Category Archives: Trades

Edmonton Oilers: Would You Make This Swap?

There are reports out of Russia this morning that New Jersey Devils RFA Pavel Zacha has agreed to terms with KHL club Avangard Omsk. Note though that no signing has been reported yet, just an agreement to terms. The club itself has distanced itself from the news and claimed it to be premature.

In the event that Zacha does actually sign with Avangard, he will not be able to return to the NHL until the 2020/21 season as NHL-out clauses are forbidden in the KHL.

You’re right, this has nothing to do with the Edmonton Oilers except for the droves of media and fans that have already jumped on the Jesse Puljujarvi for Zacha train… Would you make that deal? I sure wouldn’t.

Zacha was a fine player, if not a bit overhyped, in the OHL with Sarnia back in 2014/15 and 2015/16, but like Puljujarvi, he was rushed a bit. In his draft plus one season, he played for New Jersey and managed to scrounge up 24pts in 70 games. In the following two seasons, he’s only managed to increase his production per year by one point (25) and in just this last campaign, he was sent to the AHL for four games where he put up five assists in five games. Getting sent to the minors in year three after two years in the NHL full-time can’t be a great sign, can it?

Personally, I don’t think the big Czech has the ceiling that Puljujarvi has. He looks like he could be a solid 3rd line player who contributes on the penalty kill. He’s had trouble staying healthy so far as well with seasons of 70, 69, and 61 games played. I don’t know, maybe he’s like Pulju in that he’s been mishandled so far and there’s something more. I just don’t see it right now.

If I’m dealing Puljujarvi to NJ, I want someone back who can score. Not another body to make an already packed bottom-6 even more congested. Maybe the Oilers put him in a package to get Taylor Hall? I don’t know.

A Plan I’ve Seen Before

Oilers GM Ken Holland has been accruing a massive amount of veteran players on 1-yr deals this off-season and it sort of reminds me of how the Maple Leafs have done business of recent. Basically signing cheap players for the year and then pilfering them off for draft picks at the deadline. The key being that those players were coming from Europe but could still be sent to the AHL or they were veteran NHLers that would interest NHL teams looking for depth on their playoff run.

Given that the 2020 NHL entry draft is friggin’ loaded, is this the plan for the Oilers? They’ve got fourteen players on expiring contracts between the big club and their AHL affiliate. It makes perfect sense to play the season out, deal as many of those expiring contracts away at the deadline and then give the kids in Bakersfield a run out to end the year.

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Edmonton Oilers: Pretty Obvious Why Puljujarvi Wants Out

Whilst I’ve always been of the opinion that this has been agent-driven, the trade request has finally come out of Jesse Puljujarvi’s mouth and therefore I’m a bit disappointed it has come to this. The Cult of Hockey has a good post out now on this whole situation and a bit of insider info on the drama that I’ll get to later, but first I just want to talk about it from a different point of view.

I think that we need to take what we get with a grain of salt. At the moment, we’re getting a ton of coverage from the Oilers side of things or perhaps more the “local” side of things. I’m of the belief that most of what we’re hearing is coming from a former employee of the club, but I’ve got no proof to give you on that. It’s just a hunch. I think that the media machine is in full character assassination mode at this point (you’ll see on that later) and Jesse’s camp is unable to fire back. The people who are leaking the info know this and are taking the opportunity to get their shots in.

That being said, I don’t think any of this is coming from Ken Holland or Dave Tippett. As far as I understand, they’ve told Jesse that he has a spot on this roster if he comes back. NOT come back and earn it or come back and compete for it. It’s yours to lose… And yet, he still won’t back down from his request…

Now, because Edmonton is so “dedicated” to the Oilers, we’ve got a weekly update on this drama but it’s only coming from one source… Is that fair? Is it okay that we only get one party’s perspective? Because what it’s doing is making Jesse look like an asshole while the team is getting away unscathed.

I might be wasting my time because most of the fanbase is going to take the word of the media, but I really feel like things have to be said.

First off, the “trade request” translation from Jouni Nieminen might be a problem. I talked to a source out of Finland and was told this,

Translations between English and Finnish are hard and Finns speak so literal and blunt, even if they don’t mean to be. There are conditional words that are built into the language, so in English they don’t translate except as the more definitive version of the word being used. For example, deal and contract, there’s a distinction there, right? And in Jesse’s quote, he said, I’d like to, not, I will or I want; but the translation is the same unless you can see the changed form of the verb. The point is, the subtlety is lost. My opinion? I think he was stating his wishes and not making demands. 

Translating from one language to another is always a pain in the ass no matter the language and we have to be careful when we do that (I’m talking from experience) and speaking as someone who lives in a non-English environment, when someone says something to you and you think you’ve got it but you’re not 100% sure, you tend to just go with it instead of asking the person you’re talking with to repeat what they’ve just said. Could that be construed as “arrogance” or “stubbornness”? Probably, but is that the first place you’d jump to? Doubtful. How many times does it have to happen before you’ve decided that you’ve done all you can and now the problem lies with the other person?

I feel that everyone is a teacher in one way or another and at one time or another and so I think I can safely say that everybody has had an experience giving instructions and not having the message get through. It really relies on your ability to communicate, doesn’t it? So why couldn’t experienced coaches like Todd McLellan, Glen Gulutzan, Manny Viveiros, and Ken Hitchcock get through to Pulju BUT Jay Woodcroft could? Who was really out there building Jesse’s confidence in a meaningful manner?

A new season means a new design! Click the image above to get the new Pulju shirt!

When did this become more about portraying a 21-year-old in such a negative light because someone out there needs the validation that it wasn’t them instead of saying that the relationship is fractured and it’s unrepairable but at least everyone can amicably go their own way…

There’s a lack of accountability coming from the organization and I suppose we shouldn’t be surprised. When’s the last time an NHL club went public and said they were wrong in the development of a player?

