Tag Archives: Phil Kessel

SCF 2016 Game 1 – SJ at PIT – Detailed Statistical Breakdown

Game Notes PIT vs S.J


San Jose Sharks (Head Coach: Peter DeBoer) at Pittsburgh Penguins (Head Coach: Mike Sullivan)

NHL Playoff Game #411, CONSOL Energy Center, 2016-05-30 06:00:00PM (GMT -0600)

Penguins 3-2

Referees: Wes McCauley, Dan O’Rourke, Dan O’Halloran
Linesmen: Pierre Racicot, Derek Amell, Jonny Murray

Three Stars: Nick Bonino; Conor Sheary; Patrick Marleau

  • Welcome!  This is the “OilersNerdAlert” format statistical breakdown for this game.  Beer League Heroes will be publishing these state of the art analyses for each of the Final games.
  • This was an exciting game. Hope they’re all this intense!
  • The Sharks are my designated #2 team, since I have family and friends down in Silicon Valley, so … boo. Also the game information below is from the Sharks point of view.  If you’re a Penguins fan and want to see the breakdown from a PIT point of view, please comment and we’ll be happy to add a second gamepage.
  • The score ended up being (and following) the gameflows pretty much exactly – which happens less often than you’d think!
  • My man BLH is choked that Justin Schultz isn’t wearing #19, so he could make up a half and half jersey shirt. Even as a Penguin, Jultz frustrates Oiler fans!

Grab a 16-bit tee and help keep the BLH ship afloat! We’ve got all the big names playing in the Cup Final! Burns, Malkin, Kessel, Pavelski, etc! Click the pics above or right HERE to go and get yours today!


Game at a Glance

http://i.imgur.com/h7cr0Fu.png
http://i.imgur.com/FzkX60r.png

Leaderboard

  • Patrick Marleau, Tomas Hertl each had 1 goal
  • Logan Couture blasted 4 shots on goal
  • Brent Burns was most active on the team with 13 shot attempts
  • Tomas Hertl was the faceoff champ at 100.0% (1-0) … um, yeah, but …
  • Tomas Hertl led the team in on-ice 5v5 shot attempts at 60.0% (24-16)
  • Joel Ward trailed the team in 5v5 on-ice shot attempts at 20.0% (3-12)
  • Dainius Zubrus was the big hitter with 6

Goal Overview

Team Period Time Strength ShotType ShotDist Danger
PIT 1 12:46 EV Wrist 10.0 2.53
PIT 1 13:48 EV Wrist 18.0 1.81
S.J 2 3:02 PP Wrist 11.0 2.44
S.J 2 18:12 EV Backhand 8.0 2.34
PIT 3 17:27 EV Wrist 13.0 2.26

Who Won the 5v5 Shot Battle?

Which Battle Who Won By How Much
Shots PIT 36 to 24 (60.0%)
Average Shot Distance Against (ft) PIT 32 to 34
Corsi PIT 56 to 52 (51.9%)
Score & Venue Adjusted Corsi PIT 56 to 52 (52.2%)
Fenwick PIT 43 to 33 (56.6%)
Dangerous Fenwick PIT 49 to 28 (63.2%)

http://i.imgur.com/j3rdRtu.png
http://i.imgur.com/hFcAwUV.png

Detailed Metrics

Shot Metrics
Strength CF CA CF% SACF SACA SACF% FF FA FF% DFF DFA DFF%
EV 52 56 48.1 51.7 56.5 47.8 33 43 43.4 28.4 48.8 36.8
All 58 67 46.4 57.4 67.2 46.1 37 52 41.6 33.5 58.1 36.6
Other Metrics
Team PP PPG PIM FO Hits Giveaways Takeaways
Penguins 3 0 6 53.2 36 10 10
Sharks 2 1 8 46.8 36 8 4

How the Players Did (On Ice Shot Attempts)

New chart! Shows how the players did directly comparing raw Corsi with DangerousFenwick. Look for big discrepenacies one way or the other.

http://i.imgur.com/U5TZLbJ.png

http://i.imgur.com/shPtb30.png

Danger Tables

Forwards are sorted by decreasing CF%. Defensemen and pairs sorted by increasing DFA60. Forward lines by decreasing DFF%. Positions are as listed by the NHL roster page, not necessarily where they played.

