Showing posts with label NHL Entry Draft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NHL Entry Draft. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

THN's Caps 2008 Draft Grade: B+

Mark Seidel of The Hockey News has finally gotten around to posting the rest of his 2008 NHL Entry Draft grades, and he's got good things to say about the Caps' effort (then again, he's got good things to say about nearly everyone - only San Jose got lower than a C). Particularly noteworthy is his assessment of our guy Delly.

Anyway, here's Seidel's Caps capsule:
B+, Washington Capitals – The Caps started things off with Anton Gustafsson, a guy who caused as much internal divide at NACS as any player in this year’s draft. Some of our staff loved him, while others thought he was completely overrated. While there was no consensus on Gustafsson, we liked the Caps’ selection of John Carlson from Indiana of the USHL. It’s no secret we are critical of players selected out of the USHL, but there’s no doubt Carlson will become a very good player as his career progresses. Their next pick, Eric Mestery, is a purely defensive defenseman who has to improve his puck skills if he is to play at a high level. In the middle rounds, the Caps’ picks were underwhelming with the exception of their last pick, Stefan Della Rovere, who we think has a chance to make a lot of teams look silly for passing on him. If Gustafsson and Carlson turn out the way we think they can, the 2008 draft will be remembered as a successful foray for Washington.
H/t Canes Country on the link

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Leave The Picks. Take The Cannoli.

So you're thinking that one of the Caps' Restricted Free Agents is going to sign an offer sheet with another team and you're wondering whether or not the Caps should match. You're going over and over all sorts of hypotheticals in your head, all of which come back to one question: "Are the Caps better off with an overpaid Player X or the unspent money and compensatory draft picks?"

Let me make that questions slightly easier on you. Take the picks out of the equation - they're likely not worth much.

To begin with, let's look at exactly what picks we're talking about (dollar values represent the average annual salary of the contract the RFA signs):

Below $863,156: No compensation
$863,156-$1,307,812: One third-round pick
$1,307,812-$2,615,625: One second-round pick
$2,615,625-$3,923,437: One first- and one third-round pick
$3,923,437-$5,231,249: One first-, one second- and one third-round pick
$5,231,249-$6,539,062: Two first-, one second- and one third-round pick
$6,539,062 or more: Four first-round picks

Now let's throw out all the second and third round compensatory picks. Why? They're crap.

When this past season ended, there were more players on NHL rosters who were never drafted or who were drafted in rounds that don't even exist anymore than players who were drafted in the second round, and more than twice as many of those first group of players then players who were drafted in the third round. [Source]

From the 1998 draft (ten years out sounds like a fine draft to use), 36 of the 59 second and third round picks (61%) have played less than one full season's worth of NHL games, and only nine of the 59 (15%) have played more than four seasons' worth of NHL games (we'll perhaps generously call players who have played at least four seasons' worth of games "legitimate NHLers" the rest of the way). From the 1997 draft, those numbers are 76% and 7%, respectively, and from the 1999 draft, those numbers are 72% and 9%, respectively. For the three year stretch, 69% of the players drafted in the second and third rounds have played fewer than 82 NHL games and only 10% (19 players total) are legitimate NHLers, having played more than four seasons' worth of NHL games.

Bringing the analysis a little closer to home, the Caps have drafted 24 players in the second and third rounds in the past ten drafts (2008 excluded). The total number of NHL games played for these 24? 599. Matt Pettinger has played 324 of those and Nathan Paetsch has played 123 (which one could reasonably say were really played as a 2003 Buffalo seventh round pick and not as a 2001 Caps second rounder), meaning that the other 22 Caps second and third round picks over that span - 92% of the 2nd and 3rd rounders - have averaged fewer than seven NHL games per man.

But since picks (especially those after the first round) take a while to mature, let's look at the ten-year span from 1990-1999 (arbitrary, and mostly under a different front office, but humor me). The Caps made 22 second and third round picks, and those players combined (not one is still active in the NHL) to play 1,948 NHL games, with 1991 third round pick Steve Konowalchuk playing 790 of those and 1996 second rounder Jan Bulis playing 552. Even including those guys, that's an 88.5 NHL games average (just over one season's worth) per pick, and one pick in each of the second and third rounds over a decade of drafting that panned out.

The bottom line here, both from the League-wide analysis and the Caps' experience over two different decade-long stretches, is that a player picked in second or third round of the NHL draft has, at best, around a 10% chance of playing at least one full season's worth of NHL games.