I was passed along a message from a prominent NHL European head scout that basically said there are concerns about how much damage has been done to Jesse in the past three years. The note said that nobody is worried about his talent, it’s massive and that NHL execs are more fearful about what’s been done to him mentally. Adding to that, they felt that this was always going to be the thing with Jesse, how would he adjust to the game from where he’d been.

Puljujarvi and his agent took a wrong turn when they decided to go public (both times) instead of keeping quiet. They don’t have the ability to fight back in an insular market like Edmonton where the fans hate the media but eat every word they say.

The Latest from The Cult of Hockey

I have a great deal of respect for Kurt Leavins and the guys at The Cult of Hockey. I read all of their posts and listen to all of the podcasts. That said, I’m having a hard time with Mr. Leavins’ latest and so I’d like to comment on a few of the things said. You can read his article here.

While I have written and still think it’s possible Puljujarvi will be in camp this Fall, the bigger question has really become: How did we get to this point? There’s no question the organization has made its share of mistakes in developing the player.

I think it’s only fair to point out that Kurt isn’t coming at this from one side and that he’s just reporting what he’s been told. So if we’re going to have any negative feelings, they should be directed at the person who we think is providing him the info.

-It has been described to me by multiple sources close to the team how Todd McLellan invested hours upon hours into trying to un-lock Puljujarvi when he first arrived in Edmonton. One of Todd’s frustrations was Jesse’s inconsistency in getting to the net. There, the player’s size & skill combination could be a real factor. When Puljujarvi would do this and was successful Todd would not miss the opportunity to praise him. He would point out how positioning on the play was critical. But then the next shift Puljujarvi would stubbornly appear back on the perimeter again. Todd got frustrated.

Why in the world would McLellan be trying to change this kid’s game? Basically telling him, “What worked for you in Finland, ain’t gonna work in the NHL son.” Bob Stauffer has spoken to this sort of thing in the past, right? Breaking a player down and building him back up. Could you imagine if someone took a former World Junior MVP and said to him that his game, the style of play that got him to where he is today, won’t work and he’ll have to transform it?

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Can you imagine an 18-year-old player having inconsistencies in his game? Shocking. I know.

The Oilers gave Jesse 28 games as a very young teenager before sending him to Bakersfield where he was nearly a point-per-game player on a team with no real offensive talent to play with. Even then, his coach was benching him for “inconsistencies”.

What is it that Gerrard Gallant said about accountability?

“It’s a game of mistakes. You’re not going to be perfect every time you’re on the ice, and then when mistakes happen, you forget about them and you move on… I’m not holding my players accountable for making mistakes. If you worry about making mistakes, you’re not going to play a good game. I want you going out there and thinking you’re gonna make the good plays and do the right things on the ice. So don’t worry about your mistakes.”

Can you imagine if coaching greats like Todd McLellan and Ken Hitchcock had adhered to that philosophy where Jesse would be today?

-Part of McLellan’s struggle was that he was often in the position of being “the bad cop” on the staff. Perhaps a good complimentary step would be to assign a coach to him whose job would be to “catch Jesse doing things right”? So this past fall Manny Viveiros was brought in. One of his key assignments was to attach himself to the young Finn which he did. But Manny didn’t even make as much progress as McLellan had. And remember: Viveiros has a reputation of being able to connect with today’s player. Observers say it was if advice would go in one ear…and right out the other.

Two things here,

  • I thought Viveiros was brought in to help with the PP (Obviously not).
  • At what point was Viveiros assigned to Jesse? Was it before or after Pulju’s hips started to bother him? Was Jesse his only assignment? What kind of methods were used to attempt to “get through” to him?

Is it possible that 98 had already checked out by the time that Manny was given this task? Additionally, is it out of the realm of possibility that getting through to kids in junior and the NHL are two completely different balls of yarn?

-New head coach Ken Hitchcock was so confident that he had the answer he reversed a decision to have Puljujarvi spend the rest of the season in Bakersfield. Much to the consternation and confusion of the Puljujarvi camp, the Oilers recalled him yet again. Hitchcock is the very personification of stubborn when it comes to insisting that players play for him a certain way, especially without the puck. But as it turned out Hitch (the 2nd winningest coach in NHL history) didn’t have the keys to the car, either. The winger’s TOI over his last 10 games topped 10 minutes only 3 times. 3 other times it fell into the single digits. Yes, the bad hip also contributed to that.

What a mistake this was… Everything was going so smoothly at that point too. It wasn’t long after this that the trade rumblings started to come out…

So we go from “bad cop” McLellan to “tyrant” Hitchcock in an attempt to “unlock” Jesse? What in Sam’s Hell is going on? How does this line of thinking even make sense? Sure, the “good cop” routine didn’t pan out (allegedly) but what about Jesse’s time in the AHL said to anybody that he should be recalled let alone recalled then given a game to show what he’s got, and then thrown back to the bottom-6?

Puljujarvi has been one of the team’s best forecheckers since he landed in Edmonton and yet, the team never capitalized on his reach and speed. Instead, they wanted him to “grind” better or be a better net=front presence.

-Meanwhile, though all of the above, his teammates struggled to connect with him on the ice. Often, especially on the power play, Puljujarvi would repeatedly head to the wrong spot. He would literally bump into them. When they would try to explain it to him their words of advice seemed to fall flat. Was he not listening…or not agreeing? Eventually, although none of these players would ever dream of saying this in public…I am made to understand that they quietly asked just not to play with him anymore. There’s no suggestion they disliked him as a guy. Just that he was just hard to play with.

This is a massive problem with me and it speaks to the lack of proper leadership on the team. A leader doesn’t go to the person above him and say that it’s not working out with a teammate on the ice. If anything everybody tries to find a way to make things work out. You do what it takes until it works.

