the Oilers should offer Reinhart and Yakupov to be honest but it feels like it would be sending the Sabres the Oilers’ garbage. But even then, there’s tons of room for improvement and their ceilings are still high. It would be a good move on Chiarelli’s part to distance himself from failed moves be it from his tenure or other previous ones.

Then again, maybe this Girgensons fellow is falling off the map a bit and is deserved of a 4th line role…

As you can see, I’m a bit on the fence about it now after looking into the Latvian’s stats a bit. But I still feel that if the Oilers are going to build a defensive team around McDavid and Lucic, that their bottom six is going to need a major upgrade, right?

THE FINAL STAT

The last stat I want to give you is from the new WoodMoney chart and we’ll make our conclusions from there. The main numbers I want to focus on are G Money’s Defensive Fenwick For and Against per 60. If you’re reading the charts, they’re the last two columns.

Dangerous Fenwick tries to adjust for that issue by deliberately accounting for the danger level of the shots taken. 

Read the primer on DFF here and on WoodMoney here.

Girgensons:

Vs Elite (476 minutes) – DFF/60 = 28.6, DFA/60 = 39.5
Vs Muddle (532 minutes) – DFF/60 = 31.9, DFA/60 = 34.2
Vs Dregs (458 minutes) – DFF/60 = 33.4, DFA/60 = 30.1

He’s not Pavel Datsyuk, Anze Kopitar, or Patrice Bergeron because he doesn’t bring that offense to the game that they do. Also they are/were no.1 centres in the league. But he can compete with them versus the top 6 of any team in the league with regards to shutting them down. Something that the Oilers have trouble with and as I earlier noted, something Nugent-Hopkins shouldn’t be tasked with. According to the WoodMoney chart, Girgensons is a better option that RNH in a shut-down role.

My apologies if this post was a bit jumpy! I woke up with Girgensons on my mind and I was bound to make a case for the Oilers making a move for him. But what do you think? Is the Latvian Peca of interest to you? What would you pay to get him on the Oilers? Let me know in the comments below!

Stat charts provided by www.corsica.hockey and http://ownthepuck.blogspot.tw/

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Oilers Most Likely to Not Be Oilers By…

Part I – Training Camp

With inspiration from the Beer League Hero himself, we’ve decided to come up with a recurring series here at BLH, a series that analyzes who we should prepare to say goodbye to at certain key points in the season and offseason.

Look forward in the coming months for updates near the end of the 2016 calendar year, before the trade deadline, before the 2017 expansion draft, and before the 2017 entry draft. My insidious plan to secure my writing gig at BLH for at least a year is slowly falling into place.

For this installment, we’ll look at the block of time between now and the start of training camp in September. I’m going to focus (unfortunately) on Edmonton’s simultaneously favourite and least favourite little Russian Rocket, Nail “Please Just Live Up To Your Potential” Yakupov.

The rumour mill was churning earlier this week about a near-transaction that broke first here on BLH about Yak going to Florida for Alex Petrovic and a pick. It’s understood that the deal was hinging for Chiarelli on a second rounder, but Florida was only willing to package in a third. Nail has also been linked to several teams throughout the season, amongst them Montreal and Winnipeg, but those rumours seem to have cooled off as of late.

One thing remains clear, even if it’s true that Yakupov or his camp didn’t formally request a move out of E-town, he appears to be firmly on the trade block regardless.

Unfortunately for Oilers fans looking for a good return, Yak’s trade value has truly never been lower; the going rate for much of the latter half of the 2015-16 season was apparently a third round pick. But if we’re going purely based off numbers, this isn’t really fair. For his career, Nail Yakupov is sitting at 0.44 points per game. That is 165th amongst NHL forward with 200+ games played across the past 4 seasons. It’s solid 2nd line production, period. He could literally never improve for the remainder of his career and still be worth at least a 2nd round pick, and rightfully more.

