Tag Archives: Dougie Hamilton

Beer League Heroes 15 -16 Season Primers: The Calgary Flames

Welcome back to the season primer series. The Calgary Flames were the team that everyone expected to come crashing back to earth all year last year and somehow they never did. The analytics crowd was screaming that the teams PDO had to come back to an even level and there was little to no chance that they could sustain their productivity through-out the entire year. Well they did and that just allowed the media and analytics crowd to change their tune to they won’t be able to duplicate that success next year. The Flames had solid defense all season, even when Captain Mark Giordano went down with a season ending injury the rest of the rear guards picked up the slack and soldiered on. Add in up and coming top pairing defender Dougie Hamilton to the mix and Calgary now has one of the best defense cores in the league.

Key Additions: RW Michael Frolik, D Dougie Hamilton

Key Subtractions: D David Schlemko, RW Brian McGrattan, D Corey Potter, D Raphael Diaz

Calgary only added two players this summer but the two that they did add are excellent additions to the team. Dougie Hamilton has the ability to be a top pairing guy in the NHL for a very long time. Michael Frolik brings decent size but more importantly he brings a veteran presence and should be good for between 15 and 20 goals.

Projected Lines (All Players Healthy):

Johnny Gaudreau – Sean Monahan – Jiri Hudler
Sam Bennett – Mikael Backlund – Michael Frolik
Mason Raymond – Josh Jooris – Joe Colborne
Michael Ferland – Matt Stajan – David Jones

TJ Brodie – Mark Giordano
Kris Russel – Dougie Hamilton
Deryk Engelland – Dennis Wideman

Jonas Hiller
Karri Ramo

Roster Contenders: D Ladislav Smid, LW Brandon Bollig, C Lance Bouma, C Paul Byron, C Markus Granlund, D Tyler Wotherspoon, and G Joni Ortio.

Calgary seems to have a roster that is pretty much set even before we enter training camp. A player like Ladi Smid will likely end up being the 7th defender but will still see significant time because we all know how hard it is to keep six healthy defensemen all season.

The key concern with Calgary is going to be their forward depth again this year. Outside of the top line there isn’t anyone on the team that can be counted on for a 20-goal season. Frolik is a possibility but since he hasn’t gotten there yet I wouldn’t hold my breath.

The Flames defense is what is going to power them through for the most part this season. We know Monahan is good for 20 plus goals and so is Gaudreau, well as long as he doesn’t hit the dreaded sophomore slump.

People have been expecting a Calgary regression since November of last year and it never happened. Sorry Oilers fans but it isn’t going to happen this year either. Calgary will be in the playoff picture come April. In what slot is anyone’s guess though.


 

If you are a Flames fan or know of one please direct them to our t-shirt shop. We have 16-Bit Johnny Gaudreau, Sam Bennett, Sean Monahan, Dougie Hamilton, and Mark Giordano all waiting to go to a caring home where they can keep you warm throughout those “miserable” Calgary winters…

Thanks for reading and let us know in the comments below if you think the Flames are due to make the playoffs again this year?

Stay tuned for the next installment of the Beer League Heroes Season Primers series!

WELCOME TO THE MAD HOUSE, an Oilers blog

Well here we sit on Sunday morning and it is a real slow news day for the Edmonton Oilers. So slow in fact that I have decided to debut my new weekly series. Welcome to the madhouse will be a point-form style blog that will not only cover Oilers news but really anything that I feel like commenting at the time. So fair warning people, if you want to read an article solely about hockey this one may not be for you from time to time. Today you are in luck though because I have a lot going on inside the old hat rack that I want to touch on. So let’s get right to it, enter if you dare.

  • The NHL has agreed to try three-on-three overtime format this season and I have seen a lot of good things being written about it. I mean come on, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that by going to this new format we will some really fast hockey. Teams with a lot of speed up front will be looking to push the pace will the bigger stronger teams struggle to keep them to the outside. I for one am stoked to see the Oilers playing three-on-three as we have a bevy of speedy players up front and potentially on the back-end as well. Can you imagine Hall and McDavid flying down the ice with that much room to move? Like I said, the majority of feedback that I have seen is positive but one goalie has remarked that he thinks that it will be harder on the net-minders. Cory Schneider had this to say when discussing the new format. Not exactly a ringing endorsement but a scathing review either. Check out his comments at the end of the post about goalie skill levels and making nets larger to bring out more skill. Interesting hearing that coming from a goalie.

 

  • All Edmonton Oilers fans know there is a great big elephant in the room this morning. That beloved pachyderm is present courtesy of the second buy-out window granted to the franchise for filing the Schultz arbitration. I wrote a piece late last week discussing the merits and pitfalls of using said buy-out and I am still on record as being in favour of using it. If the space can be freed to sign Cody Franson or Christian Ehrhoff for 3 years I say do it. There is a lot of space coming available next summer with both Ben Scrivens and Teddy Purcell coming off the books next year so I say do it! Fortune favours the bold! Or at least that is what we are told, we have never seen the bold we were so falsely promised… The only key RFA’s next summer are Oscar Klefbom and Justin Schultz with Schultz being moved if Franson signs. We have no need of Schultz if we have a better version of the player here.