Now on to the first rounders. In the ten-year span from 1990-99, 53% of the players drafted in the top-30 (not all first-rounders, mind you, but top-30 talent is top-30 talent) have played more than four NHL seasons' worth of games, but 30% have played less than one full NHL season. [Note: for the purposes of this analysis, Nick Boynton, who was drafted in the first round twice and with whom I just realized I share a birthday - is treated as two different players; one who never played in the NHL and the other who has the 437 career games played] That "miss" rate goes way down when you're talking about top-10 picks, of course, and 88% of the 100 players fitting that description have played more than 82 NHL games, with 74% of the hundred playing more than four seasons' worth (granted, this includes guys like Bryan Allen, Andrei Nazarov, Drake Berehowsky and Mark Bell, so don't get too excited).

So there's slightly better than a 50/50 chance, all else equal, that a team will get a legitimate NHLer (as defined above) with a generic first round pick, but a three-in-ten chance of getting a dud. And while the balance shifts dramatically when we're talking about top-ten picks, even then, they're not all Alexes and Sids. Which leads to our next point, which is the fool's gambit of trying to figure out the true value of a first round pick by predicting where the team from whom the pick comes will finish in the standings.

When Brian Burke didn't match the offer sheet to which the Oilers signed Dustin Penner last summer, the Anaheim GM's decision was widely hailed not only for recognizing that Penner ain't worth $4.25 million per year, but also because Edmonton was surely headed for the lottery, so the compensatory picks would be that much better. Then Edmonton went out and finished 19th in the League, giving Anaheim a nice pick, but not a top-10 pick, and not what they might have hoped for or expected.

Since the League expanded to 30 teams for the 2000-01 season, only 13 times has a team finished in the bottom-five (a.k.a. Lotteryville) in consecutive seasons, and only twice since the lockout ushered in the new "age of parity." Over that same span (since 2000-01), teams have only had consecutive bottom-ten finishes (and thus top-ten picks) 37 times (many of which were recent expansion teams), and 13 times since the lockout. Percentage-wise, this tells us that since the League has had 30 teams, a team followed up a bottom-five finish with another bottom-five finish approximately 36% of the time (and only 20% since the lockout) and answered a bottom-ten finish with another bottom-ten finish 63% of the time (65% post-lockout).

Beyond those numbers, at times it's been no great surprise that a team has had consecutive down years (the Caps and Penguins during their rebuilds, for example), but it's becoming less predictible all the time. Fourteen teams haven't finished in the bottom ten in the League since the lockout. Six teams have finished in that group just once, and six teams have done so twice. Eighteen haven't finished in the bottom five since the lockout, nine have done so once and three teams have done so twice. All of this is to say that in a League that, since the work stoppage, has seen Pittsburgh go from 29th to 9th, Philly go from 30th to 10th, and three other double-digit standings leaps forward all in the span of one season, today's cellar dweller is tomorrow's playoff contender (unless, of course, we're talking about Columbus or Florida, who have each finished in the bottom ten in every season since 2000-01).

The bottom line on first round picks, then, is that a generic first-round pick is around 50% likely to yield a legitimate NHLer (as we've defined that term above), and while the odds get markedly better if that pick is in the top ten, it's difficult in hockey's salary cap era to accurately predict whether a team that's currently down is going to stay down long (and it's a fairly safe bet that a team that is willing to part with first-round picks as compensation for signing an RFA expects to be on the rise sooner rather than later - you don't part with those picks if you're rebuilding).

The point of this ridiculously long-winded and dense discussion is that when it comes to deciding whether or not to match an RFA-signed offer sheet, a team shouldn't even think about the compensatory draft picks as anything more than a tie-breaker in the event that it's impossible to determine whether or not the salary fits into the team's overall salary structure (which it never is). As we've established, second and third round picks have an extremely low success rate attached to them, and first-rounders are by no means sure things. Still don't believe me? Try this little excercise: pick a random team, then pick any four-year stretch and see who was picked in that team's standings-based draft slot (i.e. 2005 doesn't count) in each of those years (and go ahead and report your findings in the comments for the rest of us to see).

This is not to say, of course, that a team should match any offer that one of its RFAs signs, but rather to say that the decision should be about the dollars, not the draft picks. If a GM is seriously weighing the latter, he likely flatters himself a bit much.

So when you're thinking about RFAs, do yourself a favor and forget about the non-monetary compensation. Focus on the salary. Leave the picks. Take the cannoli.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Of Apples And The Proximity To The Trees From Which They Fall

A longtime Caps fan can't help but feel a bit nostalgic after the Caps made Anton Gustafsson their first pick, twenty-first overall, in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft, nearly thirty years to the day after the Caps selected Anton's father Bengt.

Personally, such nostalgia tends to send me straight for the white, corrugated cardboard boxes that house my hockey card collection (and to my old VHS tapes - that's Bengt at the 1:23 mark). Rooting through, I found the 1981 O-Pee-Chee gem below that included a brief description of the elder Gustafsson.