According to a recent Steve Dangle podcast interview from July 12th with ex-Oilers goaltender Ben Scrivens, Yak is “criminally misunderstood” in Edmonton and in the media. Paraphrasing his very clear statements on the matter, Scribbles has nothing but good things to say about the young first overall pick, calling his will to win and work ethic among the highest he’s ever seen. Ben says the only thing Nail is guilty of is something he himself has been guilty of over the years: trying to do too much. A fair assessment, because despite Yakupov’s flaws, I think very few of us could truly accuse the guy of not playing with his heart on his sleeve.

The erroneous image Yakupov’s critics have of the “lazy Russian” doesn’t seem to hold much water, according to a guy from that mythical place known as “inside the locker room”, who certainly doesn’t owe the Edmonton organization any unwarranted praise considering the way his AHL assignment last season was so hastily handled. (Scrivens elaborates on this more in his interview, and also has some interesting things he doesn’t say about Taylor Hall and The Trade. It’s a good listen, check it out below!

So with all this said, are you as quick to want Yak gone as maybe you were in March or April? If we’re talking about “bottom-6” Nail Yakupov, I’m with you. His third- and fourth-line production is straight trash. May the #packyourshit hastags flow freely on the Twitter machine. But top-6 Nail Yakupov is a different animal. He looked bloody brilliant next to McDavid at the beginning of 2015, able to use his wicked shot to its full potential on the receiving end of the gift pucks off McDavid’s stick. Two things stand in the way of us ever seeing this Yakupov again, and they’re called Jordan Eberle and Jesse Puljujärvi. Ebs is a known quantity, and I don’t think anyone has anymore questions left going into his seventh season in the NHL if he knows how to finish a play. And maybe it’s more classic Edmontonian wishful thinking, but I’m pretty sure Poolparty lives on the top-6 in 2016-17. He’s NHL-ready, and he’s bloody brilliant, too, and in likely more ways than Yak, despite everything that we may collectively misunderstand about him and his game.

“But Mike, what if we trade Eberle for Barrie before September?” Well then we don’t have a problem anymore, do we? Staple Yakupov’s ass to McDavid’s right wing and watch the highlight reels. Groom Puljujärvi on the second and third lines, swapping Draisaitl out on RNH’s wing/centering the third line, see who develops chemistry with who, and we’re off to the proverbial playoff races. But we’ll have to wait until July 29th for Barrie’s arbitration hearing before we have any idea whether or not a trade is likely to happen.

From where I sit, I’m not holding my breath. Plus, by not picking up Barrie this season, and instead maybe trying to wait for 2017 free agency to see if he or an even better puck-moving defenceman comes up for auction, we get to protect Davidson in expansion.

So finally, with all of that said, and fair or not, I think Yakupov goes before we get into training camp. But where he goes is much harder to say. We’ve heard about the Cody Ceci rumours, and personally I think they definitely have merit. I have another idea, though. Bear with me on this.

McIlrath, post-fight and looking pleased

Dylan McIlrath

Yes, 2G-2A-4P in all of 37 total NHL games Dylan McIlrath.

Also 6’5″, 221lb, 10th overall pick in 2010, 24-years-young Dylan McIlrath.

He does cool things like this:

And also things like this (appropriately, his first NHL goal was against none other than us):

While showing some really decent offensive and defensive advanced stats like this:

Joe Fortunato over at Blue Shirt Banter, in his article entitled Dylan McIlrath Needs To Be Part Of The Rangers’ Future, has this to say about McIlrath with regards to how he impressed out of a training camp last summer that he maybe wasn’t expected to make it out of:

… something really cool happened. When McIlrath did get into game action he was good. As in, actually really impressive on a level I’m not sure many people expected.

Which is why it was so insane that Alain Vigneault never found a real home for McIlrath in the lineup. Not only was McIlrath better than both Dan Girardi and Marc Staal (even on games where he had sat for a month with no action), he could have at the very least been used to give rest to an injured and ageing Girardi, a declining Staal or an ageing Dan Boyle. Instead, Vigneault opted to staple McIlrath to the press box…

Fortunato continues with some advanced stats,

McIlrath, in just 35 games, was a 51.06 corsi for % at even strength. He was a -1.88% in offensive zone starts rel, and was a +2 in scoring chances differential. When you looked at the Rangers defense and saw all the problems, McIlrath never caught your eye — despite Vigneault treating him like a player he couldn’t trust on the back end.