 

  • What would the addition of a player like Franson do to players like Nurse? Adding Franson pushes everyone but possibly Sekera and Fayne down the depth chart. The addition of a player of that caliber would mean that both Griffin Reinhart and Darnell Nurse start the season in Bakersfield and that isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Nurse has a grand total of six games as pro and Reinhart, while having a full season of AHL experience, still has only eight NHL games on his resume. Just because they are very highly touted prospects doesn’t mean they will be gifted roster spots like in years past. New management seems more than capable of separating the wheat from the chaff so to speak. I think that regardless of who the players are the seven or eight best will be on the opening night roster. Not just the most expensive…

 

  • Talking about Darnell Nurse, just how crazy good is this kid? He has the ability, size, mean streak, and speed to be the real number one defender that we so desperately need. Of course that is the best case scenario and even if it does come to fruition it won’t be for a few years yet as Darnell progresses as a player. At this point I think the worst case is a second pairing player but I just see too much skill and too many natural physical gifts to not be at least a top pairing guy.

 

  • Monday, besides being the end of the Oilers 48 hour buy-out window, is the deadline for official submitting an expansion bid. Originally it was thought that we would see bids coming from Las Vegas, Quebec City, and Seattle. It came to light Friday that the possible ownership group in Seattle would not be submitting a bid after arena issues were not able to be worked out in time. There is talk of second bid coming from the Seattle area but it is uncertain whether the league will be keen to be outside of the greater Seattle or if they will refuse the $500 million franchise fee that is expected from each new team. It does however seem all but a certainty that Quebecor media will be handing their bid in along with the $10 million deposit. And with Las Vegas proceeding with the building of a fantastic new arena complex it is a virtual guarantee that the prospective owners have all their forms filled out and a giant suitcase full of money to wheel into NHL headquarters tomorrow morning.

 

  • I was on Twitter last night and our very own Beer League Hero brought up the polarizing discussion of the Big E. Of course I mean Eric Lindros. One of the most physically dominant skilled players I have ever had the opportunity to watch. BLH asked if, and I am paraphrasing of course, we will ever see a player like Lindros again? It is a great topic for discussion as there was no one like him ever before he joined the league and hasn’t been anyone like him since. He has made many errors along the way. From his refusal to join the Nordiques to his off-ice issues that have been well documented. I am not going to condone his actions as there is no reason for what took place to ever happen but I am thinking that those items need to be separated when discussing him as a hockey player. If we are talking about what he is like as a person then by all means bring on the character attacks and prior misdeeds but in a discussion about him as a player shouldn’t revolve around what he did in a night club 20 plus years ago. Just my opinion.

 

  • Will the summer of insanity ever end for the Boston Bruins and general manager Don Sweeney? He traded one of the top up and coming defenseman in the entire league in Dougie Hamilton for next to nothing in return. He had a better offer, although marginally, from former Bruins GM Peter Chiarelli but had to add in an extra player on top in an attempt to stick it to our Chia pet. Then he moved power forward Milan Lucic to the Los Angeles Kings for promising young goalie Martin Jones and the 13th overall pick in the 2015 draft. The pick was used to select Jakub Zboril, a defender for the Saint Johns Sea Dogs of the QMJHL. I know nothing about this young fella so I won’t make any judgement as far as whether he is a good pick at that point of the draft. I do understand Boston adding defense at the draft though. Likely an attempt to find a replacement for Hamilton but that isn’t coming any time soon. Beleskey was an okay add for the team and was even kept below 4 million per which is well below what he was asking. Overall I don’t know that either of the two trades they made were any good. The Hamilton trade will take years to decide on but it is a clear win for Calgary right now. The Lucic trade was one I liked but personally I think the guy is over-rated to begin with, The point of all of this is that Boston subtracted one of the best defensemen they had and didn’t bring anyone that can be considered close to a replacement. Sweeney is on record as saying that his team may not be doing adding yet. With the expectation being a playoff berth next year they damn sure better not be done. This team is worse than they were prior to the NHL draft that is for sure.

 

  • The final thing that I want to touch on is the fabulous t-shirts that Beer League Heroes is currently selling through our store. There are some fantastic designs and let’s not forget the always stylish Beer League Heroes shirt! Get yours before  they are gone!!! Besides being a great deal they are also great at helping meet women! The conversations these beauties will inspire will be the stuff of legend! No but seriously they won’t help your game at all. If you had none before the shirt like me you still won’t have any after you wear it. But at least you will have a really snappy new shirt!

I have decided that I will end this weekly blog series every week with a question to pose to all you fantastic readers and I will post the best answers in the following weeks edition. Today my question to all of you is what should the entrance song be for the Edmonton Oilers this season? My answer is in the video below. Thanks for reading, leave me a comment and follow me on twitter, @cooke_rob. Have a great night!

