Category Archives: Michael Sifeldeen

Someone’s In Big Trouba

Okay, before you beat me up and take my lunch money for that pun that doesn’t even really work if you read it out loud, let’s just talk about a few things. A recap, if you will, of a rather eventful few days at a point in the offseason not really close to any major events, when we as hockey writers have to just take it upon ourselves to manufacture controversy wherever we can. I will gladly shoulder that burden.

Oh hey, Sexbom
  • By now, we’re all painfully aware of the comments made by Klefbom in regard to Hall and his play against tough competition, and how it was in all likelihood someone in the Oilers organization who made him “clarify” those comments the next morning, when they became a whole lot more politically correct and a whole lot less about Hall
  • Tyson Barrie is going to be an Avalanche… Avalancher?.. for the foreseeable future and not, in fact, an Oiler. Boo-urns.
  • Jacob Trouba and Winnipeg management are “far apart on money, term, and usage”, according to comments made by TSN’s Gary Lawless on “That’s Hockey” on Tuesday

But what does it all mean, man?

Well, a few things, maybe:

  • The Cubs are still not going to win the World Series
  • If one more goddamn Pidgey breaks out of one of my pokeballs, I’m deleting Pokémon Go for good
  • Maybe Klefbom gets traded to Winnipeg for Trouba?

I know, I know, that’s ridiculous. I’ll never delete Pokémon Go. So let’s talk about why the Oilers and the Jets do this trade.

Anyone who’s been paying attention the last few years knows that Peter Chiarelli absolutely does not care at all about your opinion when it comes to who he gets rid of from an organization. Phil Kessel, Tyler Seguin, and Taylor Hall can all attest to that. He also has no time for guys who he feels are sources of “character problems” inside or outside the locker room. Do Klef’s comments put him firmly on Chia’s shit list? Who knows. But if the rumours are true that he was the one who got on the phone and laid down the law, you’ve got to think there’s tension there.

Enter, the Winnipeg Jets and their inability to retain young talent long-term. There’s an argument to be made that the Jets are under-utilizing one of their best defensive assets, and it’s probably pissing him off, especially if they’re trying to lowball him on his well-earned bridge contract. Jacob is watching Dustin “The Brandon Davidson Killer” Byfuglien lumber around with a $7.6M contract until 2021 and he wants to get his, too. I reckon he’s asking for something like a $6Mx4 and guaranteed PP minutes, and the Jets don’t want to pony up just yet, on term or price.

I hate this guy

Maybe a guy like Klefbom, locked in at under $4.2M for the next 6 seasons looks pretty appealing to Winnipeg right now. Maybe the Oilers take a shot on Trouba (who is pretty much a known quantity at this point, who stays healthier than poor Klef has historically) and give him the $6M he wants for a few years. We’ll be shedding some anchors soon with all the money tied up in Ference and Nikitin, and we have almost $8.5M in cap space left as it is. Woodguy (one half of the very cool WoodMoney stat co-created by BLH’s own G Money) loves the guy, and he’s a lot smarter than me and has the fancystats to prove what an asset Trouba would be. The Oilers so desperately need defencemen who consistently maintain possession and drive offense, which is Jacob’s specialty. Now, that’s not to say the numbers indicate that Klefbom doesn’t do that — because he definitely does — but what I’m saying is that we wouldn’t necessarily miss him all that much. (I mean, I would miss just looking at him at the very least, and these top Google suggestions would seem to indicate the Edmonton area would share my pain.)

 

But we’ll plop BDavey on the top line on Larsson’s wing and let them just be awesome and rock solid together and out-Corsi everyone in the Pacific. Look at what it does to our defensive lineups:

Davidson – Larsson
Sekera- Trouba
Nurse – Fayne/Oesterle

Holy smokes, right? That’s an objectively awesome defensive lineup. And cheap, too! Dare I say it, that’s a playoff d-core.

And all because Klefbom shot his mouth off a bit to the Swedish press. It sure is nice here in perpetual optimism land, where the glass is always half full and this year is always our year!

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The Oilers’ 2016-17 Bottom Pairing: The Last Line of Defence

I know what you’re thinking: the Oilers blogosphere definitely needs another article about our defensive situation. But mostly, those articles have been focused on the addition of our new Swedish stud (yes, I’m calling him a stud already) Adam Larsson, and how the “upper echelons” of the d-core will look going forward. I don’t think there’s too much debate left about what our top-2 looks like next season. Oscar Klefbom and Adam Larsson should have no problem anchoring our back-end for many years to come. (Provided they both stay healthy, of course. #PrayForKlefbomsFoot.)

