Tag Archives: Puljujärvi

Oilers Prospect Grades (U-21)

The Edmonton Oiler prospect depth has been suspect for more than a few years, and it’s safe to say that their inability to draft and develop beyond the first round contributed to their failures over the past decade. Between 2006 – 2014, the Oilers made a total of 56 post-first round selections, with only 20 of those players having played NHL game, and of those 20, only five have played more than 100 NHL games. Of the 56 players selected, only two are currently active on the Oilers roster (Davidson and Slepyshev), and 14 of the 56 selected remain under Oilers control. The most notable misses over that eight year window include the selection of Mitchell Moroz with the 32nd overall pick, a selection Oilers management took flack for after missing out on Ville Pokka who went only two picks later.

 

 

With a new management crew in charge we’ve seen a much different approach to the drafting and development of prospects, seeing many more college prospects added at the draft, as well as a focus on adding proven junior players instead of taking big risks on projects. The shift in philosophy came to light in the 2015 draft when the Oilers were able to add both Ethan Bear and Caleb Jones outside of the first round. The addition of college players looks good long term as they will then be afforded additional years to sign ELC’s.

 

 

There are many ways different services rank players and project potential, but the criteria for this list is fairly simple. Level of play and production given level of league. For example, a player who spent half of a season in SuperElit and was then promoted and able to produce at the SHL level is likely going to be ranked higher than a player in the OHL who was just under a point per game in their draft year, and a hair over a point per game this year. Now I understand many will say “you can’t just look at stats and say this guy is going to be better than another” which I fully agree with, however, given the inability to get a look at all of the prospects, the list is more so based on the way their career path is trending. So take a look, and let me know your thoughts.

 

 

Edmonton Oilers Prospect Grades (U-21)

 

 

A – Projected to be a top 6 forward, top 3 defenceman, or NHL 1A or 1B goalie. Very little uncertainty regarding these prospects, and their trade value would be a first round pick or a first round pick plus.

 

Jesse Puljujarvi (RW) – Bakersfield Condors

 

Expect him to be a full time top six NHL player next season. Has been able to produce at just under a point per game at the AHL level, and may earn a call up before the end of the season. Going to be a point producer in the top six, just have to be patient.

 

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWEBUT1qFuM]

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=152117

 
B – May not be a big time player, or even a top six forward/top three guy, but they are the most likely to carve out full time role in the NHL. Trade value is fairly high, likely a second rounder, or a second round plus.

 

 

Caleb Jones (LD) – Portland Winterhawks

 

Gained a lot of attention at the World Juniors when he logged over 30 minutes in the gold medal game. Has been stellar for the Hawks this season, and is on pace to pass his point total from last season. High on him given his ability to be a sound defensive zone player as well as jump in on offense.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=199902

 

Tyler Benson (LW) – Vancouver Giants

 

He’ll be an NHL’er if he can get past the injury problems. The positive on that is the lack of repeating injuries. Good nose for the net and is likely a bottom six forward. The real test for Benson will come next year on what will be a Giants team that should be able to score, so we’ll see how big of a factor he is.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=154220

 

Ethan Bear (RD) – Seattle Thunderbirds

 

Hasn’t had the most consistent year, but is on pace to blow past 70 points from the blue line. Reminds me a lot of Duncan Keith, could be a big time player. Good skater, good hockey sense, will see him in the AHL next year, with the hope being his game transitions easily.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=197561

 

Filip Berglund (RD) – Skelleftea AIK

 

Taken in the third round and was able to jump up to log full time SHL minutes this season. Has a contract through 17/18, and will hopefully make the jump to North America in two years, but the Oilers are able to be patient and hope he’s able to continue to develop.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=113834

 

 
C – Projected to be a fringe NHL player, and there’s quite a bit of optimism with these players. Unlikely to ever be a top six forward or top three defenceman, but could carve out a role at the NHL level.