 

Cheers

Rob

 

The Battle of Alberta via Analytics: Andrej Sekera vs. Dougie Hamilton

Sekera squeezes Toews along the boards

The Calgary Flames made a huge splash in acquiring up-and-coming defensive stalwart, Dougie Hamilton, of the Boston Bruins, for 3 draft picks. The deal shocked everyone. Apparently, the Oilers also negotiated for Hamilton, but Boston wanted Darnell Nurse, as well as 3 draft picks (#16 overall, and two second round picks). It seems Edmonton balked at trading Nurse, which to many fans is understandable. Fans, media, and management have much optimism in Nurse’s potential, which was reinforced by his stellar season and deep OHL playoff run with the Sault St. Marie Greyhounds. Somehow, though, Calgary negotiated a deal for less and the rest is history. The Oilers were desperate for a top-pairing defenseman, but they also needed a #1 goaltender. Their major draft-day trade turned out to be exchanging draft picks for Cameron Talbot of the New York Rangers. I like this deal and have high hopes for Talbot. (Based on war-on-ice computations of adjusted and high-danger zone save percentage, I had Talbot ranked quite high on my list of potentially available goalies.)

Still, free agency was coming up on July 1st and some potential top-pairing defensemen were available. On opening day, the Oilers acquired free-agent defenseman, Andrej Sekera. I was excited! In my regular Oilers Facebook group, we had discussed who we wanted for our top pair and Sekera’s name always came up. Indeed, Sekera appeared to be in high demand by other teams. Last season, Sekera was traded from the Carolina Hurricanes to help Los Angeles into the playoffs. Unfortunately, the NHL point system as it is (i.e., overvaluing overtime wins), and with LA’s bad luck in overtime, they didn’t make the playoffs. To this point, Sekera looks like the Oilers’ answer to filling at least one spot for a top-2 defender.

There appears to be wide agreement in the hockey world that Hamilton is going to be a stud defenseman, if he is not already. Sekera has been around for a few more years and is considered a solid defenseman, at least a top-4. Important to note, though, that he and Justin Faulk were the top-pair for the Hurricanes. Most would also agree that Hamilton is the bigger name–and Calary signed him to a fatter contract–, but what would an analysis of their metrics tell us? How much better is Hamilton? Or are they closer in performance than many would assume?

Shot Attempt Metrics: Quality of Competition

Unpacking David Johnson’s WOWY (With-or-Without-you) tables, which, in part, shows how each player performs against specific opponents, I used the opponents’ shot-attempt differentials as quality of competition (QualComp) indices. Opponents with higher shot-attempt differentials (SAT%; also known as Corsi) were considered tougher competition. I assumed that how Sekera and Hamilton performed against weaker competition was not as important. Instead, I focused on tougher competition, specifically, opponents with an average shot-attempt differential of 50% or greater. I divided the tougher competition into 5 levels of average SAT%–56%, 54%, 52%, & 50%–with each level having a range of +/- 1% and a sample size of about 30 opponents. This method allowed me to compare each player’s shot-attempt differential versus similar levels of competition.

In addition, I computed a metric that I call Break-Even QualComp SAT%, or Break-Even SAT%. (I introduced the metric here.) The Break-Even SAT% indicates the level of competition in which a player can hold their own, that is, maintain a 50% shot-attempt differential. The higher the Break-Even SAT%, the tougher the competition the player can handle. I graphed this quality of competition comparison below.

(Click on graph to enlarge. Use your browser’s [back] button to return to the article.)

Regardless of the quality of competition, both Sekera and Hamilton demonstrated impressive shot-attempt differentials. This is clear in their Break-Even SAT differentials with Sekera at 54.8% and Hamilton at 55.9%. Opposition at this SAT% level are typically first-line players on strong possession teams such as Pavel Datsyuk (Detroit), Sidney Crosby (Pittsburgh), and John Tavares (New York Islanders).

In terms of which player outperformed the other, there doesn’t seem to be a clear “winner,” although the Break-Even SAT% suggested that Hamilton was slightly ahead. To gain another perspective, I computed their average SAT differentials versus all opponents with a SAT% greater than 52%. I chose 52% because teams with a SAT% of 52.5% or greater have a 90% chance of making the playoffs. In a loose way, then, the following graph shows how Sekera and Hamilton performed against playoff-caliber teams.

As this graph shows, their respective shot-attempt differentials are nearly identical (52.1 vs 51.8). To be sure I was making a fair comparison, I  computed the average competition SAT%, which was about 54% for each player. By separating offense (SAG/60; shot-attempt generation) and defense (SAS/60; shot-attempt suppression), we have a glimpse into how their playing styles differ. Although their differentials are similar—difference of 4 shot-attempts per 60 min–Sekera is a “higher event” defenseman than Hamilton. Compared to Hamilton, Sekera’s teammates not only generate more shot attempts with him on the ice, they also allow more shot attempts. At this level of analysis, it seems that Sekera and Hamilton are similar in their ability to handle tough competition. However, quality of competition is only one side of shot metrics. The other side is a player’s quality of teammates.

Shot Attempt Metrics: Quality of Teammates

Using the WOWY tables, there’s two measures we can examine on the influence of teammates in relation to a player. First, there is the player’s impact on his teammates: How much does a teammate’s shot-attempt differential change, and which direction (positive or negative) does it change, when paired with the player? Second, there is the player’s dependence on his teammates: How much does a player’s SAT% depend, positively or negatively, on his teammate’s influence? This can be a complicated relationship. For instance, just because Player A’s SAT% improves a ton with Player B doesn’t mean Player A’s SAT% is overly dependent on Player B. That’s because Player A may also be improving Player B’s SAT%. They are better together than apart. Isn’t this the ideal of close relationships we strive for in life? As is true in life, it is true in hockey.

