Tag Archives: Matt Hendricks

Edmonton Oilers Rumors: The Trades that Didn’t Happen

Going into this year’s trade deadline, I was almost giddy. I was looking forward to seeing some mad roster turnover for the Edmonton Oilers given the number of depth players that they had on their team. These are the sort of players that contenders usually pick up for their playoff run, or so I thought…


But before we get into that, I think we should take the time to acknowledge the handy work of former GM Peter Chiarelli.

I don’t care what you say. The Oilers junior pipeline and minor league system was completely rebuilt thanks to Chiarelli and the Oilers are going to reap what he sowed going forward. At least, he got one thing majorly right…

Back to the trade deadline analysis.


What did I wake up to? Not a single trade from Bob Nicholson’s management crew.

Now, I didn’t think that they’d be pilfering off young assets and draft picks but I did expect them to move one of their defensemen, at least. Or one of Zack Kassian or Alex Chiasson… But nadda…

They did well earlier with the Cam Talbot and Sam Gagner trades, no arguing that. Getting that cap room open and bringing in a character guy with skill has proven to be some astute interim-GMing on Gretzky’s part, but I view this year’s deadline as a fail on Keith Gretzky, Craig MacTavish, Scott Howson, and Bob Nicholson.

When I got in touch with one of my sources to see how things were going earlier in the day, I was told that things weren’t looking rosy. That the team would most likely stand pat because they believed they could still make the playoffs.

I says, “WHAT?!”

Right now the Oilers have a 6% chance of making the post-season. Tell me how a group of grown men who’ve worked in professional hockey for most of, if not all, their adult lives can, with a straight face, believe the Oilers have a chance at making the playoffs?

I like to think that I’m one of the most optimistic Oilers fans out there and I try my best to find the positive in everything but this is a bit ridiculous.

The Oilers should’ve tried to gather as many picks and prospects as possible in the last 48 hours. They’ve got eight defensemen on the NHL roster right now… I get that they needed to have warm bodies for the game vs. NSH yesterday but they were a lot closer to Bakersfield then that they were three days ago.

The same source that told me that the team was most likely to stay quiet also intimated that the reason they weren’t really going for it to upgrade the team or, for lack of a better team, tank, was because Darryl Katz is set to lose a sack of money labeled “millions” from non-renewals on his suites.

Well la-di-frickin’-da… That’s simply called a “stupidity tax”.

Do that enough times and you’ll find yourself living in a van down by the river eating government cheese!

RIP: Chris Farley

A nod to those old nWo shirts from WCW wrestling. The oBc: Old Boys Clubs shirt is something every hockey/wrestling lover would enjoy! Click the image above to get yours today!

ON THE OTHER HAND

Sometimes you’ve just got to get some things off of your chest before you can understand something through a clear(er) lens.

One thing that no other NHL team has right now is Connor McDavid, and you cannot discount the Oilers chances of going on a massive run when he’s playing. The team has performed fantastically during his suspension and if they can combine that with the kind of goaltending that Mikko Koskinen is giving and a healthy defense, you never know…

With a game in hand, the Oilers are only 7 points from a wildcard spot. They’re next five games are against Toronto, Ottawa, Columbus, Buffalo, and Vancouver. I won’t even speculate as to what they might come out of those games with point-wise as it could go either way against all of those teams.

The Oilers have been playing some of their best hockey since coming back from the bye week (3-5-4). There’s an intensity and a work ethic in their game that had been missing for some time and I think that it’s tied into Hitch being told to take it easy on the players.

They are 2-2-2 since Nick Kypreos made it public during Hockey Night in Canada’s Saturday Headlines that the Oilers would like him to be a bit more “positive” if he’s to remain behind the bench.

SPEAKING OF POSITIVE

Bob Stauffer said on Oilers Now yesterday that a couple of weeks ago, the Oilers had inquired into the services of Matt Hendricks for the reason of bringing some more positivity to the room. Obviously, we know that didn’t happen, he was traded back to Winnipeg from Minnesota on the deadline for a late round draft pick, a 7th rounder if I’m not mistaken…

I would’ve been jumping for joy had they brought Hendy back. He’s one of my favorite all-time Oilers. Such a hard worker and what a positive influence he was on that team when he was there. Plus, he definitely would’ve scored in the shootout vs. NSH last night instead of Rattie getting stopped.