"A brilliant puckhandler for the Capitals. Bengt exhibits a graceful and fluid skating style. He's an opportunist with great finesse and uncanny hockey sense. Bengt works hard at both ends of the ice for the Capitals." [Emphasis added]

With that in mind, recall how Central Scouting's Director of European Scouting, Goran Stubb, described Anton pre-draft:

"Anton is a highly skilled player with strong puckhandling skills and playmaking ability. He is an effective passer through traffic who also has a good selection of shots. He's a tall, strong and talented two-way center with good vision and a fine understanding of the game. He plays a mature game even when playing against opponents who were two or three years older." [Emphasis added]

It's like déjà vu all over again, eh?

Anton's old man played 629 games in a Caps sweater and racked up 555 points along the way (good for fifth most in team history). If Gus II can produce anywhere near those numbers, it would be a most welcomed father-son similarity indeed.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

What They're Saying: Caps 2008 Entry Draft

Vogs has done a heckuva job pulling together "what various scouting reports, scouting services and media reports are saying about the eight players chosen by the Washington Capitals in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft," but if that's not enough for you, there's a bit more 411 out there, including:
Look for more updates in this spot as they pop up.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

2008 Entry Draft Day Two Open Thread

Update: Here are your second round Caps picks: The Caps two second round picks: Eric Mestery and Dmitri Kugryshev. More on Mestery here and here, more on Kugryshev here (hat tip to the diligent folks on the Caps Message Board on those last links) and here.

As far as rankings go, Mestery was the CSB's 59th North American Skater and Kugryshev the CSB's 10th European skater. I'll provide more info as it comes in.

Also, Sombrero Guy writes in with the following:
  1. Scotiabank Center is to Ottawa as FedEX field is to Washington DC, only you don't have to worry about dodging bullets near Scotiabank. It really makes me appreciate the downtown location of Verizon Center.
  2. Canadians are very friendly, and Canadian chicks seem to be more likely to be hot and date a guy who looks like a computer programer than not.
  3. Ushers allow you to scream taunts and heckles at Pierre McGuire as long as you replace actual curse words with "f-ing"....up to 8 heckles.
  4. Greg "Puck Daddy" Wyshynski (who had the misfortune of agreeing to go out with us on a wild goose chase for open bars) is nowhere near the blackjack player recent HOF'er Glen Anderson is, who split threes three times and won on all three hands.
I look forward to hearing the story on that last point.

Update: The Caps took Braden Holtby, CSB's fourth-rated North American goalie, with the second pick of the fourth round. Here's his (sparse) HF Profile and an article on his WHL debut, as well as TSN's capsule:


Update: Joel Broda is the Caps 5th round pick, 144th overall. Broda - the Caps' second pick today who started the 2007-08 season with Olie Kolzig's Tri-City WHL club, was traded from Tri-City to Moose Jaw back in September.

Update: Greg Burke in the sixth. Read more about him here and a snippet here.

Update: The Caps used their last pick (7th round, 204th overall) on Stefan Della Rovere, a kid who, despite being smallish, got in 14 fights in the OHL this past season and whose handiwork you can see plenty of here.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Caps Nab Pair In First Round

The Caps left the first round of what is widely regarded as the deepest draft in some time having made two drafts pick. The team traded up from 23rd to draft Anton Gustafsson with the 21st pick and traded Steve Eminger and a pick to Philly for the 27th pick, which they used to draft John Carlson.

Both draftees have ties to the Caps - Gustafsson, of course, as the son of a Caps legend, and Carlson as a player headed to London, Ontario to be coached by Dale Hunter as a member of the OHL Knights.

Anyway, here's a pre-draft info dump on the pair, with more to follow (profiles courtesy TSN.ca):

Gustafsson

Click to enlarge
Carlson

Click to enlarge

2008 NHL Entry Draft Live Blogstravaganza

So we're going to do the live blog thing for tonight's portion of the draft. Stop by and join Eric McErlain, at least one OFBer, hopefully Peerless, Dmitry Chesnokov, myself and others as we analyze, chat and rationalize sitting in front of the computer on a lovely Friday night.

Draft Day Open Thread

This is your open thread, people - use it wisely.

Also, join Mirtle, myself and others in a 1:00 draft chat over at FanHouse that may well last until the draft, the way The Good Doctor likes to dish the info and talk pucks:

Thursday, June 19, 2008

A Traveshamock Draft

I'll be honest - I took a pass on geeking out on this year's draft (bad blogger, I know). Last year, besides dropping some knowledge on the top prospects' skills, I could tell you that Keaton Ellerby's favorite movie is "Blow" and that Jakub Voracek's favorite actors are Kurt Russell and Martin Lawrence. This year? Once I get past Stamkos, Filatov and a handful of defensemen, I'm pretty much spent (a by-product of the Caps not having a high pick, I suppose).