In the tables below, I present both players’ SAT dependency and impact on teammates. I focused on key teammates, namely, the 1st and 2nd line centers and the player’s primary defensive partner. I treated the centers as a proxy for the first and second lines. I further divided the measures into shot-attempt generation (SAG; also known as Corsi-For) and shot-attempt suppression (SAS; a.k.a Corsi-Against). There are many numbers, which can be confusing. The important numbers in bold, which I have labelled as “totals.” In fact, the numbers in bold are averages of the 3 teammates. If you only wanted to know the one number that would give you the most information, “total” (i.e., average) SAT/60 +/- would be it.

We would expect that when playing with the team’s top centers, or their primary D-partner, that a defender’s shot metrics would improve. (All the shot attempt rates are presented in 60-minute units.) On average, Sekera’s shot-attempt (SAT) differential improved by 9.7 shot attempts with the Hurricanes, and by 6.52 with the Kings.

As an side, as a member of the Hurricanes, Sekera’s shot attempt suppression metric remained stable (SAS/60 +/- = -0.68). In contrast, with the Kings his SAT suppression metric improved (SAS/60 +/- = -4.45). The reason? One plausible answer is that these are teams with different systems. In particular, the Kings appear to be more focused on (and perhaps better at executing) defensive systems.

Mainly because of Bergeron’s influence, Hamilton’s SAT differential improved by 13.35 shot attempts, on average.  Does this mean Hamilton is more dependent than Sekera for his higher SAT differentials? Not necessarily. Because the relationship is complicated, we also need to assess the other side: The player’s impact on his teammates.

Sekera had a positive impact on his centers in Carolina and Los Angeles, as well as his D-partner, McNabb, for the Kings. However, his D-partner on the Hurricanes, Faulk, performed worse with Sekera. Faulk’s SAT differential dropped by 10.3 shot attempts (per 60 minutes) when on the ice with Sekera. In the previous table, we can see that Faulk returned the favor by knocking down Sekera’s SAT differential by 8.27 shot attempts. Seems like that relationship was not working out too well; a bit dysfunctional even. Overall, though, Sekera’s impact on his key Carolina teammates’ SAT differential was positive (+2.31), as was his impact on his key Los Angeles teammates (+9.11).

Hamilton also had a positive impact on each of his teammates, both in terms of shot attempt generation (SAG/60 +/- = +9.8) and suppression (SAS/60 +/- = -.6.96). In fact, his impact total (+16.76) exceeded his dependency total (+13.35) by just over 3.4 shot attempts per 60 minutes. Continuing with the relationship analogy, Hamilton gave more to his teammates than he received.

A few analytics writers have recently cautioned about comparing players from different teams using these relative metrics. They argue there are so many other things going on with the teams (e.g., systems, line-combinations) that a straight across comparison would not be meaningful. I tend to agree with this line of thinking. Nonetheless, I think it’s still useful to note the general patterns, specifically, that although each player is dependent on major teammates to boost his SAT differential, each had positive impacts on his teammates’s SAT differentials.

WOWY Diagrams

Another way to express these dependency and impact relationships is through a diagram. Fortunately for Twitter followers of hockey analytics blogger, Micah McCurdy, we’ve been treated to elegant diagrams of teammate shot-attempt WOWY metrics. McCurdy created two types, spider and WOWY diagrams. Spiders are explained here and WOWYs here. To be frank, if you really want to understand how to clearly interpret the diagrams, then I do strongly recommend reading the explanations.

What spider diagrams provide, which I did not in the above tables, is how SAT differentials change with more than 2 players together. To keep things simple, I’ll break down the diagram to its essential points. The main pattern you want to see in spider diagrams is teammate combinations moving toward the bottom-right, below the red line. This bottom-right half indicates a positive shot attempt differential (i.e., SAT% > 50%).

Combinations above the red line are negative shot-attempt differentials (i.e., SAT% < 50%). The combinations in blue are the defender’s average SAT differential and his SAT% with his primary defensive partners. To the right of the diagram, player numbers are listed along with their names and a percentage, which represents the proportional time-on-ice the player shared with each teammate.

Sekera’s Spider WOWY Diagram – 2014/15

(Click to enlarge. Use your browser’s “back” key to return to the article.)

Hamilton’s Spider WOWY Diagram – 2014/15

(Click to enlarge. Use your browser’s “back” key to return to the article.)

Most of Sekera’s and Hamilton’s teammate combinations are below the red-line. Sekera’s combinations with the Staal brothers, Eric & Jordan, are particularly dominating. In fact, their shot-attempt differential was very good (approximately 61% SAT%) when both brothers were on the ice. Interesting to note that that the Faulk-Sekera pairing actually does quite well when playing with either Staal brother. There is a small cluster of combinations that move diagonally upward to the right (still below the red line). This would show little, if any, change in shot-attempt differential, but an increase in both shot attempt generation and suppression (i.e., more events). This fits with what we found earlier in my analysis, that Sekera appears to be a higher event defensemen compared to Hamilton.