Pick up the NEW “Beat His Ass” shirt right now!!

OTHER RUMORED TRADES

Mark Spector said that a Kassian to Toronto for Connor Brown deal never went through. I’d heard a Matt Benning for Brown trade was on the table and I think that Stauffer was saying the Maple Leafs wanted Jujhar Khaira because he was making a bit less. Probably the same reason that Edmonton wanted to keep him.

I’d heard bits and pieces about teams inquiring about Adam Larsson but nothing concrete. Milan Lucic was a hot topic for a short time. I think the Oilers were trying to get the Habs or the Panthers to take him on.

Lots of talk about Milan and Jesse Puljujarvi getting moved to Ottawa this summer and that makes sense but some might be asking whether Lucic would bother to waive his NMC to go there? I say he will because there’ll be a deal to retain salary and move him on again because the Senators will need to hit the cap floor.

Lastly, I got a DM saying that Boston was interested in one of the Oilers top-4 defenders but no other details. Sorry.

So take all of that for what you will.

In conclusion, the Oilers didn’t get worse on deadline day but on the other hand, they didn’t do anything to improve either.

So we’ll wait until the summer and see what the new GM has in store. You just hope it’s not another year of auditing before taking action.

What did you think of this year’s trade deadline for the Oilers? Let me know in the comments below!

Elias Pettersson’s nickname is “Alien”. Here’s a shirt to celebrate it! Click the image to buy one!
Click the image above and get this sweet Leon’s parody shirt!
Click the pic and grab a 16-bit McDavid tee!

Deals on the Table?

Hendy’s balls got rung vs. Dallas
Just a quick update, I’ve been thinking, Pouliot and Hendricks are being shopped like mad and it’s my belief that there are some deals on the table for both of them. I can’t see Chiarelli wanting to tinker with this current roster too much right now apart from picking up that elusive right-handed powerplay quarterback. So it wouldn’t surprise me in the least if all Edmonton got back in return for our beloved Matty Hendricks and Benoit Pouliot was draft picks.

Now, here’s the thing. I think that Chia might just load up on draft picks in order to give him some slack with Las Vegas. I reckon that Brandon Davidson will be left unprotected and perhaps Tyler Pitlick will be the one that is protected in his spot. But I also know that the Oilers LOVE Brandon Davidson and really want him to be part of this team. Chia also needs a 2nd rounder and he’s got a glut of RFA dmen in Bakersfield that need tending to.

Minnesota and Anaheim are teams that have been linked closest to the Oilers in recent rumours and oddly enough, both of those teams are in a pickle regarding their expansion draft protection list. And what better year to go shopping for underperforming defensemen? Barrie, Vatanen, and pretty much any of the Islanders defenders are up for grabs.

Eklund has the Oilers eyeing up defender Derrick Pouliot of the Pittsburgh Penguins… It’s hard to imagine a man’s job being taken by Justin Schultz but this seems to be the case… Now I’ll have to do more digging as to why D-Pou hasn’t been able to catch on in Pittsburgh yet but the connection to the Oilers is obvious… Bob Green was the Edmonton Oil Kings’ GM back in his junior days and when Derrick Pouliot and his Portland Winterhawks were going toe-to-toe with the Oil Kings. Talk about a rivalry…

Bob Green was the Edmonton Oil Kings’ GM back in his junior days and when Derrick Pouliot and his Portland Winterhawks were going toe-to-toe with the Oil Kings. Talk about a rivalry… WOWZAS!!! Those playoff series were epic. Ahhh I yearn for the days of Lazar, Brossoit, and (young) Griffin Reinhart.

I’m a little hesitant with Bob Green’s trade-for-this-great-WHL-defenseman history as it hasn’t really panned out for Griffin Reinhart yet but his draft history has been pretty tight.

What do you think about these rumours? Let us know in the comments below! Oh and pick up this sweet Patrik Laine 16-Bit Superstars tee!