 

 

Dylan Wells (G) – Peterborough Petes

 

Strong year with Peterborough, maintaining above a .910 save percentage throughout most of the season. Has performed well internationally and has sound fundamentals. Have to be patient with goalies, but he’s proving to be a good pickup.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=239801

 

Kyle Platzer (C) – Bakersfield Condors

 

Hasn’t had the best season in terms of offensive production, but has been held to a fourth line role for the majority of the season. He has a good offensive toolset, and may be a bottom six forward down the road. Would like to see what he could do in a more prominent role.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=126916

 

Aapeli Rasanen (C) – Sioux City Musketeers

 

Strong first year in North America, earning a spot on the Finnish World Junior roster where he was a point per game player. Right handed center who has been very strong in the dot. Heading to Boston College next season.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=118081

 

William Lagesson (LD) – UMass (Amherst)

 

Was left off the Swedish World Junior roster after playing with them the year before. He’s a mean two way defenceman who can pass the puck. Defends well. Next two years at UMass will be extremely beneficial.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=86158

 

John Marino (RD) – Harvard University

 

Strong freshman campaign with Harvard. Plays a steady two way game. Strong skater who will see his role with Harvard expand in the coming years. Right handed shot adds value, especially to the Oilers.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=278675

 

 
D – Unlikely to ever be a full time NHL player, and may be considered a project or labelled as enigmatic. May have some trade value, but would likely be a later pick.

 

 

Matthew Cairns (LD) – Powell River Kings

 

After moving from Fargo to Powell River, Cairns picked up his offensive production logging 16 points in 18 games. He’s heading to Cornell next year where we will get a more accurate idea of what his game really is.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=245621

 

Graham McPhee (LW) – Boston College

 

Had an average first year at BC, however his two way game seems to be a bright spot. Good bloodlines, likely finds a contract down the road, but hard to read an 18 year old playing a depth role in college. Patience.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=226444

 

Markus Niemelainen (LD) – Saginaw Spirit

 

A bit of a disastrous year for Niemelainen as his offensive totals dropped tremendously and his inability to find consistency really hurt his game. He’s a project worth investing in, and I wouldn’t doubt we see him return to Europe to find his game.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=175894

 

 

E – Not likely to sign a pro contract, zero trade value at the moment.

 

 

Miroslav Svoboda (G) – HC Dukla Jihlava

 

Has posted good numbers in the Czech 2 league, but has struggled with conditioning and athleticism. He’s still young, and like I said, you never know with goalies, but he seems like a lifetime European player.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=101860

 

Vincent Desharnais (RD) – Providence College

 

With the importance of puck moving defenceman at an all time high, not sure the 6’6 defenceman who has only registered 6 assists in the past three years, his chance at the NHL seems doubtful.

 

http://www.eliteprospects.com/player.php?player=264690

 

 

Thanks for reading! I’d love to get your feedback to know where you’d make changes or who else you might push up to an A or B rating. To get ahold of me, send a tweet to @york_dg

Post-Game Report: Oilers vs Calgary (10/12/2016)

Game result: Oilers 7-4 Calgary

Apparently it was “80s Night” over at Rogers Place for our first ever NHL game at the new barn. What a racket! 11 goals! What era even is this? So there were a whole lot of things to like about this game, and some head-scratchers. Let’s go through them in point-form because it’s too late to worry about complete sentences:

Things that were awesome:
– Chiefly, Captain Connor showing up for 2G-1A-3P in his first game of the year is a pretty damn good look at what’s to come for his sophomore season. CANNOT wait to see it unfold
– Maroon getting the first goal in Rogers Place was really cool. He was so stoked on it. Love this guy
– Kris Russell was really good. Guys. Can someone direct me to the nearest bakery serving humble pie? I was shitting on this guy as much as the rest of them because of how awful he is from a fancystats point of view, but he really shone tonight with 2 assists and several solid defensive plays that directly saved very likely Calgary goals. (In case you weren’t confused enough yet, his all-situations Corsi For on the night was 41.67%, and 5v5 was 48.28%. Apparently he is cursed on paper.)
– Larsson looked pretty good, too. Poised. Doesn’t panic. Klef needs to settle in a bit still, I think, but when he does, these two will be mint together
– Here are some more misleading stats since we’re on it: Larsson had a 34.38% all-situations Corsi For on the night, but could you tell by watching? I sure couldn’t. Could’ve been because he played 47% of his TOI against the Gaudreau/Monahan line, as per WheatNOil on Twitter (https://t.co/GqjIhEuD8r). He also started 75% of his shifts in the defensive zone. Leaning on him heavy already, I like it
– Poolparty got his 1st NHL goal on a beauty snipe under Elliott’s wide-open right arm. That’s nice. :] He also lead the team with a ridiculous 76.19% Corsi For rating in all situations, which came back down to earth a little bit at 5v5 with 58.33%, but still really good for the rookie’s first game in the bigs
– Brandon Davidson single-handedly saved, at least from what I saw, 3 sure Calgary goals. Some went off a well-positioned skate, some off his stick, some from getting his body in the way of a player in front of the net. BDavey is just so good and so solid, and that leads me into the other part of the night…