Why? We’ll never know. The subjective wheel of justice reared its ugly head early and often this year, with no one taking a bigger hit than McIlrath.

The Oilers make this trade because McIlrath is a promising, young, giant right side defenceman who is absolutely begging to break out and become a real force on a team that appreciates him and uses him properly. He’s cheap at $800K through the 2017-18 season (in which he will be a RFA), and he’s exactly the type of player that just twirls Chiarelli’s moustache.

The Rangers make this trade because Nail Yakupov is an instant improvement over their current second-line RW Jesper Fast, and given the right environment (*cough* Zibanejad and Nash *cough*), has a significantly higher ceiling than Kevin Hayes. I think there could even be some magic made putting him next to a young playmaker like Oscar Lindberg. We all know how much Yakupov likes playmaking centers. Plus, Vigneault gets to clear up space on the back end to move forward with Brady Skjei like he wants to do anyway.

I think that we try to get New York to throw in the 2018 2nd rounder they picked up from Ottawa in the Zibanejad trade, or if Chia can’t swing that, then the Rangers’ 2017 3rd rounder. Both teams end up with projects, but with guys who I think amount to two solid pieces who clearly need a new environment in which to flourish and show their true potential.


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Oilers Waiting on Avalanche?

Tyson Barrie, Av or Oiler by October?

As we sit in our comfy chairs awaiting the next move that will solidify the Edmonton Oilers roster a tad more, we’re forced to speculate. And so today I want to chat a bit about the rumblings I’ve heard regarding some roster moves that could be in the works.

FOREWARNING

*As I say with almost every post like this, believe me or not, it’s up to you. I’m not Dreger, McKenzie, Rishaug, or Stauffer for that matter. I’ll tell you what I hear and you can take that as bullshit or you can believe it. It’s no skin off my ass either way. But don’t be rude about what you read. That’s all that I ask from you as a reader.

I write, you read.*

HURRY UP BURNABY JOE!

The title of the post gives it away but it’s my belief that the Oilers are biding their time and waiting on the results of the Tyson Barrie arbitration hearing which will take place on July 29th.

Nothing new here but it looks like the Avs are in for the same culture shifting move that the Oilers themselves took part in when they traded Taylor Hall to the Devils for Adam Larsson. Speculation has calmed down as of late but right around the draft Gabriel Landeskog and Matt Duchene were thought to be available.

Now nothing has been released to say that aren’t still on the block and there’s nothing I’d love more than to see two of Landeskog, Duchene, or Barrie become Oilers but that’d be a deal done in my dreams. Besides, could you see the Oilers parting with Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Jordan Eberle, and/or Leon Draisaitl to get, say, Barrie and Duchene or Barrie and Landeskog?

But an Eberle for Barrie deal could very well be on the table depending on the outcome of said hearing.

MINOR MOVES AND THE DEFENSE

Brandon Pirri is still on the Oilers radar and from my understanding he’s got the Oilers on his radar as well but this is a move that would surely be dependent on Edmonton moving Yakupov.

  • Earlier this week we talked about a deal that would send Yak to Florida for right-handed dman Alex Petrovic. This was quickly quashed by some pretty big names in the media and very quickly I might add (almost too quickly to not have a modicum of truth to it).
  • Pirri has amassed 80 points in 166 games played. Not bad for a guy that can’t seem to find a permanent home the last three years and is yet to be signed this offseason.
  • Brandon Pirri has been mentioned by Bob Stauffer in the past on his show, so his name should be of no real surprise to those following the Oilers closely.

I’ll tell you why I think this would be a good fit for the Oilers.

  • Cheap, bonus-laden contract.

    Pirri wants to find a place to put his roots down in. He can score at the NHL level, there’s no doubt about that but after playing on three teams (Chicago, Anaheim, and Florida) in three years, the 25-year old will be looking for something solid, something the Oilers can offer.

