Tag Archives: Vancouver Giants

2019 NHL Draft: Bowen Byram vs. Morgan Rielly from @TPEHockey

Bowen Byram has made it clear that when it comes to defensemen at the 2019 draft nobody compares to him. He’s been top 5 in WHL scoring for defensemen and is second in scoring for his Vancouver Giants at over a point per game. Byram has been nothing less than a dominant force in the WHL, making the Giants a consistently dangerous squad. With a player that can control a game like Byram, it’s clear he won’t be sitting long at the 2019 draft. With many wondering what Byram could be in the NHL, we can look over to Toronto to see a player with a similar style and ceiling to Byram.

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Morgan Rielly has long been a staple of the Leafs blue line. He’s served as their number one defenseman but is more widely considered a high-end number two defensemen if he‘s on any other cup contending blue line. Rielly, in his draft year, put on quite the performance in the WHL, Byram’s current league. With the Moose Jaw Warriors, he was kept to only 18 games due to an ACL tear but scored 18 points. In that short time scouts got a good look at the dynamic Vancouver native. Rielly was selected 5th overall by Toronto as the third defenseman behind Ryan Murray and Griffin Reinhart.

Going into the draft in Vancouver we’d expect to see Byram be taken in a similar range. Some have him slid into the third spot behind Hughes and Kakko, but most have him slotted in around 4-6. Almost all agree Byram is this draft’s top defensemen. While he is in a similar range as Rielly we also expect him to have a similar ceiling. Some see him as a future number one defensemen on a cup contender, but most see him as a very good number two guy. It’s expected he will play a huge role in his team’s success. The other assumption is that he should be NHL ready in only a year or less. Some believe he’s got a shot at stepping into an NHL role immediately. With his size (6’1”) and physical maturity, he wouldn’t have a problem surviving the NHL game. Generally, Byram is a high ceiling and a higher floor player. Byram is not only a safe pick for any team but a pick with big potential. A true low risk, high reward player.

In terms of the on-ice game, Rielly and Byram share many similarities. Each play a high paced offensive game. They love to jump up in the rush or get down low in the offensive zone to open passing or shooting lanes. The two have a high focus on offense and contribute as much as any forward. They are great passers that can thread the needle or play keep away from defenders. Making slot passes is a strength of both and leads to a lot of goals for their respective teams.

Both are great playmakers, but Byram has real special goal scoring abilities. He often takes the puck to the slot or sets up lower in the offensive zone to score. He’s got a great shot which has allowed him to gain the WHL lead for most goals by a defenseman. His goal scoring has also proved to be more than clutch as he holds the record for most WHL OT goals at 6 this season.

The duo also possesses high-end speed, and especially Byram with his explosive stops and start. With both players, it immediately stands out how well each can skate with the puck. I’d consider both elite puck carriers with lateral movement and edges that are rarely combatted by defenders. It’s hard to get a handle on either of them as they dodge checks on the rush. Their skating and edgework also allow each to walk the blue line very well and avoid wingers as they put pressure on them at the line. Escaping pressure is nothing to either of these guys.

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Other shared aspects of the two’s games include top-of-their-class offensive instincts, great puck skills, elusive ability with the puck, and a role as a power play quarterback.

Defensively, I’d say the Byram has the upper hand. He plays a powerful defensive game with physical capabilities and high intensity. He shuts down lanes and his good with his stick. While his focus is on offensive play, he doesn’t get caught lacking on the defensive end.

Overall, Byram is widely seen as the top defensemen up for this year’s draft. He could slide into an NHL role next year. Eventually, he might be a high-end number two defensemen with probable number one upside. Any team drafting Byram should look forward to their own Morgan Rielly with the potential to be more.

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Hedge Your Bets on Benson

I’m typing this article up on a combination of an iPad Air 2 + Apple Magic Keyboard 2. It’s replacing my very-powerful-yet-very-old-and-temperamental Macbook Pro that I picked up sometime in 2010. It’s a great computer and all, but more often than not it’s a headache to use, it doesn’t show up for me every day, and basically I just needed something new, different, more reliable. Maybe the iPad doesn’t have the same kind of raw computing power as my old Mac, but it is also without the old, buggy software and backlog of files slowing it down every time I need to count on it.