The Finnish Crash! Pick up one of his tees!!

Oilers’ Grizzled Vet Matt Hendricks on the Block According to Friedman

On tonight’s episode of Hockey Night in Canada’s Headliners, Elliotte Friedman noted that the Oilers’ Matt Hendricks could be on the trade block. Friedman said that perhaps the Minnesota Wild could be a possible destination. Hendricks is from Blaine, Minnesota, so it makes a bit of sense there.

Matt Hendricks has been a healthy scratch more times than not since coming back from injury and his performances when he has been playing have been less than stellar. Not helping Hendricks’ situation is the fact that younger players like Tyler Pitlick and Anton Slepyshev have really stepped up their game.

Personally, I think that veterans like Matt Hendricks are invaluable when it comes to playoff races and actual playoff games. Also, I believe that he is the type of player that keeps a dressing room sane.

What do you think? Is it time for the Oilers to move on from Matt Hendricks or should they be trying to keep him in case of a playoff drive? Let us know in the comments below.

Click on the pic and grab a new 16-bit Fighting Looch tee!

The Curious Case of Leon Draisaitl

Welcome everyone, to what is my first analytics post here at BeerLeagueHeroes.  I go by the pen name “G Money”, and for the past year I’ve been building up some pretty cool analytic data and visualizations and publishing them on my personal blog, OilersNerdAlert

The subliminal messages I embedded in those visualizations finally tricked, er I mean convinced, the folks here at BLH into thinking I have mad stats skillz, and so here I am!

(Rather than bore you now, I’ve put a bit more biographic info at the end of the post – so I can bore you later)

My plan here at BLH is to do some deep dives into aspects of the game we all know and love, on topics that are amenable to an investigative/analytic approach … and in so doing, hopefully entertain, educate, and enlighten.

Famous last words!  So on to the topic of this post … one Mr. Leon Draisaitl

Dr. Drai’s Forgettable February

Much (virtual) ink has been spilled of late about Leon Draisaitl’s recent slump.  Since late January or so, he hasn’t been as effective as he was prior to that, and by extension, neither has his entire line.  You can see this by eye, by scoring, and by the stats.

Why?

Here are the most common of the theories that I’ve heard floated:

  • He’s wearing down from a long season of facing first line duty in Nuge’s absence
  • He’s fatigued (which is really just the same as wearing down) because he’s young and not used to this much TOI for this long a season
  • He’s injured

Short of putting a listening device in the trainer’s room, is there anything we can use to help figure out which of these it could be?

Why yes, I do believe there is!

Fatigue

Specifically, let’s see if we can test the idea of whether or not Dr. Drai is fatigued or otherwise wearing down.  How would we do that?

Let me float this hypothesis: if Dr. Drai is fatigued, he’s going to become less and less effective over the course of the game.  Fair?  Even tired people can start strong.  It’s in the later periods (or rounds, or whatever) that fatigue tends to assert itself.

So, here’s the idea: let’s look at how effective Draisaitl was at driving shot metrics over the course of the game before February, and how he does during February, and see if there’s a difference.

If he really is fatigued or worn down, we should see that he gets weaker over the course of games in the month of February than he did before February.

If on the other hand it’s just (ha ha – “just”) his overall effectiveness that is compromised, we’d expect that his pattern will show him struggling over the entire course of the game, rather than weakening in the later stages of the game

Does that make sense to you?

It does to me.  So let’s test that.

Relativity

But wait!

We can’t just look at Leon’s trace over the month of February vs the rest of the season. What happens if the entire team went into a funk in February (which it kind of did for a while)?  What if the entire team was tired? In that case, we’d see a weakening in King Leon’s shot metrics over the game, but it would be reflective of the entire team’s weakness, not his.

So we have to look at Draisaitl’s relative shot metrics – how he did compared to the rest of the team during those two different time periods. That way we can isolate Draisaitl from the overall team trends.

Isolating February

But wait! One more wrinkle!

Is February really the right comparison timeframe? If we don’t pick the right timeframe, we could end up with mixed data, where we don’t adequately separate the good and the bad timeframes.  That might be enough to hide differences in the data, so it would be good to confirm whether we have the right timeframe.  So let’s take our first quick look at some Draisaitl data:

* Click to embiggen

What is this strange looking duck of a chart?