Things that sucked a little:

– So Tkachuk Jr is kind of a shithead, hey? He straight up slew-footed BDavey and he never returned for the 3rd. Still awaiting word on his condition/timeline for return. Fingers crossed it was precautionary. This kid just has no luck
– The Oilers allowed two pretty sloppy short-handed goals there in the 2nd, in what was just a classic #HereComeTheOilers 2nd period. I’d like to know the statistical metric that describes how we’re just so bad in the middle of games when we can start and end so strong
– Talbot was not the sharpest. He did stop 37 shots, but let 4 in for a .902 SV% in his first start of 2016-17. I mean, it’s no Brian Elliott .778 SV%, but we know he can be better. I chalk this up mostly to opening night/new building/don’t screw up this game of all game jitters
– Lucic played just okay. He sure made his presence felt early on when the Calgary goon squad figured they could throw McDavid around without repercussion, so that was good of him. But he gave up a really bad 2-on-1 opportunity and actually accidentally knocked one of those Calgary shorties in. So it’s just a matter of finesse at this point for him, I think. I hope.

Anyway. Numbers and analysis aside, we won 7-4 and start the year on a good note, and almost as importantly, Calgary starts the year on a lame note and that feels just as good if I’m honest.

Oilers Most Likely to Not Be Oilers By…

Part I – Training Camp

With inspiration from the Beer League Hero himself, we’ve decided to come up with a recurring series here at BLH, a series that analyzes who we should prepare to say goodbye to at certain key points in the season and offseason.

Look forward in the coming months for updates near the end of the 2016 calendar year, before the trade deadline, before the 2017 expansion draft, and before the 2017 entry draft. My insidious plan to secure my writing gig at BLH for at least a year is slowly falling into place.

For this installment, we’ll look at the block of time between now and the start of training camp in September. I’m going to focus (unfortunately) on Edmonton’s simultaneously favourite and least favourite little Russian Rocket, Nail “Please Just Live Up To Your Potential” Yakupov.

The rumour mill was churning earlier this week about a near-transaction that broke first here on BLH about Yak going to Florida for Alex Petrovic and a pick. It’s understood that the deal was hinging for Chiarelli on a second rounder, but Florida was only willing to package in a third. Nail has also been linked to several teams throughout the season, amongst them Montreal and Winnipeg, but those rumours seem to have cooled off as of late.

One thing remains clear, even if it’s true that Yakupov or his camp didn’t formally request a move out of E-town, he appears to be firmly on the trade block regardless.

Unfortunately for Oilers fans looking for a good return, Yak’s trade value has truly never been lower; the going rate for much of the latter half of the 2015-16 season was apparently a third round pick. But if we’re going purely based off numbers, this isn’t really fair. For his career, Nail Yakupov is sitting at 0.44 points per game. That is 165th amongst NHL forward with 200+ games played across the past 4 seasons. It’s solid 2nd line production, period. He could literally never improve for the remainder of his career and still be worth at least a 2nd round pick, and rightfully more.

According to a recent Steve Dangle podcast interview from July 12th with ex-Oilers goaltender Ben Scrivens, Yak is “criminally misunderstood” in Edmonton and in the media. Paraphrasing his very clear statements on the matter, Scribbles has nothing but good things to say about the young first overall pick, calling his will to win and work ethic among the highest he’s ever seen. Ben says the only thing Nail is guilty of is something he himself has been guilty of over the years: trying to do too much. A fair assessment, because despite Yakupov’s flaws, I think very few of us could truly accuse the guy of not playing with his heart on his sleeve.

The erroneous image Yakupov’s critics have of the “lazy Russian” doesn’t seem to hold much water, according to a guy from that mythical place known as “inside the locker room”, who certainly doesn’t owe the Edmonton organization any unwarranted praise considering the way his AHL assignment last season was so hastily handled. (Scrivens elaborates on this more in his interview, and also has some interesting things he doesn’t say about Taylor Hall and The Trade. It’s a good listen, check it out below!