John Shannon spoke to this earlier in the year, hinting that Connor and Leon didn’t want to play with Jesse and Bob Stauffer has said on countless occasions that Pulju didn’t build up enough credit with his teammates.

Is it possible that Jesse’s teammates’ words fell flat because he’d heard them talking smack about him? And boo hoo, cry me $20M worth of tears. Jesse’s hard to play with. Give me a bloody break! Who sounds like the entitled ones now?

Now how would you feel if you were making strides with a teammate and things were going really well, the confidence was building, the trust was returning and then seeing that teammate traded? How would your trust level fluctuate? How would you feel if you just wanted to get an opportunity to show what you have but your other teammates have gone behind your back to tell the coach not to give that to you? That’s some high school behavior right there.

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This team cannot have the young stars calling the shots, I don’t care who stands at the blueline together before each game. They’ve got to bring in a veteran player who can still play and wouldn’t have a problem telling others how he sees things.

That’s where it went wrong with Lucic’s “leadership”. As soon as he lost his hands, he lost his clout. I’m sure the players still respected Milan, but it’s not the same as having an older player who can still produce AND show the young leaders how it’s done, right? These are the days I really wish the Oilers could’ve secured Jaromir Jagr’s signature back in the day… He’s exactly the kind of player I’m talking about. Too bad Calgary ruined his last year in the NHL…

Did you know that Puljujarvi played over 30% of his PP TOI last season in the first month of the year and over 30% of that TOI was spent in game 1 versus NJ. So what I’m wondering is where these occasions are that we’re being told about when he wasn’t in the right position? Pundits say it happened, but I never hear when or during which game. I feel like they weren’t last year because we’ve been hearing about them since his rookie season and if the coaching staff was using those instances from year one as an excuse not to play him on the PP in year three, that’s bullshit. I can’t honestly see that being the case, but are we then blaming the rink size or the language barrier here or what?

Did Jesse perhaps just not understand? I think we’d all have time for that issue, right? Well…there has been a lot of ink spilled on Puljujarvi’s perceived language barrier. However, one particular person who was in that dressing room last season was asked about that very factor, and he answered:

“No, he knows way more that he lets on”.

That same person (who shall remain anonymous) was then asked, “So what’s the problem with Jesse, really”?

The answer, shrugged back, was once again: “He’s just stubborn”.

Huh. You don’t say…

Some folks are going to say this quote came from Connor McDavid, but it didn’t. I can assure you of that. It probably would’ve come from someone who Jesse would’ve spent actual time with.

Say, have you ever met a 20-year-old who has been through what Jesse has that wasn’t stubborn?

I’ve heard that Leon used to get pretty pouty when he wasn’t playing with Connor. I don’t recall him getting held accountable during those days. Weird because the pouting worked for him, he’s now McDavid’s full-time winger.

I hope for the love of Christ that Holland flips the script on these boys and the media coverage of the team. The culture of all of it is still off in my opinion and we’ll find out this season too. We’ll see who’s racking up points in the garbage games IF there are any and what’s getting reported throughout the season.

So…if you’re a prospect for whom things have just not gone your way (and again, not all his doing by any means) at some point…don’t you figure out that “stubborn” isn’t a trait that is going to do you any favors?

If this isn’t all of his doing, according to the person providing Leavins with this info, I’d sure like to read some reports with as specific examples and quotes from players stating so. Saying the team is on the hook for this debacle.

It’s pretty obvious why Jesse Puljujarvi wants out.

Edmonton Oilers: 2019 Free Agency Day 1 Review + Bob Stauffer’s Jesse Puljujarvi Trade Scenarios

Did you get the feeling that after the Oilers hired Ken Holland to be their new GM that he’d be making big moves right away? Were there any indications that he might try to build up the roster bit by bit instead of blowing it up? Was there anything that he said that lead you to believe that major changes were coming?

I didn’t think so. So why is it that so many people were disappointed yesterday? Holland did do what he said he was going to and that’s to add speed and depth to the bottom-6. So wouldn’t we want to give him some credit there? I’d say it’s looking pretty deep so far. Lots of competition and that’s what we want, right? We don’t want to be gifting AHLers jobs right at the onset of training camp anymore and Holland is doing a pretty decent job of preventing that.

Am I disappointed the Oilers couldn’t get their hands on Gus Nyquist? Sure. But I never really expected him to sign in Edmonton, so I’m pretty meh on it. Besides, there are lots of good free agents still out there and the longer they go without getting a contract, the less they’re more likely to sign for and that would be perfect for Edmonton. Look at this list,

  • Pat Maroon (More on him at the end)
  • Ryan Dzingel
  • Michael Ferland
  • Tomas Vanek
  • Marcus Johansson
  • Jason Pominville
  • Patrik Marleau
  • Joe Thornton
  • Justin Williams
  • Jake Gardiner
  • Derrick Brassard
  • Pontus Aberg
  • Nick Cousins
  • Niklas Kronwall
  • Ben Hutton

Tons of useful players still out there. So don’t fret that Edmonton didn’t make some blockbuster signing on day one of free agency and actually be happy they signed the players they did to short-term cheap deals because it sounds like push will be for the 2020 off-season to make some big moves. You should see the list of players that could be unrestricted

  • Taylor Hall
  • Torey Krug
  • Tyson Barrie
  • Tyler Toffoli
  • Chris Kreider
  • Justin Faulk
  • Sami Vatanen
  • Robin Lehner
  • Brayden Schenn
  • Cody Eakin
  • Charlie Coyle
  • Jaro Halak
  • JG Pageau

Wow! If they make it there, next summer will be HUGE and you’ll really want the Oilers to have a lot of cap-room then.