For Hamilton, the general trend of player combinations is downward (more shot suppression) and toward the right (more shot generation). Any combination with Bergeron was exceptionally strong. By my estimation, the 5-man combination of Smith, Bergeron, Marchand, Chara, and Hamilton had an impressive shot-attempt differential of 65%.

Quality Shot Analysis

So far, I’ve looked at the most blunt measure of shot metrics, shot attempts, which include blocked shots, missed shots, and shots on goal. Shot attempt metrics are useful and informative, but limit any analysis to broad brushstrokes. This past season, the bloggers at war-on-ice stepped up their measurement game and created metrics to account for higher quality shots, specifically, scoring chances and high scoring chances, which are mainly scoring chances from the slot area.

At this level of analysis, a difference between the two players is emerging. When Hamilton was on the ice, the Bruins generated significantly more scoring chances (54.7%), especially high-scoring chances (57.3%), than their opposition. Moreover, Hamilton ranked 7th in the league among defenders in terms of high-scoring chance differential and 21st in general scoring chance differential. Finally, Hamilton also had strong scoring chance differentials relative to when he is on the ice to off the ice.

Sekera’s high-scoring chance differential was in the average range (50%), relative to the league. When he was on the ice, he and his teammates allowed as many high scoring chances as they generated. His scoring chance differential was a better (51.4%), ranking him 71st in the league among defenders.

High & Medium Probability Zones

Above, I observed differences between the players in shot attempts generated and suppressed. Although their respective SAT differentials were similar, Sekera was a higher event player than Hamilton. In particular, it appears Hamilton and his teammates were better at suppressing shot attempts, whereas Sekera and his teammates were better at generating shot attempts. This loosely suggests that Hamilton may be stronger defensively. To get a clearer picture of these offensive and defensive differences, I once again used data from war-on-ice using the “Player-Hextally” option. Here war-on-ice breaks down shot locations to 3 major zones: high (the slot), medium, and low probability zones. I focused on the high and medium-probability zones because these are the areas where the action happens. For instance, shooting percentages are almost 5 times higher in the slot than from the low-probability zone.

In the following table, I present a team’s shot rates relative to the league, for and against, when the player is on the ice,. As well, I include these shot rates relative to the league and to the team. The shot rates are then divided into 2 zones: the slot area (high-probability) and the medium-probability zone (i.e., immediate area around the slot). Green boxes indicate strong numbers, whereas red boxes indicate weak numbers.

Consistent with Hamilton’s high scoring chance differentials above, he and his teammates generated 28% more shots from the slot compared to the league average. Moreover, with Hamilton on the ice, the team produced 25% more shots from the slot compared to him off the ice. From the slot, Sekera and his teammates were less productive than Hamilton and company, but still 5% above league average. Shot rates generated in the medium-probability zone were more similar, with Sekera having a slight advantage. Hamilton and his teammates had a shot-rate of 15% above league average, whereas Sekera and his teammates were at 17% above league average. Both players, then, appear very good in helping generate shots from the slot and medium-probability zones.

What about their respective defensive metrics? One difference is very clear: Hamilton and his teammates were far superior in suppressing shots from the slot compared to Sekera and his teammates. In fact, Sekera and company were below average, that is, they allowed 14% more shots from the slot relative to the league average.  Indeed, with Sekera on the ice, his team allowed 12.3% more shots compared to him off the ice. Although this doesn’t look good for Sekera’s defense, we also see that he and his teammates are solid at suppressing shots within the medium-probability zone–6% below league average–, whereas Hamilton and his teammates are no different than league average.

Net Goals

Now that we’re seeing differences between them more clearly, how does this translate into expected goals? Again, war-on-ice provides this information by dividing expected goals into scoring zones and then applying conversion rates to the shots to compute Net Goals per 60 minutes. (The Average Conversion figures suggest that these tables use shot attempts, not shots on goal.) I then computed Total Net Goals using the player’s time-on-ice.

The simplicity of Net goals is that it condenses many of the shot metrics into one number. When Sekera was on the ice, his team was expected to score 4 goals more than their opposition. Hamilton and his teammates were expected to score 11 more goals than their opposition. Hamilton’s advantage over Sekera is two-fold: He not only seems to help generate more goals from the slot (3.09/60 vs. 2.01/60 for Sekera), but also appears to help suppress more shots from the slot (-0.85 vs. +2.49 for Sekera). So despite their similarities at the level of shot attempt metrics, including the ability to handle the league’s toughest competition, when I went deeper into the data to account for shot quality, Hamilton appeared to be the strong player, both offensively and defensively.

New Passing Metrics

To this point, I’ve indirectly shown how each player contributes to his team’s scoring. All the above metrics are group measures: They indicate how the team is doing while the player is on the ice. But what about directly measured contributions? Fortunately, Ryan Stimson and his small army of volunteers have painstakingly collected such data! It’s called the Passing Project. Recently, one of his colleagues, Spencer Mann (Twitter: @SpenceIce), created graphs of the project’s main metrics. The graphs provide a clear snap-shot of a player’s strengths and limitations in terms of their offensive contributions. The percentile scores tell us how a player ranks compared to other defensemen.  For example, a score in the 80th percentile means the defenseman is better than 80% of other defenders on this metric.