Centres
Centre EVTOI OZS%2 CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
T. Hertl 15:56 46.7 24 16 60 60 59.3 48.7
J. Thornton 15:36 50.0 23 17 57.5 57.6 57.7 47.7
J. Pavelski 16:11 50.0 23 19 54.8 54.9 55.6 46.8
L. Couture 13:05 33.3 14 13 51.9 51.4 40 51.5
P. Marleau 13:37 37.5 13 15 46.4 45.9 35 44.1
N. Spaling 09:21 40.0 10 12 45.5 44.6 43.8 36.7
T. Wingels 09:19 40.0 10 12 45.5 44.5 40 32.7
D. Zubrus 08:41 50.0 9 12 42.9 42.6 46.7 38.4
M. Karlsson 12:34 28.6 6 13 31.6 30.7 23.1 16.5
C. Tierney 12:03 33.3 5 14 26.3 25.8 20 9
Wingers
Winger EVTOI OZS%2 CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
J. Donskoi 13:24 33.3 16 13 55.2 54.4 45.5 56.9
J. Ward 11:07 33.3 3 12 20 19.9 16.7 2.9
Defensemen
Defense EVTOI OZS%2 CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF% DFA60
R. Polak 14:24 85.7 14 15 48.3 47.6 38.9 31.2 25.83
B. Dillon 15:33 77.8 15 15 50 49.4 29.4 19.5 30.87
M. Vlasic 17:17 20.0 14 17 45.2 45 39.1 28.4 59.71
B. Burns 17:11 38.9 23 21 52.3 51.9 54.5 51.5 63.9
P. Martin 19:52 35.3 26 24 52 51.7 51.4 43.8 76.41
J. Braun 15:58 0.0 12 20 37.5 37.6 33.3 21.2 84.55
Defense Pairings
Pair EVTOI DFA60 AvgDistA CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
B. Dillon R. Polak 12:24 26.13 45.3 11 13 45.8 44.8 33.3 26.3
P. Martin B. Burns 15:59 67.19 26.5 20 20 50 49.5 51.7 47.6
M. Vlasic J. Braun 13:02 77.34 35 7 16 30.4 30.3 23.5 13.5
Forward Lines
Line EVTOI CF CA CF% SACF% FF% DFF%
J. Pavelski J. Thornton T. Hertl 14:17 23 14 62.2 62.2 60 48.2
P. Marleau J. Donskoi L. Couture 11:23 12 11 52.2 51.7 37.5 46.1
D. Zubrus N. Spaling T. Wingels 06:22 8 8 50 49.5 50 37.1
J. Ward C. Tierney M. Karlsson 10:04 2 11 15.4 15 10 1.3

Game Flows



http://i.imgur.com/iuIl6E3.png

Rink Maps

Defense Pairings – Shots Given Up

http://i.imgur.com/JF31KsK.png

http://i.imgur.com/6OXPdxu.png

Forward Lines – Shots Taken

http://i.imgur.com/Rn1QS9F.png
http://i.imgur.com/32v442K.png

Head to Head

http://i.imgur.com/L3NnbbK.png
http://i.imgur.com/9Rhu5la.png

http://i.imgur.com/Hn3ELCv.png

NHL Media Highlights

Click the link to play the associated highlight video

Marleau ties game with wraparound
Jones’ back-to-back saves
Hertl’s power-play tally
Jones’ early save
Rust opens the scoring
Jones denies Hornqvist, Crosby
Bonino’s late go-ahead goal
Penguins strike twice in 1st
Jones’ stellar toe save
Murray’s big blocker save
Murray’s shoulder save
Murray stops Hertl in front
Sheary’s perfect shot
Jones’ tip-in save
Jones robs Hornqvist

What’s a Top-5 Pick Worth?

So, as a follow-up article to my precious article’s attempt to place a value on a top-pairing right-side defensemen, I was asked “What’s the value of a Top-5 pick”.  Now, if you believe Auston Matthews is a generational player, I previously wrote an article trying to come up with a modern version of the Lindros trade, which was the last time a “generational” forward was dealt.  However, if you don’t think Matthews fits into that mold, this will cover a more traditional view of what a Top-5 pick is worth.

For an idea on the value of a draft pick, I used the information from http://www.tsn.ca/statistically-speaking-expected-value-of-nhl-draft-picks-1.317819, an excellent article by Scott Cullen.

Since the 2000 season, the following trades for Top-5 picks have occurred.  Notice from 2000-2004 it was extremely common to see movement in the draft, but since then it has been less likely to occur.  We have:

  • 2000:
    • #5 Raffi Torres, NYI from Tampa
      • Kevin Weekes, Kristian Kudroc and a 2001 2nd round pick for the #5 pick, 2000 4th round pick and a 2000 7th round pick;
      • What did they get:
        • Kevin Weekes had a few seasons under his belt by that point, but had never played more than 36 games in a season until this trade. He had ok numbers going forward, so we can classify him as an average NHL starter.
        • Kristian Kudroc was a 6’7, 225lb right-shot defenseman, who was a very physical player, but he never panned out at the NHL level with only 26 total NHL games in his career, but teams have always been willing to place a premium on giants like this;
        • A 2nd round pick, giving you a 33.8% chance of landing an NHL player;
      • What did they give up:
        • The #5 pick, which has a chance of being 73.8% chance of being a Top-6 caliber or better player.
        • A 4th round pick, which is an 18.9% chance of giving you an NHL player;
        • A 7th round pick, which is a 9.3% chance of giving you an NHL player;
  • 2001:
    • #2 Jason Spezza, Ottawa from NYI
      • Alexei Yashin for Bill Muckalt, Zdeno Chara and the #2 pick;
      • What did they get:
        • Oh, the trades you wish you could take back if you were the Islanders.. Having said that, at the time of the deal, Yashin had put up 88 points in 82 NHL games the previous season, and his time with the Islanders wasn’t that bad, putting up 75 in 78 the next season. As well, he was a legitimate top-line NHL center at the time. If it wasn’t for his absurd deal, he likely would have had a much longer career with the Islanders, as he had 50 points in 58 games the season he was bought out. He played 5 seasons with the Islanders, scoring 290 points in 346 games.
      • What did they give up:
        • Bill Muckalt was your average NHL depth winger, not much to consider there.
        • The #2 pick, which is that 73.8% chance of getting a top-6 player or better;
        • Zdeno Chara, the 6’9 250lb giant, who was in his 4th season with the Islanders when this trade went down. Now, it should be noted that with the Islanders, he didn’t seem nearly as skilled as he turned out to be, putting up 29 points in 231 games. It was pretty clear he had a mean streak. However, his first season with the Senators he put up 23 points in 75 games, and never looked back. Call this a quality prospect defenseman deal.
  • 2002:
    • #1 Rick Nash, Columbus from Florida
      • #3, some draft swap options that were not exercised for next year (ability to swap first round picks) #3 Jay Bouwmeester, Florida from Columbus
      • What did they get: This was a classic example of two teams preferring different players (forwards or defensemen), and swapping their picks that year with the option for the other team to swap them next season… Essentially, this was just an attempt to pick up a better draft spot next year when an organization clearly preferred a player.
    • #4 Joni Pitkanen, Philly from Tampa
      • Ruslan Fedotenko, 2 2002 2nd round picks for the #4
      • What did they give up:
        • At the time, Ruslan Fedotenko had seasons of 36 points in 74 games and 26 points in 78 games. During his time with the Lightning, he was around a 45-point winger, so a solid second-line player.
        • The pair of 2nd round picks gives the team 33.8% chance for each pick of landing an NHL player
      • What did they get:
        • A defenseman in the first 5 picks has a 64.7% chance of being a Top-4 defenseman;
  • 2003:
    • #1 Marc-Andre Fleury, Pittsburgh from Florida
      • The #3 pick, 2003 2nd round pick for the #1 and a 2003 3rd round pick;
      • Once again, this was a case of organizations preferring a given player in the Top-5, where the team trading down to pick their player gained a 2nd round pick for a 3rd round pick for doing it.
  • 2004:
    • #4 Andrew Ladd, Carolina from Columbus
      • A 2004 1st round pick and a 2004 2nd round pick for the #4 pick.
      • And the same idea here, where a team picked up an additional 2nd round pick for moving down a few spots.
  • 2008:
    • #3 Zach Bogosian
      • Rights to Keith Tkachuk, conditional 4th round pick;
      • This was a deal sweetener trade for Keith Tkachuk if they were able to resign him, so essentially a #3 pick was used to balance a trade for a Top-3 power forward. A parallel could be used here if the Oilers were to make a trade for Kevin Shattenkirk and part of the deal was a 1st round pick going to the Blues if they were able to re-sign him.
    • #5 Luke Schenn, Toronto from NYI
      • The #5 pick for the #7 pick, 2008 3rd round pick and a 2009 2nd round pick
      • Once again, we have a trading down deal, where an organization dropped down 2 spots in the draft to pick up some extra 2nd and 3rd round picks.
  • 2010:
    • #2 Tyler Seguin, Boston from Toronto
      • Phil Kessel for #2, 2010 2nd round, 2011 1st round #9
      • Now this is one of the rare deals, where an elite NHL winger was dealt;
      • What did they get:
        • Phil Kessel was just coming into his own then, and he went on to put up some very high numbers with a very bad Toronto organization. He would be considered an elite Top-3 winger;
      • What did they give up:
        • The #2 pick would be a 73.8% chance of a Top-6 or better forward;
        • The #9 in 2011 was a 64.7% chance of getting a Top-4 defenseman;
        • And the 2nd round pick was a 33.8% chance of getting an NHL player;

So, if we remove all the trades that would just be the Oilers trading down slightly to get a couple more 2nd or 3rd round picks, we have these left:

  • A #5 pick (as well as a 4th round pick and a 7th round pick) went for an average starting goaltender, a quality prospect defenseman, and a 2nd round pick;
  • A #2 pick as well as a depth forward and a quality prospect defenseman for a Top-3 NHL center;
  • A #4 pick for a 2nd line Winger and a pair of 2nd round picks;
  • A #3 pick as a deal sweetener if a team re-signs an elite forward (or player) they get in a deal;
  • A #2 pick, a #9 pick and a 2nd round pick for an Elite Top-3 scoring winger;
        • The #9 in 2011 was a 64.7% chance of getting a Top-4 defenseman;
        • And the 2nd round pick was a 33.8% chance of getting an NHL player;

So, what can we conclude from this?  Depending on where the Oilers pick, we can see that you can get an elite NHL forward for a #2 pick if you include either another pick or a quality prospect defenseman.  If you go down to #3, you can use this to seal the deal on a soon-to-be UFA elite player in a deal.  At #4, you can get yourself a Top-6 forward and a few extra picks, and at #5 you can get a quality prospect, a starting goaltender and an extra depth pick.

I would say there’s little point in trading the #4 or #5 here, as teams rarely got anything worth the effort.  For the #3, this would be an example, as mentioned, of how the Oilers may do a deal for Brent Burns or Kevin Shattenkirk, who both have one year until free agency, however that wouldn’t work for this year’s draft anyhow, it would be more likely to involve their pick next year.  And lastly, we can see that you can land an elite NHL forward in a deal for that #2 pick.  Having said that, if you look at the Yashin deal and the Seguin deal, both teams trading for that elite player and giving up the draft pick did not fare well.  Essentially, teams dealing their Top-5 picks don’t tend to come out of it all that well unless they’re doing a swap with another team for a high first round pick to get the player they prefer.


 

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BLH Edmonton Oilers Weekly Roundup Oct 25th-Nov 1st

Sigh. Oilers did not do well this week. I predicted them to go 1-3 this week, but losing all three games by one goal is a kick in the pants. Especially that heartbreaker against Calgary last night. That was unbelievable.

Oil Country is probably in a foul mood today and rightfully so.

Edmonton Oilers Three Stars

3. Connor McDavid

McDavid is still in the three stars because he’s been that great. Against Montreal, he was the straw that stirred the drink by pitching in two assists, including a great play to a wide open Benoit Pouliot. That said, there’s two others that out performed McDavid this week.His so far career high seven game point streak was snapped last night against Calgary, although he came awfully close twice to continue that streak.

2. Leon Draisaitl 

Draisaitl was recalled earlier this week and had to catch a flight for the game on Thursday against Montreal. Draisaitl, with a lack of sleep, only scored two goals including the game winner in that game where the Oilers were down 3-0 after one. Draisaitl kept up his “clutch” factor by scoring the game tying goal and two helpers against Calgary last night. Two games in and it will be a very difficult task to send him back to Bakersfield.

1. Taylor Hall

Has been on fire. He only had three points last night. Sure, he had some turnovers and the Hall Character Problem club will be all over that, but he was our strongest player this week. He has nine points in his last five games. He’s playing like one of the best Left Wingers in the NHL that we know he is. This season would be a lot worse without Taylor Hall on the left side.

Edmonton Oilers Rumors 

So, the Edmonton Oilers are completely decimated with injuries at the moment. Stop if you heard that one before. Out are: Jordan Eberle, Justin Schultz, Griffin Reinhart, Matt Hendricks, Rob Klinkhammer. I’m biased but I think losing Reinhart hurts the most because we are forced to watch a god awful Ference and Gryba pairing without a capable puck mover in sight. Reinhart isn’t known for his puck movement abilities but sure is a helluva better bet than Ference and Gryba who handle the puck like a grenade.

There’ll be some tough questions: Who will get sent down? Who will get put where? Most importantly though, and one would hope Chiarelli is watching carefully: That defence is horrendous, even when healthy. Right now, the Oilers cannot move the puck out one bit out of their end. Who knows what is out there but one would have to think that it’ll get remedied quickly.

Also, the third and fourth lines scoring is non existent. Lander has vanished. If someone could find his game, please let the Oilers know.

Around the League

 

Highlights and Videos

Some saves of the week

 

Dylan Larkin scored a nifty goal

 

Mats Zuccarello scored his first career hat trick

 

Camera Man had his lens broken by a shot

 

The Week Ahead

The Oilers have three games this week and it’s a doozy:

Tuesday at home versus Philadelphia and Friday at home versus Pittsburgh.

Sunday they visit Chicago.

That’s your weekly recap for this week! Follow me on Twitter.