But let’s talk about the players that Edmonton did sign.

THE NEW GUYS

Mike Smith is a player I did not like at all before yesterday but I’m going to love the shit out of him as an Oiler. “He’s the best puckhandling goalie the Oilers have ever had!” is how one source of mine described him. This is a player who is on the verge of retirement I reckon but he still has some magic left in him. He’ll be a great help to the Oilers locker room and even though he’s coming off his worst season ever, I will overlook that because we don’t judge on one season, right? He has a long stat sheet that’s full of above average numbers that I would prefer to take into consideration when judging the former NHL All-Star and Gold Medal-winning Olympian. For $2M, I’ll take him.

Markus Granlund was described to me by another source out of Vancouver as “someone who plays centre and wing – kills penalties – works hard. Good versatility.” Ken Holland praised him for how professional he is. Now, I’ll be frank here, he’s never stood out to me when the Oilers have played Granlund’s teams in Vancouver or Calgary but if the plan is to improve the PK, then this is a good add. I don’t need anything flashy out of him, but what I do want is a smart player here and someone who is an upgrade on Tobias Rieder.

The Finn averaged 2:22 on the kill for Vancouver last year, so he was a trusted member of the penalty killing crew and he also scored 19 goals spending most of his TOI with Brandon Sutter and Loui Eriksson a couple of seasons back. $1.3M per is a bit high for me, but what are we talking about here? A 3rd liner for under $1.5M is pretty decent in reality, especially if he scores in double digits.

Tomas Jurco used to be a pretty well thought of prospect in the Red Wings system when they had Martin Frk coming and Tomas Tatar. I guess things never really panned out for him as they moved him on to Chicago for a 3rd round pick in the 2017 draft that turned into another well-regarded prospect, Keith Petruzzelli.

Jurco, to me, is another Ty Rattie or Valentin Zykov. The tools are there but something is missing. He’s depth scoring but I’m not sure if he’ll even make it up past the 3rd line in Edmonton. He had a good playoff for Carolina’s farm team in Charlotte mind you, 18pts in 18 games. He’s there to provide competition and as I said above, to make sure the Oilers aren’t rushing teenagers and first-year pros onto an NHL roster.  He could turn out to be this year’s Alex Chiasson if all the stars aligned. 700k? sounds good to me whether he’s getting that in Edmonton or Bakersfield.

Gaetan Haas and Joakim Nygard I have no expectations for. They’ll be who they’ll be but we won’t know that until we see them at training camp and into the exhibition games. One thing I’ve heard folks complaining about online is how he wasn’t even the best player on his team let alone the league he played in and to that I say, it’s not always about the stats… Sometimes the skill set and fit for the team is more important. Also, look at where Melker Karlsson sat on his team’s scoring the year before San Jose brought him over. Edmonton just needs some players who will work their asses off, play smart, and maybe contribute on the scoreboard from time to time. You never know with these guys, right? I mean, we’re not talking about 21-year-old kids coming over. Both Haas and Nygard are closer to thirty than twenty-one years old.

A new season means a new design! Click the image above to get the new Pulju shirt!

THE RE-SIGNINGS

Alex Chiasson is a player I’m glad the Oilers could re-sign. I like the term ($2.15M) and the length of the deal (two years). He’s kind of like an introverted Pat Maroon. He works his butt off, he sticks up for his teammates, he gets to the mucky areas, he stands in front of the goalie and actually screens him, plus he’s sneaky good at finding the open space for a scoring chance. He is streaky though, so fans have to come to grips with that, but he scored over 20 goals last season and Edmonton really needs as many 20 goal scorers as they can get.

Jujhar Khaira, I still don’t know what to figure about him. I reckon at $1.2M over the next two campaigns, he’ll be worth his pay. My friend Jeremy says JJ is working VERY hard this off-season to prove to the Oilers that he’s ready to take the next step and solidify his spot on the team. Now, be that as a left-winger or a centreman, that remains to be seen, but there are a couple of things I really enjoy about JJ’s game,

  • He’s tough as nails and already has a reputation league-wide as someone not to mess with. Cross-checking that one dman in the neck last season probably helped that a bit too.
  • He’s so powerful when he gets the puck. I really like watching him exit the D-zone with the puck.
  • He’s got pretty good hands for a man his size.
What’s interesting about these re-signings is that they’re completely moveable in the event that the Oilers are out of the playoff race again next season, they can move Chiasson and/or Khaira to a team that wants to “beef up” for their club for the playoffs.As we move deeper into the off-season, I think it would benefit Edmonton to bide their time and let the other teams blow up their cap-space. By the time training camp is ending, there’ll be some players who hit the waiver wire that might be of interest to the Oilers and it behooves them to have cap space available just in case a trade needs to be made or a player claimed.

Are the Oilers a better team today than they were yesterday? I’d say yes because they added some much-needed depth to their team and they didn’t sacrifice much to do it. Could they get better before game one of the 2019/20 season? Absolutely. I expect them to.

The fact remains though, the Oilers still need a player on their roster who can play in the top-6. I was told that they’re working on two deals, one that could bring in a forward and a defenseman and one that would bring in two forwards. So we’ll have to wait and see if that pans out and who it’ll entail.

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JESSE PULJUJARVI/MILAN LUCIC

Bob Stauffer had quite a bit to say on the topic of Looch and Pulju during his free agency coverage.

“I can see Milan Lucic being moved in the next three weeks.”

The time frame here is important because Milan hasn’t had his bonus paid out to him yet, that’ll happen in the next three weeks… So we’ll have to wait on this one for a bit.

Stauffer also wondered what might shake out of NY with the Panarin signing… Brought up Kreider and wondered about Puljujarvi possibly bringing in a $3M-$4M player to play in the top-6.