What I’ve done is looked at three datasets: shot metrics, shot metrics relative to team, and scoring rate.  There’s both the raw data and a smoothed version showing for each.  Highlighted in purple are the points where it looks like a downturn could be argued to have started, at a peak on either the raw or the smoothed data.  In orange are some points where that downtrend might have ended.

It’s not cut and dried (it never is, despite the precision with which we often associate numbers-based analyses), but it does look like February is a separating factor for “good Draisaitl” and “bad Draisaitl”.

Using February vs ‘not February’ as our basis for comparison seems like a reasonable choice.

* Data for this chart was downloaded from war-on-ice.com

Draisaitl, before the walls fell

Here’s the centrepiece chart for this analysis:

This is visualization of Draisaitl’s shot metrics over the course of games excluding February. These are ‘score and venue adjusted’, meaning they try to account for the score state in each game and whether it’s a home or away game.

It’s “Corsi over the course of the game”, so of course I’m calling it Coursi, as a matter of course. What else could I call it?

First impression?  Man, is Draisaitl a strong player!  Every period, the team is better with him than without him.  And apart from a couple of short letdowns early in both the first and second periods, he remains strong throughout.  In fact, 51 to 56% means the Oilers are pretty much an elite team when he’s on the ice.  Quite encouraging.

Now, let’s temper this a little bit – Draisaitl has spent most of this season with Taylor Hall.  We already know Taylor Hall is elite.  We already know Taylor Hall drags pretty much every single player on the Oilers above breakeven when he’s on the ice. But the good news is that Drai was with Hall throughout February, so fortunately we don’t have to worry too much about that particular teammate effect biasing our comparison.

The key chart in some ways is the third one – the purple smoothed line shows Draisaitl’s results when compared to the team as a whole.  We’ll get back to that line later!

* Data for this chart was scraped by my own scripts directly from NHL data.  Corsi calculations use score and venue adjustment factors provided by Micah Blake McCurdy (hockeyviz.com).

Draisaitl on the ocean

Here’s Drai just in the month of February:

That’s quite a contrast, yes? You can very clearly see that Drai is not doing nearly as well in February.  That’s true on an absolute basis, AND on a basis relative to the team – the purple line on the rightmost chart dips below the breakeven line a lot more often than it did outside of February.

Hang on a sec, though.  That’s not what we were looking for.  We were already pretty sure that Drai had a tough February. What we wanted to see is any evidence of fatigue.

Do you see one?  I don’t. There is no noticeable downward slope on that purple line.

Looks to me like our man Drai’s issues, whatever they are, are something that stay more or less steady throughout the game.

Direct Comparison

We can see that effect even more clearly if we isolate the two smoothed ‘CoursiRel’ lines on a single chart:

Again, I’d say it’s pretty clear.  February is lower overall (more time below breakeven).  It is also more volatile. But it’s not sloping downward over the course of the game.

I’m going to go out on a limb here and suggest to you that whatever is ailing Leon Draisaitl – it’s probably not fatigue.

One More Control

One last chart for you.  When we look at the chart above, we see quite a difference in character between the two curves.   Enough that, while it doesn’t appear to be fatigue, it certainly implies something.

Or does it?  What if it’s a data artefact?

We are comparing a fairly large data set (all the games played outside of February) with a small one. Maybe it’s just that the small dataset is inherently more volatile.

So let’s look at a comparison dataset. It was suggested to me that Matt Hendricks, who plays primarily as defensive third/fourth line guy facing mostly similar competition through the season, might make a nice comparison. So here’s exactly the same pair of lines for Matt Hendricks:

Certainly, you can see a difference between the two, as you’d expect. February is more volatile, indicative of a smaller sample size.

The overall character of the two curves, though, is similar.  In other words, over the course of the game, Matt Hendricks has been pretty much the same player in February as he was prior to February.

And for our purposes, that’s good. That at least provides some reason to believe that the difference we’re seeing with Draisaitl is a real one.