To explain the metrics, I’ll quote Stimson (bold and italics added):

CC% [SAC%] and CC/60 [SAC/60] are for Corsi Contribution [Shot Attempt Contribution] (individual shot attempts, primary passes leading to shot attempts, and secondary passes leading to shot attempts) percentage and per sixty minutes. These tell you how much offense goes through that player while on the ice and also how often they contribute.

Composite SAG and SG represent the total number of shot attempts and shots a player generated from both primary and secondary passes per sixty minutes. SAG/60 is solely for the player’s primary passing contributions.

Entry Assists represent the number of controlled entries a player assisted on. This is determined by the number of passes in transition (prior to entering the offensive zone) we recorded for each player.

SC Contribution% and SCC/60 are the exact same thing as CC% and CC/60, but represent only the scoring chances a player was involved in. I combined our passing data for scoring chances with War-on-Ice’s scoring chance data to arrive at the total number of scoring chances a player contributed to. SC SAG/60 represents the number of scoring chances set up from a player’s primary passes.

Source: Ryan Stimson, In Lou We Trust (SB Nation), Twitter: @RK_Stimp

 

Source: Ryan Stimson, In Lou We Trust (SB Nation), Twitter: @RK_Stimp

Based on these graphs, the main differences between Sekera and Hamilton are their respective strengths in zone entry assists and generating scoring chances. Hamilton was especially strong in his contribution to scoring chance ranking almost at 90th percentile compared to other defensemen. This is consistent with the indirect measures I presented earlier (i.e., Scoring Chance% & High-Scoring Chance%).  Sekera was not as strong as Hamilton, but still above-average ranking at about 60th percentile. I was disappointed to see that Sekera appeared to be weak (about 25th percentile) in setting up scoring chances from primary passes.

But when it came to assists that lead to controlled offensive zone entries, Sekera excelled with a ranking over 95th percentile. In contrast, Hamilton was surprisingly quite below average (30th percentile).  Reading from different sources, and from the few Los Angeles games I watched, Sekera’s passing stood out. His overall passing metrics easily support that observation. I’m excited about seeing Sekera’s passes lighten the load for the Oilers’ puck-lugging forwards, like Taylor Hall.

Summary

Hamilton and Sekera have both handled the league’s toughest competition and held their own. Indeed, their shot-attempt differentials are almost identical against this competition. A main difference that began to emerge was that Sekera was a higher event defender than Hamilton. That is, more shot attempts happened both ways when Sekera was on the ice. When examining each player’s impact and dependency on teammates, they both depended on their top 2 centers to bolster their SAT differentials, but at they also reciprocated by positively impacts on their centers’ SAT differentials. In addition, Hamilton had the benefit of playing with Chara, although Chara’s SAT% also improved with Hamilton. Sekera’s defensive pairing in Carolina, Faulk, was not a particularly good pairing, although they did well when on the ice with either of the Staal brothers. Despite limited time, Sekera appeared to work well with his defensive partner in Los Angeles, McNabb, as well as his centers, Kopitar and Carter.

Looking deeper into the data, in particular, by comparing scoring chances, as well as quality shots based on location, Hamilton came out on top both offensively and defensively. In terms offense, he was much stronger than Sekera in generating scoring chances, whether through primary passes leading to shots or taking shots himself. Hamilton also appeared to be better than Sekera in suppressing shots from the slot. Sekera’s main advantage over Hamilton, and most other defensemen in the league, was his ability to execute passes that lead to controlled zone entries. Sekera appeared to be especially strong in contributing to shot attempts and shots on goal, but the shots tended to be of poorer quality than those of Hamilton. This data suggests that Sekera is not a strong playmaker, yet it also suggests  that his passing will help the Oilers in their transition to offense, which is an area of weakness for them with their current blueline. (This link takes you to Sunil Agnihotri’s post on what the Passing Project data reveals about the Oilers’ defense.)

When Sekera was asked why he chose the Oilers, he hit on all the right notes. “I looked at the roster and I saw the team they had, the coach and the management,” Sekera said. “When I saw what kind of players they had there, it made my choice very easy. They have a lot of skill, a lot of speed and a lot of smart players. They have a good coach, a good GM and a good goalie. It was a good place for me to play with my style of hockey, so that’s why I chose Edmonton” (Source: NHL.com). Skill, speed, and intelligence is what Sekera wanted to match his style (and a 6th year on his contract didn’t hurt either).

I am excited about the upcoming season. McDavid alone may be worth the price of admission some nights. But to see a more complete team, one with a very competent defenseman like Sekera at the helm, gives me even more hope about the Oilers future. The time is coming soon for the rebuild to have a playoff-worthy structure and I see Sekera as a key piece.

Thanks for reading. There was a lot of information packed into this post, but I hope I made it understandable. Some of this information I’m presenting for the first time, so it’s entirely possible I’ve made errors or been unclear. If you have any comments or questions, I’d like to hear from you.

Walter Foddis
Twitter: @waltlaw69

Oilers Post-Draft Thoughts

Well it’s done. Connor McDavid is an Edmonton Oiler and we can all rest easy or at least take the rest of the weekend to get ready for free agency!! Let’s talk about what happened at the draft shall we?