I think Kreider would be a fine addition but he only has one year left on his contract and surely he’ll be looking for mega-bucks next summer. You’d have to think that the Rangers wouldn’t just take Puljujarvi straight across for Kreider, right?

“Could you get Rust out of PIT, could you get Heinen out of BOS?”

I believe PIT already turned down the Rust for Pulju offer but it could be revisited at some point. As for Heinen, his point totals went down this season for Boston by 13 points and he only managed 8pts in the playoffs. I don’t think that’s the kind of return that would “help” the Oilers. Rust’s point totals weren’t much better but he scored 18 goals. Also, he’s a bit more rounded out and experienced than Heinen.

For the second show in a row, a Puljujarvi for Erik Haula trade hypothetical was proposed by Stauffer. His reasoning was that if Carolina matches the Sebastien Aho offer-sheet, that might put them a couple million over their self-imposed salary cap and since Haula makes $2.75M, why not swap Haula’s contract for Puljujarvi’s? If Jesse were to just accept the qualifying offer, it’d be under half of what Haula makes and that might make it more palpable for Tom Dundon.

I still think that Pulju is going to an East coast team and I threw out five teams that might have or have had an interest in Puljujarvi (BOS, NYR, NYI, NJ, TB). Are there any top-6/9 forwards on those teams that could shake out or some good prospects?

  • BOS – Maybe I’d look at Jakub Lauko or Jack Studnicka if I were to go after prospects. If I wanted roster players, I’d ask around Charlie Coyle or Torey Krug and expand the trade a bit. Boston has some major players that need resigning, most notably Charlie MacAvoy and Brandon Carlo.
  • NYR – I know the Oilers were looking at Jesper Fast and Vlad Namestnikov in the past, would they still hold interest for Holland? Pavel Buchnevich is another name that I’m not too sure about in New York. He’s 24, an RFA, and has put up two really productive seasons in a row. My feeling is that he’d be a coveted player for New York but I’m just not sure they’re convinced he’s part of their future. That said, it’d take more than Puljujarvi to pry him out of the Big Apple. Maybe we have a friend in NYC that could help facilitate things?
  • NYI – The Islanders have a few youngsters who are taking their time developing. Michael Dal Colle, Josh Ho-Sang, Keifer Bellows, and Oliver Wahlstrom all have yet to realize their potential for the Big Lou’s team. Ho-Sang is probably the readiest but he’s got some attitude problems. As for the other three, they were great scorers before they turned pro… Could the Oilers help them to bring it out at the NHL Level? They wouldn’t be hurt the cap much.
  • NJ – I like Pavel Zacha here. He’s another player who is having a difficult time finding traction in the NHL but I like his size and his skill set. We know he’s good for 25pts because in his three seasons in NJ he’s never scored less than 24 and no more than 25. The former 6th overall pick in the McDavid draft hasn’t played more than 70 games either though… So there’s that to consider.
  • TB – Julien Brisbois needs to move some salary and pick up nothing in return so that they can re-sign Brayden Point. So I think the Oilers should target Tyler Johnson and his $5M contract. If they did get him, they’d have their own cap problems to deal with but at least the top-6 would have proper depth and time to relieve that pressure.

But there’s a new option as well. If Carolina lets Aho walk to MTL, could that be a destination for Puljujarvi? He could get back together with Aho and between those two and Kotkaniemi be quite the handful… Perhaps Charles Hudon, Joel Armia, or Artturi Lehkonen would be part of the ask.

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OTHER NOTES

  • As I reported before Mark Spector (hehe), the Oilers do have interest in Pat Maroon BUT he might be looking for term that Edmonton might not be able to give him. That said, in the event that the Oilers do sign him, they could reunite the Maroon/McDavid/Draisaitl line and bump Kassian down. It would mark the end of the Milan Lucic era.
  • If Carolina matches Aho’s offer sheet, it wouldn’t surprise me if Carolina and Edmonton got together NEXT summer to make a deal that would include Ryan Nugent-Hopkins going to the Hurricanes and Aho to Edmonton. This was suggested on Oilers Now and endorsed by Bob Stauffer.

Edmonton Oilers: Bob Stauffer On the Potential Return for Jesse Puljujarvi

Every day it’s going to be touch and go with regards to my favorite Finnish Oiler, Jesse Puljujarvi, isn’t it? Yesterday morning on Oilers Now, after opening the show up with “Rock You Like a Hurricane” (can you lay it on any thicker Bob?), Bob Stauffer really sort of laid out what the possible return for Pulju might be in a trade and went as far as to explain why in detail. I’ll put the transcriptions below so you don’t have to chase down the audio.

Well, here’s where we’re kind of at right now. Logic dictates, the teams that are interested in JP, they’ve probably let the Oilers know at this stage because they probably want to have things in place by July 1st.

Let’s say you have a RFA forward that’s played roughly the same amount of games as Puljujarvi, Puljujarvi by the way is an RFA as well, and you’re thinking, “You know what? We think Puljujarvi has a higher upside than our guy and our guy is probably going to be required to be paid $1.75M-$2.25M. Maybe we bring Puljujarvi in and we just qualify him and he gets, you know, 10% bump on 925k base, which would take him just over a million bucks.”

You’re going to need to know that before you dip into free agency. Mmmkay? If you’re the Oilers, you’re going to want to know what you’re getting back for Puljujarvi and I would suggest to you that there’s multiple teams that are in on him, Ok? And if you’re Edmonton, you’re going, “Are we getting back a guy that is $2M-$2.5M, cause if we do get that guy back; that might take us out of the mix of some potential mid-range free agents that we’re looking at up front. 