Conclusion

So the evidence doesn’t indicate fatigue.  So what could the issue be?

My opinion?

I think Drai is injured.  Not enough to keep him out, but enough to impair.  He took some vicious (uncalled … naturally) cross checks and a few shot blocks in January that visibly hurt him.  That would be consistent with the overall reduction in his game, and also what appears to be a recent improvement in March (7 games in 11 days doesn’t seem like the ideal circumstances to address a fatigue issue!)

Or maybe, just maybe, it’s a garden variety slump!  Those happen too.

Either way – I’d say it’s unlikely it was ‘wearing down’.  It’s not definitive, certainly.  No single study is, especially a relatively casual one like this.

But I feel comfortable in saying that this analysis suggests we should look elsewhere.

What say you?

Post Script and Bio

There you have it – my first article for BLH. I hope you enjoyed it.  My plan is to average about one a week.  Some lighter, some heavier, but hopefully always at least somewhat interesting!

A quick word about me for those not yet asleep: I’ve been an Oilers fan for uncountably many years – including the glory years.  Maybe that’s what has kept me going, even as I’ve spent so much time living in the land of the bovine enemy.

I’m unquestionably a numbers guy, but just FYI, I “watched the game” for about 35 years before I ever got into the whole fancystats thing.  I do this stuff as a hobby, but when I’m not watching hockey or talking hockey online (my wife calls them “my imaginary friends”) I’ve got the aforementioned wife, plus three kids and a cabin in the mountains to keep me hopping.

P.S. I’m a huge Rush fan, so a lot of my posts will have a Rush lyric easter egg embedded – though today I went with Star Trek.

A Penny For Your Thoughts

Hallsy and Ebs look on while Matt Hendricks writhes on the ice in pain after getting his balls puck smashed.

Basically the video clip below of Matt Hendricks getting his nuts shot off versus the Dallas Stars is a symbol of the season to date for the Edmonton Oilers. As a fan I’ve felt disgusted at times, I’ve felt embarrassed at others, I’ve felt jubilation, and I’ve felt sympathetic.

The Oilers are, and always will be, my team. No matter how many other teams I’ve cheered for in my life (Edmonton from birth, Pittsburgh in the early 90’s, Detroit in the mid-late 90’s, Toronto in the early 2000’s, back to Pittsburgh after Crosby was drafted, and then back to the Oilers since Hall was drafted) I have never been able to veer far away from this team. Sure, when I was younger I hopped on the bandwagon a few times but I liked winners, who can blame me? But as I grew older I felt the need to go back to my roots and cheer for the team that gave me this passion for the game I find myself with. I almost feel a duty to be loyal to them no matter their place in the standings. It’s a very odd feeling to tell you the truth. I’m compelled to dedicate a small portion of my life to this team and I can’t really tell you why. It just is.

Anyways, I suppose we should get into some actual Oilers talk. Let’s start with MY choice for Oilers captain, Matt Hendricks.

I watched that and immediately a couple of sound effects came into my head, a bell being rung and the sound of a tree falling slowly… OUCH! Teddy Purcell looks like he’s going to puke and if you watch Kari Lehtonen’s face as Hendricks walks past him, he can hardly contain himself… Now I’ve got a pretty sick sense of humor and there’s definitely a part of me that finds a man getting hit in the balls funny but boy oh boy this time I didn’t laugh at all.

The way that the Oilers have been hit by injuries this season has been something out of an 80’s horror movie and with Hendricks going down there and Brandon Davidson leaving the game as well, I couldn’t imagine things getting worse. It’s as if the hockey gods have some sort of hit list this season.

Friend of the blog, Ryan Robinson’s latest vlog touches on this injury crisis the Oilers are going through below.

I think that Mr.Robinson makes some great points but there’s one that I vehemently disagree with and that is the one about being a homer. A person who believes that if their team got better calls or better breaks, luck if you will, they would win every game…

My impression is that Robinson is saying that if Eberle didn’t start the year on the IR, McDavid didn’t break his collarbone, Yakupov didn’t sprain his ankle, Klefbom didn’t break his finger and/or get a staph infection in his leg, that this record the Oilers currently find themselves mired in (19-26-5) would be exactly the same.