Perhaps even the top-4 isn’t too hard to predict, either. Andrej Sekera’s numbers proved last season that he’s a perfectly serviceable top-4 d-man who, through necessity, was pushed into a top-2 role. He also had a penchant for scoring cool O-ver-TIIIIIIME winners. His individual production wasn’t anything to write home about in general, really, but his shot generation and productive possession was fantastic (RelCF/60: 3.95, and RelCD/60: 3.36 respectively). So that’s the left side shored up. As far as the right side muddle pair goes, there are about 3.625 million reasons why one would reasonably expect Mark Fayne to live there. According to the numbers, though, I firmly expect Brandon Davidson to be the guy.

Can you see any category in which Mark Fayne is more clearly a top-4 defenceman than Brandon Davidson? I’m squinting real hard and I just can’t do it. In fact, the harder I look, the more I see Davidson hitting top-pairing status sooner rather than later if his trajectory even kind of holds course.

So who does that leave us with for the bottom pair? Fayne, obviously, unfortunately. I don’t really like the guy, and I think he’s unforgivingly overpaid, but he’s not useless, and I’m sure I’ll end up eating my words once he starts only taking up bottom-pairing minutes. He’ll probably pull a Jultz and end up playing half-decently. (This just in: defencemen look better with limited minutes and when playing within their skill role, not being force-fed minutes because of injuries and wishful thinking. More at 12.) Fayne won’t be putting up big numbers; he’s a shutdown guy through and through. But his shot suppression is workable at a RelCA/60 of -0.73, and he has the years of experience to know basically where he should be most of the time.

And for the left side? I’m throwing my lot in with Jordan Oesterle. There’s a common school of thought in creating defensive pairings that the limitations of particular defenders should compliment each other. In this case, Oesterle’s offence shows incredible promise (with admittedly a smallish sample size) in individual production (his PP/60 is 0.68) and productive possession (RelCD/60 of 4.61). He sits a full 2 points higher in CF% (47), and has a relative WOWY spread of only -2% rather than -5%, when compared with Darnell Nurse and Griffin Reinhart. We saw at the end of last season how composed Oesterle looked in his first passes and zone exits, and at least to my eyes, he never really looked out of his element in whatever situation in which TMac placed him.

Where does this leave Darnell Nurse and Griffin Reinhart? Nursey I’d like to see have a full season or two unencumbered by NHL duties in the A, bulking up his tall frame, playing tough minutes, and refining the specifics of his game. He needs to decide just what kind of a defenceman he’s going to be. We saw him last season toy around with a quick, attacking defensive style, taking it upon himself to carry pucks deep and try to create offence. We saw him go the goon route and pretty convincingly beat the shit out of a few unfortunate opposition tough guys. Can he be all of it? Man, I hope so! He’s got all the tools and seemingly all the drive and desire in the world to do it. But he’s never going to be able to get there if he’s being used up with ridiculous minutes and being put in situations no reasonable first-or-second-year d-man really should be.

As for Griffin, I don’t even know, guys. He’s just… not very good… at the hockeys. Maybe he has big potential, maybe he doesn’t. But I’d rather see the Oilers organization focus their growth and development efforts into their young guns like Davidson, Oesterle, Nurse, and Bear who have at least shown flashes of brilliance in some category or another, rather than a guy who we only ever hear about having potential.

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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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The 411 on the Bottom-6

Hendy’s balls got rung vs. Dallas

Much has been made this offseason of what the Edmonton Oilers’ defensive pairings will look like in 2016-17. Not as much has been said of where we are in terms of offensive depth. Who plays on the bottom-6 this season? Read on for a whole bunch of cool numbers and speculation, and also to ultimately find out that I don’t really know.

But Bob Stauffer might! Radio analyst, prolific Twitter tease, and most notably known as the voice of the Oilers on Edmonton’s talk radio network, 630 CHED. Scratch that: Bob Stauffer has recently been most notably known as the guy who totally called that we’d be trading for Adam Larsson on Oilers Now a full day before it happened.

Stauffer is today undoubtedly not only one of the most connected hockey insiders in Edmonton, but in the NHL proper. Historically, most of his predictions are spot-on. So what does ol’ Bob have to say about my favourite little prospect centerman Drake Caggiula?

Ooh! Well, that’s promising. Seems like these days, you don’t get a second look in E-town unless you’re 6’3 200+ or your name starts with Connor.