Clearly the Oilers have experienced defensemen. They’ve got a plethora now, especially with the addition of Broberg, of some young “D” that are coming. It’s probably the deepest part of the organization, Evan Bouchard, Broberg, Dmitri Samorukov. Caleb Jones, Ethan Bear, William Lagesson… Not out of the realm of possibilities in three years from now, three or four of those guys could be in the Oilers defense moving forward. 

So why not use one as a sweetener in a trade to open up some cap space?

But up front there’s movement that’s potentially available. I put a tweet out last week believing the Oilers could spend $2.5M-$3M, maybe $3.5M at the high-end on one forward and then sign a couple other forwards one 1-way deals at like 800k. So, we mentioned Brett Connolly yesterday on Twitter. Could he get $4M somewhere? He might. I’d have to talk to Gerry Johannson about that. In a perfect world in Edmonton, if he could get him at $3Mx3, he might make sense. I’m just not convinced they can get him at that price point. 

Some names out there, assuming that maybe a guy like Brett Ritchie doesn’t get qualified out of Dallas, he was making $1.75M last year… Daniel Carr was a free agent, he is a UFA by the way, Ritchie an RFA. Maybe those are guys you can get in the 800k to $1M range. In fact, I’m sure you could if you offered them a 1-way deal.

You know… If you deal Kris Russell out, that will open up a significant amount of cap space and then you wouldn’t really have to worry about this sort of thing… The Oilers might even be able to sign TWO mid-range free agents. Imagine that! Picking up Joonas Donskoi AND Brett Connolly… Crazy, right?

So time will tell on that front, but you need to know what you’re going to get back. An argument could be made what makes the most sense for Edmonton is a guy who has spent the last couple of seasons in the minors and is ready to take the next step. So, for the sake of argument, we’ve mentioned Julien Gauthier out of Carolina. Sebastian Aho is with the Carolina Hurricanes, Gerry Johannson is gonna be busy cause he’s got Aho and Brayden Point and those guys are huge players for the organizations they’re with. My guess is with Sebastian Aho believes he can make Jesse Puljujarvi a player and if I was Carolina, Tom Dundon, and trust me, it’s Tom Dundon, I would be willing to make that bet. 

The analytics folks are probably just salivating at the idea of buying low on Puljujarvi here and given how involved they are in Carolina, it makes perfect sense why they are getting the push here from the media.

So the Hurricanes look at moving a prospect to Edmonton for Puljujarvi, I’d think they would contemplate that. Would Tampa Bay do it? They have tons of 2nd round and 3rd round players over the last few years contributing on their farm team, they need a younger cheaper guy. Maybe they look at Puljujarvi. People mention Pittsburgh, possibly. And again, what’s the return going to be?

If I’m looking at the Hurricanes farm roster, I would think Janne Kuokkanen or Morgan Geekie would be players worth considering. They’re 5×5 pts/60 are 0.49 and 0.44 respectively, whereas Julien Gauthier’s sits at 0.37. I mean none of them scream “NHL PLAYER!!!” but we are where we are and I can see why Gauthier would stand out. He scored 27 goals and has seen a substantial increase in his production since the season prior, going from 25 points in 2017/18 to 41 in 2018/19. He’s also 6’4″ and 225lbs too.

I don’t really know what Bob’s talking about regarding Tampa’s “tons of 2nd/3rd rounders that have been contributing. Junior scoring sensations Boris Katchouk and Taylor Raddysh have just finished up their rookie seasons in the AHL and combined for 69pts between the two and really their 5×5 pts/60 wasn’t much better than the Canes’ prospects above (0.20 for Katchouk and 0.43 for Raddysh). Alexandre Volkov is another player who might garner interest but you have to wonder after two 40+ point seasons in the AHL, can he take the next step? The oldest “prospect” of the group, Carter Verhaeghe, is the only one producing for Syracuse but he IS an RFA… Over the last four seasons in the AHL, this young man has produced seasons of 15, 29, 48, and 82 points. This past year he had a 5×5 pts/60 of 0.63 but he’s also 23 years old.

A new season means a new design! Click the image above to get the new Pulju shirt!

Bringing us to Pittsburgh. Do they have any RFA prospects? They do, but they spent good chunks of the year with the Pens. Teddy Blueger is a 24-year-old Latvian forward who posted 39pts in 45 games for the Baby Pens last season and had a 5×5 pts/60 of 0.6. He might be tempting. Another player is Zach Ashton-Reese, he was a highly sought after NCAA free agent but has been a bit riddled with injuries in his two seasons with Pittsburgh so far. He did have a cup of coffee in Wilkes-Barre last year, 11 games where he put up 9pts. I watched him a little bit and he’s a thick guy who goes to the dirty areas. He was a really good scorer at the collegiate level but that hasn’t quite translated to the NHL yet.

I just can’t recommend any of these guys I listed in an exchange for Jesse Puljujarvi though. But what about these RFAs?

Again, not my first choices, I’m just trying to do what I can here. Both players haven’t been able to get going at all with their NHL clubs and have spent times in and out of the AHL for the past two or three seasons.

I do think a US market would probably work better for Puljujarvi, I think he needs to be gradually brought along. But to me, the best place, if I was Markus Lehto, the best place I’d be happiest with for Jesse would be Carolina. So we’ll wait and see on that front but it’s my belief that it has to get done in the next 3-4 days IF it’s going to happen. He’s going to be one of the story lines. 

I don’t quite get why Stauffer is saying that Pulju needs to be gradually brought along? Isn’t that part of the reason Jesse doesn’t want to play for the Oilers? Because they’re not giving him the ice-time he thinks he can perform best in?