That, my friend, is a load of BS. And if you believe that they’d be equally is infertile on the ice sans those injuries, you’re delusional.

I do agree though that through mismanagement that Chiarelli has been forced to put players in situations where they shouldn’t be in. Darnell Nurse comes to mind first and foremost as we’re seeing this future stud blue-liner get overwhelmed on a nightly basis. Draisaitl has been able to hold his own a lot better in my opinion, he’s still putting points up and he doesn’t look outmatched every time the Oilers hit the ice.

I’m more perplexed as to what Todd McLellan is doing with his deployments on D. Nurse and Schultz continue to eat the majority of the TOI pie and they’re getting shelled because of it. If we know that this is  more likely to happen than not, why do we put those players in that position if there are better players available? Fayne and Sekera are playing fine hockey recently, why aren’t they getting 20+ minutes a night and Nurse/Schultz getting 15-16 minutes per night?

Do you think that Chiarelli is set to die on this hill of young dmen? Meaning if the Oilers dealt Fayne and Schultz and went with Klefbom, Nurse, Davidson, Reinhart, Gryba and then added one more, is that his plan? Perhaps he’s more willing to tinker with the forwards at this point… I can’t blame him either. How many games have they failed to show up?

Here’s the thing, the Oilers are dead last in scoring from the blue line. That needs to be rectified. Whoever told Justin Schultz that he needs to become a more “rounded” defenceman should be shot. He was producing points before and now he’s not. So if Jultz isn’t going to put points up from the blue, somebody has to be brought in to do it.

My suggestions are:

Pre-Trade Deadline

Kevin Shattenkirk – The Blues are looking for scoring help… Eberle comes to mind here.
Sami Vatanen – The Ducks are absolutely loaded on the back-end with young defenders.

Draft Day Trade

Tyson Barrie – He’s a longshot and I think the Avs will eventually sign the RFA but his skill set and age are a fit for the Oilers.
Shea Weber – These Oilers need a caretaker, an overseer, and yeah Weber’s contract is obtuse; he’s still an effective NHL defenseman. Could the Oilers trade out their first rounder if NSH gets bounced early in the playoffs or fails to make them?
Anton Stralman/Victor Hedman – Tampa has their hands tied with Stamkos and Drouin, Kucherov and Namestnikov. That’s just this year. In the upcoming seasons they’re going to have to decide on Ben Bishop/Andrei Vasilevskiy, Hedman, Tyler Johnson and Ondrej Palat. To me this is a team that is prime for the picking.

Some far out suggestions but never underestimate a guy who traded Phil Kessel and Tyler Seguin. The team needs a shakeup and I really believe that at the start of the 2016-17 season there’s going to be a significant Oiler plying his trade in another jersey.

Lowetide went on a similar rant recently here.

Oilers Skills competition

I didn’t get a chance to watch the competition live so I caught up with it on the Oilers website. Certainly a few suprises eh?

  • The hardest shot competition was something! Wow to Team Orange who had three players shoot over 100mph! I wonder if they might start using Iiro’s shot a bit more on the PP?
    • Iiro Pakrinen – 103.4mph
    • Benny Pouliot – 102.1mph
    • Rob Klinkhammer – 102.6mph
  • The fastest skater belongs to Hallsy (14.132 sec)… Oddly enough the all-time record in this competition belongs to Jonathan Drouin… (13.103 sec). I think we’ll have to wait until Nashville to see if anybody really turns it on.
  • Connor McDavid and Mark Letestu teamed up to win the accuracy contest over Teddy Purcell and Jordan Eberle. So a triumphant return for McJesus! Let’s hope he can keep it going when he returns on Feb.2nd versus the Columbus Blue Jackets.

I think that is all for today. What are your thoughts on the Oilers defense going forward or the skills competition? Let me know in the comments section below!

We’re going to have some great posts coming up at Beer League Heroes during this nine-day break so stay tuned for that!

Take Care!

BLH


CM97: Let There Be Stanley: Click the pic above and take a gander at some of our sweet tee designs! Pick one up to celebrate the return of Connor!