  • He can float in the middle six and contribute on the PP.
  • He’s got a history that tells us he can produce.
  • He’s averaged 135 shots over the last two years and a 13.15% shooting percentage. Compare that with Yakupov, whose had an average of 159 shots and a shooting percentage of 6.8% over the last two years… Efficiency leans towards the former 2nd round pick in 2009 on this one.
    • The caveat to those stats is that in 2014/15 Pirri put up 22 goals in 49 games with Florida and had a 15.4% shooting percentage… That’s extremely high. His career shooting % is 13.6.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmWkd0u67ss

Griffin Reinhart and Darnell Nurse to start the year in Bakersfield.

  • This would be a rare smart move on the Oilers behalf. Neither dman are ready for the pro game and putting them in the position to not only be good players but to dominate is something I am definitely in favour of.

James Wisniewski is still an option for the Oilers.

  • The Oilers are using Wisniewski as their backup plan in case any deal with Barrie falls through. I’ve been told it’s down to term not money.

*NEW* Anton Lander is being actively shopped.

  • I’m not sure how the Oilers could ever think they’ll get any more for him that Yakupov right now. Lander has completely fallen off of the cliff and if anything he’s suited for a 4th line role on the wing. If he was right-handed this might be a different story but would he pass through waivers another time? If so, the Oilers might want to explore the European loan route as they did a couple of seasons ago with Jesse Joensuu

    *No reason to get skeptical or anything but the Oiulers have not had great success with players from Finland named Jesse… Niinimaki, Joensuu… I hope to the hockey gords that Puljujarvi is different…*

    Don’t get me wrong, I really like Anton Lander because he works his ass off, unfortunately it’s not translating. I wish it would because I’d hate to see him go to a team like Detroit and find his mojo again because you gotta wonder if he’s still got the potential to be a Frans Nielsen-type? He’s not THAT old.

*Last One* Remember when Jim Matheson asked Peter Chiarelli about Yakupov’s trade request at the draft and PC told him there was no trade request from Yak or his agent? A lot of us wondered what Chiarelli was talking about… Well, as it turns out and from what I’ve been told, there’s something to it.

Nail might’ve been upset at not getting top 6 minutes…

  • To that I say, he should’ve performed better on the ice and in the practices.
  • I’m going to butcher the fack out of this quote but a player of some importance (and forgive me for not remembering who) once said that he got paid to practice and games were just the cherry on top.

FURTHER TO THAT…

The Oilers have about $9 million left in cap space. Would they add both Wizniewski AND Barrie if it were possible? Could they? How would that affect Mark Fayne? One would think that he’d be moved ASAP, right? His contract you couldn’t have sitting in the pressbox nor would you want to.

But having Larsson, Barrie, and Wisniewski would take care of the right-handed puck-moving defenceman problem once and for all AND it would let the Oilers send Reinhart and Nurse to Bakersfield with no risk attached.

Klefbom-Larsson
Sekera-Barrie
Davidson-Wisniewski
Oesterle/Fraser

As we all should know by now, it is silly season and hockey rumours are bound to find their way into our timelines more often than not. Take what you read here or any other place with a grain of salt and use your own judgement.

Let me know what you think about all of this speculation in the comments below!


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Early Offseason Oilers Forward Line Combos

God, it has to be a tad early to be talking about line combinations doesn’t it? We’re coming off of two rumoured major deal blogs (Petrovic and Nuge) and sliding into potential line match-ups eh… ‘Tis the summer isn’t it? I’m so bloody bored… #IsItOctoberYet

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I have a belief that the line-up structure that we’ve grown up with is coming to an end. What I mean is that traditionally we’ve had this:

  • Line 1 – Scoring line harbouring elite players.
  • Line 2 – Secondary scoring would come from this line.
  • Line 3 – Shut down line. Teams would match this line up against the other teams 1st line.
  • Line 4 – Energy line. Need a big hit or a fight. These were the guys that would do it.

I believe that lines one through three are all becoming scoring lines like what Pittsburgh pulled off this past season in the playoffs. Basically, and this is not a new method, teams will start to take two players who play well together and stick another guy on their line to compliment them.

For example:

  • Crosby/Hornqvist and Conor Sheary
  • Malkin/Kunitz and Bryan Rust
  • Kessel/Bonino and Hagelin (Although from my observations, Hagelin was a key component.)