For Markus Lehto, would he be happiest for himself that Jesse would be playing in Carolina because he has a client there already in Teuvo Teravainen? Jim Rutherford was the GM in Carolina when Lehto was dealing with Teravainen and his issues getting NHL TOI in Chicago, right? What happened there? Chicago needed to unload a contract and Teuvo was included as the sweetener.  Rutherford was also the GM in Pittsburgh when another one of Lehto’s clients, Kasperi Kapanen was having trouble getting traction in that organization and what happened with that? He was the main piece of the trade that brought Phil Kessel to Pittsburgh. So there’s a working relationship between Pittsburgh’s GM and Lehto.

One texter wrote in and in so many words told him how stupid it would be for the Oilers to trade Puljujarvi to the Hurricanes for Julien Gauthier and his reply was, “Well. We’ll have to see.” The writing is pretty much on the wall, eh?

I think for myself, I’m having a hard time trying to nail down the want for Edmonton here. I don’t buy this “cap space” narrative at all from the Oilers end. Move Russell, Lucic, or Sekera with the 1st rounder and Voila! Cap space! Or is it that they want Puljujarvi out? Has it been the organization all along that has been pushing this and Lehto and Jesse simply playing along?

Ken Holland was sounding pretty tough before the draft and now it sounds like the stance has softened which is a bit disconcerting. Now we’re hearing that the returns for JP could be a 2nd round pick or middle-6 winger or an RFA who’s played a similar amount of games to Jesse but yet to break through… It’s all over the place and that screams confusion or misinformation…

The best thing, I think, is for the Oilers to give this the Drouin treatment and maybe wait this out until the week before opening night, see who’s in a tight spot and then try to work out a deal there. Too add to that, Kasperi Kapanen and Teuvo Teravainan have turned out pretty well for their new clubs. That should simply be the expectation for Puljujarvi as well here, and with that, the Oilers had better not be accepting an AHL prospect in return.

Some of you might think that Jesse Puljujarvi stinks. He’s not a good player and he has no value at all and that’s fine. I happen to disagree. He does have value and if he didn’t, “lots and lots of GMs” wouldn’t be calling trying to fleece Holland.

So we wait… Will the Edmonton Oilers continue to trade young players and receive pennies on the dollar or will they flip that script and do something different this time?

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Edmonton Oilers: Puljujarvi’s Agent vs. Ken Holland – Round 1! PLUS the 2019 BLH Mock Draft

Wednesday, Jesse Puljujarvi’s agent, Markus Lehto, sent his third very public shot across the bow of the Edmonton Oilers’ boat using Darren Dreger and Mark Spector. Only this time the message was much more assertive,

“If he doesn’t get traded,” Lehto confirmed, “he will play in Europe next year. He will not play in Edmonton.” – source

When Ken Holland got wind of this, he fired his own shot back,

“At the end of the day, if you can do a deal that makes sense for the Edmonton Oilers, you do it,” said Holland, who spoke on Wednesday morning with Lehto. “If you can’t, you go over (to Europe) and watch him play, and hopefully he scores a lot of goals over there.” – source

Is Markus Lehto slow? He predictably goes to the press again (the draft and the trade deadline being the most popular times for GMs to make moves or plan future moves) to let the entire world know that he wants his client out of Edmonton with not even an ounce of leverage. I mean, is Lehto banking on his previous experiences with Kasperi Kapanen in Pittsburgh and Teuvo Teravainen in Chicago and thinking that this is going to be a piece of cake?

How in the world does he think that strong-arming one of the most experienced GMs in the NHL is going to go here?

Sad to say it, but Pulju’s value couldn’t be any lower right now considering the 7 goals he’s scored in the last 90 games for the Oilers and him coming off of double-hip surgery.

Jess was the 4th overall pick in 2016 and that’s great, but my man hasn’t turned the corner yet. Now, that doesn’t mean he won’t, it just means trading him and getting equal perceived value, won’t be an easy task nor is it even a fair ask.

Mark Spector wrote an article yesterday and he summed my thoughts up perfectly,

It is Lehto’s job to advise the player, but if I sat down next to Puljujarvi, this is what I’d say:

“Jesse, there isn’t a team that wants you to succeed more than the Oilers. They’ve got a high draft pick and a piece of their reputation invested in you. Sure, they mishandled your career by not letting you spend enough time in AHL Bakersfield. But, truth be told, you and your agent didn’t want to go there either, right?

I’m not convinced of this “refusal to go to the AHL” narrative going around. Jesse went down three times in three seasons. To me, that’s quite a bit in today’s age.

“You haven’t played much with Connor McDavid or Leon Draisaitl, or on the powerplay, but in the NHL you earn those prime spots. They don’t just get handed to you because of where you were drafted, most times.

Well, out of around 1000 minutes on the ice, he’s played the most with Milan Lucic and the 2nd most with Connor McDavid…

“Here’s what you should do: Have your agent negotiate a fair two-year deal with the new GM, Ken Holland. He’s an honest guy, and he’s saying you’ll get a full season on the third line, and a chance to learn how to play the NHL game under the new coach, Dave Tippett.

Yes!

“The Oilers are very lean on goal-scoring right-wingers. There probably isn’t a team in the league with a combination of better centremen and open spots on their flanks.

100%!

“Have Lehto get a handshake deal with Holland that, if we don’t like the way the 2019-20 season goes, he’ll trade you next summer. That way, he can say he tried to develop you, but the previous GM drafted you and it just wasn’t working.

“Give it one more year, take some of the blame for your slow development, then go out and prove you are a player. Score some goals, show the commitment that is necessary, and by Christmas you could be the No. 1 right-winger in Edmonton.

Seems like the right thing to do here. The other thing is, if he scores some goals, other GMs will want him even more.

“You’re just 21. This is the last place you’ll ever play that has as much invested in you as the Oilers have. Which, you’ll learn one day, is important.”

Sometimes it takes a while for young folk to mature. They can’t all be as collected as McDavid and Crosby, right?