Which is, of course, an absolutely perfect metaphor for who we’re going to be talking about today: Tyler Benson. I’m going all in here, and I’m predicting that Tyler Benson is going to grow into the perfect left wing replacement for Taylor Hall. It might not be this season or the next, but wait and see. By his early 20s, Benson is going to be an absolute force in the NHL, and he’ll be tearing it up on the left side in a very Hall-like fashion, but (hopefully) without all the other bullshit getting in the way of otherwise remarkable performances.

BACKGROUND

The Edmonton Oilers picked up a really interesting player in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft in Tyler Benson. He’s an Edmonton boy, and a minor celebrity coming out of the South Side Athletic Club following his just absurd numbers put up in AAA with the Lions Bantam team. Touted by some analysts in the early 2010s to be the “Next One” out of Western Canada, how did such a shining prospect fall into the Oilers’ laps 32nd overall in the 2nd round?

In a word: injuries.

The kid was an absolute monster in AAA. Like, as in, “numbers no one had ever seen before.” He scored 146 points (57G, 89A) in 33 (33!) games in 2013 for the SSAC Lions. Can you just imagine for a second what scoring almost 4 1/2 points per game must feel like? Absurd. And according to an Edmonton-based /r/hockey redditor familiar with his junior league play, Benson’s bantam coach — in an apparent show of mercy and good sportsmanship (but mostly mercy) — would often bench him for much of the 3rd periods of his games when the scores just got out of hand. So really, his point totals should’ve been even higher than the already-terrifying numbers he put up playing only 2/3 of his normal shifts.

But last winter, after being drafted first overall into the WHL for the 2014-15 season and putting up a very good showing (62GP-14G-26A-40TP), his 2015-16 campaign was cut short to only 30 games when he had to have surgery to remove a cyst from his back. In a stroke of horribly bad fortune, Tyler then developed a groin/lower core issue called osteitis pubis, which is a disorder that kids get from working out too much and too hard.

BEYOND BOXCARS

Boxcars are good and all, but with the absence of advanced stats in the minor leagues, how does Benson really “play the game” outside of putting up just a whacky amount of points, and why do I think he’ll be a perfect Taylor Hall replacement if he gets back and keeps his health?

Steve Kournianos has this to say about the Vancouver Giants captain:

“He is a nightmare to defend because he is as physically punishing with the puck as he is without it… Benson is very shifty with tremendous balance, meaning he can continue to move if he gets hit at the same time he decides to change direction. Possessing the kind of vision and IQ he owns makes it no surprise the CHL came close to giving him “exceptional” status to play a full season as a 15 year old (cut short by a knee injury).”

He’s not a small guy at 6′ and 200lbs, and if his scouting reports are to be believed, he’s steady and stable with and without the puck, and can be a real force at both ends of the ice. He’s sure-footed, and the word “complete” gets used time and time again when referring to the guy. Say what you want about Taylor Hall, but to my eyes and ears, we were never seeing or hearing those things said about him. Hall simply isn’t a defensively-minded forward, and despite his elite foot speed, almost every game he was over-skating pucks and slipping on the ice at inopportune times. Flame away in the comments section, guys, but I’m just sayin’…

SUMMARY

Chiarelli says Benson’s hockey sense is “through the roof”, and the reports out of orientation camp in Jasper this year have him looking and feeling healthy. The Oilers organization has a real gem with former Olympic gold medal-winning figure skater David Pelletier as their skating coach, and I have no doubt that he and the other coaches in the system will be working closely with Benson to ensure that he maintains his health in a sustainable way.

The irony here is that, had Tyler been fully healthy for his last season in the W, there’s no chance the Oilers get to pick him up at #32. The same Draft Analyst article by Kournianos has him being compared with the likes of Auston Matthews with regard to his on-the-spot corrections and his ability to create offense in ostensibly impossible situations, for Christ’s sake. I, for one, am right chuffed on Tyler Benson, and I look forward to having this article cited about four years from now when he’s considered an elite NHL winger and I get to say “I told you so!”

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