The Picks

No.1 – Connor McDavid – Saviour of our fine town and destroyer of planets.

No.117 – Caleb Jones – Brother of Nashville’s Seth Jones. A defenceman who shoots left and comes in at 6’0″ and 194lbs. I guess he didn’t get the same growth genes as his brother. The Hockey News tells us he is an aggressive defenceman with all-round upside. Sounds like his top-end projection is to be a 4/5/6 dman if he makes it to the NHL. More 5/6 probably.

No.124 – Ethan Bear – Lowetide was a real fan of this good ol’ Saskatchewan boy. He’s a stocky (5’11” 200lbs) defenceman out of the Seattle Thunderbirds organization. To me he looks like he could develop into a Francois Beauchemin type or maybe Stephane Robidas. He’s fearless and is willing to sacrifice his body to get the job done.

No.171 – John Marino – Another defenceman! This time a right-handed shooter because after drafting, signing, or trading for a gazillion left-handed ones, it was time to add to right-handers stable. Marino is 6’1″ 171lbs and I seen him projected as possible another Jeff Petry. He’s a great skater and puck mover. He’ll be plying his trade at Harvard University next season. At least we know he’s intelligent.

No.208 – Mirosloav Svoboda – Now I wanted a goalie in this draft for sure but who in the good Lord’s name is this guy? I mean if they were going to go for a stretch in the last round, they could’ve went for World Junior Stand out, Denis Godla, who went undrafted or what about that guy out of Norway, George Sorensen. Hell even taking a flyer on Vladislav Tretiak’s grandson, Maxim, would’ve been preferred. This Svoboda fella looks like another Kevin Bouchard to me… The kicker is the Oilers traded to get him! I’d love to get more insight on this one.

No.209 – Ziyat Paigin – Well if you can remember back at the World Juniors, there was an incident at the end of the game where a Russian defenceman threw his stick into the crowd as Team Canada rushed onto the ice to celebrate. This was the guy who threw the stick… Apart from that he’s a towering presence. He’s 6’6″ and 209lbs, so he’s an imposing blue liner. He’s said to love the physical game and is quite good and using his angles and stick to fend off opposing forwards. He’ll be in Russian for a few years yet, so there’s not too much to concern yourself as a fan with this player until we start to hear rumblings that he’s coming over.

Other players that were still on the board when the Oilers made their late round picks were guys like Ryan Pilon (#147), Dmitro Tymashov (#125), Radovan Bonda (#151), Chase Pearson (#140), Andrew Mangiapane (#166), David Cotton (#166), Nikita Korostelev (#185)

And there were even some great players that went completely undrafted. Below is a list compiled by Beer League Heroes friend, Sully! Follow him on Twitter @BSully097

Top 5 forwards – Nathan Noel, Dante Solituro, Sebastien Aho (SWE), Kay Schweri, and Pius Suter.
Top 5 dmen and goalies – Nikita Cherepanov, Ken Appleby, Aiden Jamieson, Phil Baltisberger, Casey Fitzgerald

I’d add Vlad Tkachev and Maxim Tretiak to that list.

The Trades

Griffin Reinhart to the Oilers for the #16 (Matt Barzal) and #33 (Mitchell Stephens) picks.

The way I see it is Bob Green (former GM of the Edmonton Oil Kings) had his hands all over this one. I don’t really care if Chiarelli said he had his eyes on him when he worked in Boston. Reinhart is a former Edmonton Oil King that was chosen 4th overall pick in 2012 and if I remember correctly was being considered by the Oilers if they were going to trade down at the draft. One thing I do remember correctly is that there were a large portion of fans hoping the Oilers would take a defenceman in that draft.

It’s hard to say whether keeping the picks would’ve offered better results? I mean the Oilers could’ve picked Kyle Connor and Mackenzie Blackwood for instance. Boom! Two highly touted players that would’ve appeased the most serious of draft geeks.

Look, they guy has size and smarts and WILL play the body, unlike the guy that the Oilers shipped out later in the weekend. My biggest memory of Reinhart is the year the Edmonton Oil Kings won the Memorial Cup and he more or less shut down the Portland Winterhawks in the WHL final. At 6’4″ 216lbs, he’s an absolute beast with room to get bigger and Oilers fans should be very pleased with him.

Cam Talbot and #209 to the Oilers for picks #57 (Jonas Siegenthaler), #79 (Sergey Zborovskiy), and #184 (Adam Huska).

Edmonton got their man for a much cheaper price than what was being asked (two 2nd rounders). I’m not a fan of Talbot yet but I’ll give the guy a chance to show me that he can do what he did in New York but in Edmonton and behind what could be a very young defence.

Todd McLellan to the Oilers for the #86 (Mike Robinson)

It’s not really a trade but it’s notable. Oilers get one of the best coaches in the game at the sacrifice of a 3rd round pick.

Brad Ross and #107 to the Oilers for Martin Marincin

Well the writing was on the wall, wasn’t it? Marincin’s biggest supporter, Craig MacTavish, finally found a way to get rid of him. Marty didn’t help himself getting scratched in the AHL playoffs for not being “assertive” enough… He’ll be a good defenceman in Toronto with Babcock, that’s not doubt but it just wasn’t a fit here for the Oilers.