Sorry, excuse me. I’m trying to write about Caggiula right now and what I’m actually doing is watching this just silly goal over and over. Partake in its glory with me for a moment:

Thanks for indulging me. Now, back to mature things like numbers and line combos. Ok, so with this information from Stauffer, and if Dangling Drake (pretend that’s a good nickname) truly is ready for 3rd-line C at some point in 2016, what does the Oilers’ bottom-6 look like?

To me, we have to ask ourselves a couple basic questions right off the bat:

  1. Is Leon Draisaitl going to play on Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ wing at the start of the season? My gut says yes. They had undeniable chemistry together at the end of last season, and Leon belongs in the top-6 playing with top talent, not trying to carry the bottom-6 into the offensive zone on his back. This leaves McDavid and RNH quarterbacking the top two lines for the foreseeable future.
  2. The second and more speculative question is this: is Drake Caggiula a better hockey player than current bottom-6 centermen Mark Letestu or Anton Lander? Again, I think the answer is yes, and I’m going to use a few advanced stats to try to illustrate why I’m cautiously optimistic that we could be a better hockey team with Drake and sans one of Mark/Anton.

I picked iCorsi/60 (the number of shots + shot attempts that missed or were blocked that each individual takes per 60 minutes), G/60 (individual goals per 60 minutes), and A/60 (individual assists per 60 minutes) because I am but a lowly arts graduate and those are the ones that I understand (all of these stats are from the 2015-16 season at even strength). I will use Nuge as a benchmark because he’s the centreman most immediately higher on the Oilers’ depth chart with statistical history than the men we’re discussing.

iCorsi/60

G/60

A/60

RNH

11.09

0.45

0.91

Letestu

8.27

0.27

0.34

Lander

8.5

0.11

0.22

As expected, the Nuge runs away in every category. That’s why he’s considered one of the premier two-way top-6 forwards in the league. Letestu and Lander both sit around 2.5-3 points off in the iCorsi/60 category. Which maybe doesn’t seem like much, but I am assured it’s statistically significant. They’re nowhere close in goals or assists per 60, with Lander especially coming off looking bad on paper. Another important thing to consider when looking at these guys’ numbers is that Letestu has never cracked 34 points in a complete NHL season, and Lander never more than 18. RNH averages mid-50s in points over a season’s length. Obviously, Drake Caggiula is not Ryan Nugent-Hopkins. No one expects him to be, and people aren’t really projecting him to play the kind of game RNH has become known for over his 5 seasons in the big show. But can he be half as good? Because if he’s even half as good as RNH in assists per hour, he’s miles ahead of Letestu and Lander. If he’s on the ice for two less Corsi events per hour than RNH, he’s miles ahead of Letstu and Lander.

Despite everything I just said, I like Mark Letestu. Good Alberta boy! I think he’s a character guy who shows up, wins faceoffs, and generally isn’t a liability on the ice. He looks good with Hendricks alongside him, and Pakarinen showed last season that he can play with basically anyone on the current Oilers roster and not be out of place. I don’t have anything against Anton Lander, but I don’t think he makes the opening day roster if Caggiula can show he isn’t incompetent in the circle, because that’s really the only thing Anton has going for him as it stands. To me, there isn’t anything in the playing style or statistics (junior or professional) of Letestu or Lander that indicates they’re significantly more effective offensively or defensively than Caggiula projects to be. Drake hasn’t played minute-one of a professional game, though, so I could also prove to be completely wrong. But I really can’t see Lander coming into the fall looking shinier than Caggiula. Can you?

That’s a whole lot of speculation, isn’t it? Here’s some more. To me, here are the Oilers’ likely line combinations in the fall:

Lucic – McDavid – Eberle/Puljujarvi

Maroon – RNH – Draisaitl/Puljujarvi

Pouliot – Caggiula – Kassian/Yakupov

Hendricks – Letestu – Pakarinen/Yakupov

Or to put it another way, I have no idea where the hell Yakupov fits into the lineup next year. We saw that he looks great next to McDavid, but that doesn’t really mean anything because an orange traffic cone looks good next to McDavid. I feel that a small, quick guy like Caggiula probably should have a big goon like Kassian on his right to keep the other teams’ bottom-6 from getting any ideas, and a consistent grinder like Pouliot on his left to make space in front of the net and generally be ready for setups via Drake’s nifty hands. We saw that Pouliot was capable of at least that much last season.

Clearly the only option to make my roster combination chart not look so foolish is for Peter Chiarelli to package up a right-winger who isn’t Finnish with a pick and a prospect for Tyson Barrie. Cool? Cool. Thanks, Chia. Thanks, Sakic. Goodnight sun, goodnight moon. May visions of sugar plums and Stanley Cups dance through your heads, fellow Beer League Heroes.

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