So teams are going to have to start developing better possession players, better skill players and leave behind the guys that are strictly mono-skillled. Gone are the days of the true tough guy. Now they have to be able to play. We could refer to the Islanders 4th line of Martin, Czikas, and Clutterbuck as something to been keen on in this regard. That being said, Czikas cashed in and Martin left town to be replaced my Jason Chimera…

Anyways, the Oilers. Edmonton is going much closer to having this line structure than other teams but it’s chalked full of kids and underachievers at the moment. If we take a look at just the forward corps without making and line combinations we’ll see that it’s close but not quite there yet.

Left Wing Centre Right Wing
Milan Lucic Connor McDavid Jordan Eberle
Benoit Pouliot Ryan Nugent-Hopkins Nail Yakupov
Pat Maroon Leon Draisaitl Jesse Puljujarvi
Matt Hendricks Mark Letestu Zack Kassian

You might have the depth chart a bit different but the question marks lie with Yakupov, Puljujarvi, Maroon, Hendricks, and Kassian.

We don’t know what we are going to get if Yakupov stays with the Oilers and Puljujarvi hasn’t played a single shift for the team yet. Can Pat Maroon regain the touch he had last year? Will Matty Hendrick’s style of play finally catch up to him? How is Kassian going to do with a full season?

Valid questions I believe. Anyways lets get to the line combos I think will be the best for the team this upcoming season. (Stats courtesy of Corsica.hockey)

LINE ONE

Benoit Pouliot – Connor McDavid – Jordan Eberle

Here’s a line that played 146.81 minutes together 5×5 last season with a CF/60 of 62.12 and a CA/60 of 48.23. Some mad possession there! Their expected goals for per sixty was 3.86 (the highest on the club).

This is a line that drives the bus, why fix something that’s not broken? And normally I’d say put Yakupov on that line but I think we’re going to need to move on from him and give the team the best possible chance to succeed.

Let Pouliot work the corners and make room for McJesus and Ebs but make sure that Klefbom and Larsson are on the ice as well because I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen a backcheck from Pouliot that didn’t result in a penalty and Eberle usually lollygags it a bit.

Alternative: Lucic-McDavid-Yakupov

LINE TWO

Milan Lucic – Ryan Nugent-Hopkins – Jesse Puljujarvi

Now we don’t have an statistical background to back-up this line but my reasoning for this one is that it would be a shame to put Puljujarvi on a line with non-veteran players. I believe that he should be given every opportunity to succeed in an offensive role first, then work on his two-way game as the years move on. Something that should’ve been done with Draisaitl AND Yakupov if you ask me.

Let the Finn go out there and be the goal scorer. Lucic and Nuge can handle the other side of the puck and if Puljujarvi is as good a two-way player as we’re reading, then all the better for the team.

Alternative: Pouliot – RNH – Draisaitl

LINE THREE

Pat Maroon – Leon Draisaitl – Nail Yakupov

Whatever line I check with Yakupov, the corsi against per sixty is f*cking bad. Apart from the 120 minutes of 5×5 he played with Pouliot and McDavid and the 43 minutes with Letestu and Korpikoski; Yakupov’s lines rarely do well on the other side of the possession line.

BUT!

Leon is a playmaker, Yak is a volume shooter, and Big Rig is a banger. The recipe is there for potential success. I’d be putting on some very good possession defenders at the same time as these boys if it were to happen though. Give this line cherry minutes and soft zone starts and it very well could surprise everyone. It could also fall flat on its face too though… So toss a coin!

Alternative: Maroon – Caggiula – Eberle

LINE FOUR

Matt Hendricks – Mark Letestu – Zack Kassian

It’s hard not to like this line but the players on it are overpaid by a lot. This will be the last year of its incarnation as the team will look to put players like Jujhar Khaira, Tyler Pitlick, and Iiro Pakarinen on it.

The one thing I do like about this line is it will be a tough one to play against and Letestu and Hendricks are valued penalty killers as well as good locker room presences.

Alternative: Pitlick – Letestu – Pakarinen

I know that it’s early days and there could be more moves but what do you think the lines should be starting next season? Let me know in the comments below!

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