Brad Ross… I remember him being the Greg Chase before Greg Chase came around. Irritating little SOB and if he could get his career turned around, might be a lesser man’s Brad Marchand but in all honesty I think this trade was to get Marincin off the books in Edmonton. I’d be surprised if I saw Ross in an Oilers jersey ever.

Eric Gryba to the Oilers for pick #107 (Christian Wolanin) and Travis Ewanyk

Ewanyk was a write-off. Edmonton’s version of Patrice Cormier but with even less a chance at making it to the NHL. Now Gryba is a 3rd pairing right-handed shut down defenceman. He’s only 27 and makes $1.25 million per year. He’s going to make sure that the kids stay alright. Keith Aulie was doing that a bit last season but I didn’t get the feeling he had the backing of all the coaches. Actually Aulie and Gryba fought last season after Aulie filled Chris Neil in.

I have to wonder if Gryba will be the partner for Griffin Reinhart or Darnell Nurse next season. Big boys those three are. The return of the Twin Towers?

For those of you too young to know who they were, back in the 80s and early 90s, the Oilers had two guys named Jeff Beukeboom and Steve Smith patrolling the blue together. Both were 6’3″ 200lbs plus and played with injurious intent on every shift.

Final Thoughts

I don’t think that Chiarelli is done. He did a nice job of adding some value contracts over the weekend. Marty Marincin wouldn’t have been waiver exempt this season but Griffin Reinhart will be. Cam Talbot and Eric Gryba are a combined $2.7 million for the year then they turn UFA.

The Los Angeles Kings added Milan Lucic and the Calgary Flames added Dougie Hamilton. The muscle is getting added in the Pacific and Edmonton is going to have to do the same in my opinion.

Just an aside on that Hamilton deal.

The Boston Bruins really slammed their dicks in the door this weekend. Goodness me! Lucic and Hamilton for picks? And Sweeney/Neely wanted Darnell Nurse plus the same 1st, 2nd, and 3rd rounders? Darnell Nurse could very well turn out to be better than Dougie Hamilton and I can’t wait to see the two go head-to-head 6 times a year. Bruins fans, it’s going to be okay. It might take a few years for Brandon Carlo to develop and passing on Matt Barzal and Kyle Connor may look like a mistake at first but everything will be fine… Someday…

The Calgary Flames might’ve won the weekend. They did so well to add Dougie Hamilton, Rasmus Andersson, and Oliver Kylington to their defence. But I wonder with the addition of Dougie if Mark Giordano and his $9 million dollars a year will be heading elsewhere…

Let’s get back to adding some muscle to the Edmonton Oilers. It looks like and if I have heard correctly, they could be adding some more to the blue line. Personally I’d like to see them add a Matt Beleskey-like player to the forward corps. Someone who can hit and fight and put the puck in the net. Give me Kyle Okposo for Jordan Eberle and we’ll call it a day on this topic.

Does anybody else get the feeling that Oilers will be going into next season with two new goalies? I’m not sure if Ben Scrivens will be here by the time the season starts. I wonder about Kari Ramo. He’d be the best Oilers goalie named Kari since Kari Takko was tending net for the Oilers in 1991.

Lastly, will Peter Chiarelli address his lack of a top pairing defenceman? The Seabrook rumors won’t die and usually that’s a pretty good indicator that there’s something up there. Would adding two middle pairing dmen like Paul Martin, Andrej Sekera, or Cody Franson on short term deals make more sense until Darnell Nurse and Oscar Klefbom are ready to take the torch? Food for though nevertheless.

That was a helluva read! Congrats on making it to the end. And with that I’d like to point you in the direction of the Beer League Heroes Teespring Shop! We’ve got some crazy ass designs that I’m sure you’d love! Especially the 8-bit McDavid shirt! Click this link and pick a shirt up for a friend or a loved one.

Take care everyone!

– BLH

Calgary Steals Hamilton From Bruins in Lopsided Trade

In typical Bruins fashion, Boston has traded a tremendous young player and received little value in return.

In an absolute steal of a trade that stunned many, Calgary has acquired defenceman Dougie Hamilton from the Boston Bruins in exchange for picks #15, 45, and 52.

The 6’5”, 212lbs. right-handed defenceman was drafted 9th overall in 2011 by Boston, and has already established himself as a top defenceman in the NHL. Hamilton has 83 points in 178 games in the NHL, which includes 42 points in 72 games this past season.

A restricted free agent, Hamilton had many rumours attached to him, particularly regarding offer sheets. Edmonton in particular was a team that many said could submit an offer sheet for Hamilton.

The surprisingly low return has led some to speculate that this was done as a “revenge move” of sorts against Boston’s former GM, although that sounds like a ridiculous thing for a professional hockey club to do. Other reasons have been suggested on Twitter for the poor return:

Hamilton will be a key fixture on Calgary’s blueline along with Mark Giordano and TJ Brodie. Here is some more fallout from the deal:

https://twitter.com/JonathanWillis/status/614516443527278592

**Update**

No wonder Edmonton didn’t make the trade.