As Ryan Rishaug has been saying for weeks, just through deductive reasoning, we can probably come to the conclusion that Puljujarvi’s problem with the team isn’t to do with the coaches or the medical staff or even the GM as most of those have been swapped out. It must be to do with the players because if you’re a young winger in the NHL that’s looking for one of the sweetest gigs in the league alongside Leon Draisaitl, Connor McDavid, or Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and you STILL want out, then there’s a problem in the room.

I won’t put this all on Connor and the boys though. Jesse has to come out of his shell a bit and show some initiative but I can understand why he wouldn’t want to as well. The players he respects on the club don’t feel the same way maybe and that’s a deep cut for a young guy. He might not be as mature as the rest of the guys and thus he gets left out in the cold.

I wish I knew what kind of advice he was getting from the agent so we could have an opinion on who’s to blame here from that side because if Puljujarvi isn’t traded soon, he’s going to have to go through an entire summer with this cloud hanging over him and the close it gets to training camp, the more reporters and journalists are going to want to talk to him about “the trade request”, right?

As much as I love my man Jesse, I fully support the stance Ken Holland is taking. If Markus Lehto wants to play hardball, Kenny Holland won’t back down. Just ask Andreas Athanasiou who previously tried to hold out in Detroit but eventually came back to the NHL with his tail tucked between his legs and signed a two-year deal.

Pulju needs to come back and prove his worth to not only his teammates, the organization, the entire NHL, but also himself. Heading off to Europe until his wishes are met isn’t going to do that. It’s not going to help how he’s viewed neither. Then again, Milan Lucic has been asking out for three years and the boys still love him…

A new season means a new design! Click the image above to get the new Pulju shirt!

THE 2019 BLH MOCK DRAFT

  1. NJ – Jack Hughes – C – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  2. NYR – Kaapo Kakko – RW – TPS Turku (FIN)
  3. CHI – Alex Turcotte – C – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  4. COL (OTT) – Bowen Byram – LHD – Vancouver Giants
  5. LA – Cole Caufield – RW – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  6. DET – Trevor Zegras – C – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  7. BUF – Kirby Dach – C – Saskatoon (WHL)
  8. *VAN – Philip Broberg – LHD – AIK (SWE)
  9. ANH – Dylan Cozens – C – Lethbridge (WHL)
  10. *EDM – Matthew Boldy – W – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  11. PHI – Peyton Krebs – C – Kootenay (WHL)
  12. MIN – Alex Newhook – C – Victoria (BCHL)
  13. FLA – Cam York – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  14. ARI – Victor Soderstrom – RHD – Brynas (SHL)
  15. MTL – Arthur Kaliyev – LW – Hamilton (OHL)
  16. COL – Vasili Podkolzin – RW – SKA (VHL)
  17. VGK – Ville Heinola – LHD – Luuko (FIN)
  18. DAL – Raphael Lavoie – C – Halifax (QMJHL)
  19. OTT (CBJ) – Thomas Harley – LHD – Mississauga (OHL)
  20. WPG – Moritz Seider – RHD – Mannheim (DEL)
  21. PIT – Bobby Brink – C – Sioux City (USHL)
  22. LAK (TOR) – Ryan Suzuki – C – Barrie (OHL)
  23. NYI – Connor McMichael – C – London (OHL)
  24. NAS – Phil Tomasino – C – Niagara (OHL)
  25. WAS – Pavel Dorofeyev – LW – Magnitigorsk (RUS)
  26. CGY – Spencer Knight – G – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  27. TB – Lassi Thomson – RHD – Kelowna (WHL)
  28. CAR – Jakob Pelletier – LW – Moncton (QMJHL)
  29. ANA (SJ) – Simon Holmstrom – RW – HV71 (SWE)
  30. BOS – Alex Vlasic – LHD – USNTDP (USHL/NCAA)
  31. BUF (STL) – Tobias Bjornfot – LHD – Djurgarden (SWE)

*I think there’s a high possibility that Edmonton and Vancouver swap picks. Perhaps in the oft-mentioned Lucic for Eriksson trade they’ll swap first rounders.

Rumor has it the Canucks are working feverishly to move up in the draft to pick Philip Broberg, but the problem is, they haven’t got a lot to work with. Chris Tanev might be their only real asset to trade and with his injury history, I don’t even know if he’s even considered a real asset now.

I hope the Oilers go with another forward in the 2nd round.

  • John Beecher – C – USNDTP (USHL/NCAA): Might be the fastest power forward in the draft.
  • Samuel Poulin – RW – Sherbrooke (QMJHL): Solidly built, hard-working winger whose dad was an NHLer. Strong shooter with good hockey IQ.
  • Egor Afaneseyev – LW – Muskegon (USHL): BIG guy (6’4″ 200lbs) who scored 27 goals and 62 pts in the USHL.
  • Albin Grewe – RW – Djurgarden (SWE): Highly skilled pest who’s been compared to Brad Marchand.
  • Brayden Tracey – LW – Moose Jaw (WHL): Big time scorer in the WHL who can skate, has an excellent work ethic, and fears nobody.

That is a lot of wingers, if you’re more for the Oilers picking up a center in the 2nd round, I think that Brett Leason might tickle Bob Green’s fancy, the speedy Jamieson Rees should be available, the pint-size Karl Henriksson should definitely be there, and Ilya Nikolaev, a thick two-way forward as well.

Should you fancy a defender in the 2nd, there’ll be a plethora of those, no doubt. Flint’s Vladislav Kolyachonok, Matthew Robertson, a great all-around defender from the Edmonton Oil Kings MIGHT be there, smooth-skating Ryan Johnson from Sioux Falls could be available, and the massive hard-shooting Antti Tuomisto from Assat in Finland I reckon will be around then too.

Unless Spencer Knight somehow falls to 38th, I wouldn’t touch a goalie until the 3rd round or later.

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

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