So with all this said, are you as quick to want Yak gone as maybe you were in March or April? If we’re talking about “bottom-6” Nail Yakupov, I’m with you. His third- and fourth-line production is straight trash. May the #packyourshit hastags flow freely on the Twitter machine. But top-6 Nail Yakupov is a different animal. He looked bloody brilliant next to McDavid at the beginning of 2015, able to use his wicked shot to its full potential on the receiving end of the gift pucks off McDavid’s stick. Two things stand in the way of us ever seeing this Yakupov again, and they’re called Jordan Eberle and Jesse Puljujärvi. Ebs is a known quantity, and I don’t think anyone has anymore questions left going into his seventh season in the NHL if he knows how to finish a play. And maybe it’s more classic Edmontonian wishful thinking, but I’m pretty sure Poolparty lives on the top-6 in 2016-17. He’s NHL-ready, and he’s bloody brilliant, too, and in likely more ways than Yak, despite everything that we may collectively misunderstand about him and his game.

“But Mike, what if we trade Eberle for Barrie before September?” Well then we don’t have a problem anymore, do we? Staple Yakupov’s ass to McDavid’s right wing and watch the highlight reels. Groom Puljujärvi on the second and third lines, swapping Draisaitl out on RNH’s wing/centering the third line, see who develops chemistry with who, and we’re off to the proverbial playoff races. But we’ll have to wait until July 29th for Barrie’s arbitration hearing before we have any idea whether or not a trade is likely to happen.

From where I sit, I’m not holding my breath. Plus, by not picking up Barrie this season, and instead maybe trying to wait for 2017 free agency to see if he or an even better puck-moving defenceman comes up for auction, we get to protect Davidson in expansion.

So finally, with all of that said, and fair or not, I think Yakupov goes before we get into training camp. But where he goes is much harder to say. We’ve heard about the Cody Ceci rumours, and personally I think they definitely have merit. I have another idea, though. Bear with me on this.

McIlrath, post-fight and looking pleased

Dylan McIlrath

Yes, 2G-2A-4P in all of 37 total NHL games Dylan McIlrath.

Also 6’5″, 221lb, 10th overall pick in 2010, 24-years-young Dylan McIlrath.

He does cool things like this:

And also things like this (appropriately, his first NHL goal was against none other than us):

While showing some really decent offensive and defensive advanced stats like this:

Joe Fortunato over at Blue Shirt Banter, in his article entitled Dylan McIlrath Needs To Be Part Of The Rangers’ Future, has this to say about McIlrath with regards to how he impressed out of a training camp last summer that he maybe wasn’t expected to make it out of:

… something really cool happened. When McIlrath did get into game action he was good. As in, actually really impressive on a level I’m not sure many people expected.

Which is why it was so insane that Alain Vigneault never found a real home for McIlrath in the lineup. Not only was McIlrath better than both Dan Girardi and Marc Staal (even on games where he had sat for a month with no action), he could have at the very least been used to give rest to an injured and ageing Girardi, a declining Staal or an ageing Dan Boyle. Instead, Vigneault opted to staple McIlrath to the press box…

Fortunato continues with some advanced stats,

McIlrath, in just 35 games, was a 51.06 corsi for % at even strength. He was a -1.88% in offensive zone starts rel, and was a +2 in scoring chances differential. When you looked at the Rangers defense and saw all the problems, McIlrath never caught your eye — despite Vigneault treating him like a player he couldn’t trust on the back end.

Why? We’ll never know. The subjective wheel of justice reared its ugly head early and often this year, with no one taking a bigger hit than McIlrath.

The Oilers make this trade because McIlrath is a promising, young, giant right side defenceman who is absolutely begging to break out and become a real force on a team that appreciates him and uses him properly. He’s cheap at $800K through the 2017-18 season (in which he will be a RFA), and he’s exactly the type of player that just twirls Chiarelli’s moustache.

The Rangers make this trade because Nail Yakupov is an instant improvement over their current second-line RW Jesper Fast, and given the right environment (*cough* Zibanejad and Nash *cough*), has a significantly higher ceiling than Kevin Hayes. I think there could even be some magic made putting him next to a young playmaker like Oscar Lindberg. We all know how much Yakupov likes playmaking centers. Plus, Vigneault gets to clear up space on the back end to move forward with Brady Skjei like he wants to do anyway.

I think that we try to get New York to throw in the 2018 2nd rounder they picked up from Ottawa in the Zibanejad trade, or if Chia can’t swing that, then the Rangers’ 2017 3rd rounder. Both teams end up with projects, but with guys who I think amount to two solid pieces who clearly need a new environment in which to flourish and show their true potential.


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