But here it is the day before the draft and it's time to cram. To help us all, I've taken the list of mock drafts from over at DC Pro Sports Reports (with one or two additions), seen who the Caps are predicted to take, and pulled some info (from TSN.ca) on those kids. Here we go (the first two players are the projected Caps pick in three mocks, the next five names in two mocks, and the rest appear as the Caps pick in one mock apiece)...
  • Anton Gustafsson, C, Frolunda (Swe Jr) - Comparable: Jordan Staal.
    TSN: If an NHL team is convinced the son of ex-NHLer Bengt Gustafsson is healthy, he could easily go much higher in the first round than No. 30. But the Swedish centre had significant lower back issues and his health status was a primary concern of NHL teams at the Central Scouting Combine. Those concerns could cause his stock to drop radically, but teams were doing a lot of homework on him to be sure. His X-rays and MRIs will tell as much about when he's drafted as his on-ice performance.

    NHL Central Scouting: Anton is a highly skilled player with strong puckhandling skills and playmaking ability. He's a tall, strong and talented two-way center with good vision and a fine understanding of the game. He plays a mature game.
  • Colby Robak, D, Brandon (WHL) - Comparable: Joni Pitkanen.
    TSN: The Brandon Wheat King defenceman has pro size and speed and skills but hasn't put them together to the satisfaction of the scouts. As a result, he finds himself as a first-round possibility -– certainly lots of potential -- but one who could easily slip into the second round amidst concerns that he's soft and won't be able to battle at the pro level unless he finds another level.

    NHL Central Scouting: Robak is a smooth skating defenseman with the keen ability to skate the puck out of danger. He goes in to scrums, comes up with the puck and almost effortlessly skates it up ice; combine that with a shrewd ability to look up-ice, head-man the puck and then join the rush from behind.
  • Tyler Cuma, D, Ottawa (OHL) - Comparable: Steve Staios.
    The Ottawa 67 is a strong two-way defenceman with leadership ability and a willingness to compete hard at both ends of the ice.

    NHL Central Scouting: Really adept at knowing when to pass the puck out of the zone or to put the wheels on and carry the puck out of the zone. He helps the Ottawa 67's power-play from the point and is really reliable. Equally adept at the defensive game.
  • Greg Nemisz, C, Windsor (OHL) - Comparable: John LeClair.
    TSN: A big, diligent forward with an NHL-calibre shot who protects the puck well and understands the game. But he needs to pick up his skating, add a little more energy to his game. That could mean a fall into the second round, but then they were saying all the same things about Shawn Matthias a couple of years ago.

    NHL Central Scouting: Greg is a big player that goes to the net, he's not overly physical but he doesn't get knocked around either. He is good on the power-play, in the sense that he sets himself at the front of the net, he's hard to move and he bangs in a lot of rebounds from there.
  • John Carlson, D, Indiana (USHL) - Comparable: Mike Komisarek.
    TSN: A big, strong, hard-shooting, hard-skating defenceman who will be playing with the London Knights next season.

    NHL Central Scouting: He runs the power-play from the top of the umbrella and he has a very heavy shot. He's a very self-assured kid and rightfully so -- he's a boy, yet in a man's body and very physically strong. He had all the tools – size, skill, physical presence and charisma.
  • Mikhail Stefanovich, RW, Quebec (QMJHL) - Comparable: Frank Mahovolich (seriously?).
    TSN: One of the true wild cards in this draft. The Belarussian teased scouts with a 32-goal performance in his rookie QMJHL season but so much was expected from the big pivot who is maddeningly inconsistent with a work ethic that is spotty at best. When he's on, he's capable of dominating but he seems to be off more than on for most scouts. He has first-round talent but an application and execution level that is nowhere near where it needs to be.

    NHL Central Scouting: He's a big kid, 6'2" and 200 pounds. He has good overall skills, but needs to improve on his work ethic and his involvement if he's going to make it to the next level. When he is on his game, he is a good skater and has a great shot. He can really stickhandle but needs to show it more.
  • Kirill Petrov, LW, Kazan (RusDi) - Comparable: Andrei Kostitsyn.
    TSN: The Russian forward is touted as having first-round talent, but his work ethic fluctuates wildly and there is some real concern about when or if he's interested in playing in the NHL. A regular with Kazan in the Russian Super League, many scouts believe he is too comfortable, financially and otherwise, to expend a first-round pick so he could slide a long way. But if a team thought there's a realistic chance at getting him out at some point, there's no denying he's a first-round talent.

    NHL Central Scouting: Displayed excellent skating and mobility as well as a solid work ethic playing on Russia's (Under-18) top line. He displays toughness in one-on-one situations and delivers smart passes creating a lot of scoring chances. He is also very physically strong.
  • Evgeny Grachev, C, Yaroslavl (RUS2) - Comparable: Michal Handzus.
    NHL Central Scouting: Evgeny is a power forward with a good physical presence and ability to come up with the puck in traffic areas. He displays strong puck skills and the ability to make plays all over the ice, but needs to improve his acceleration and overall speed.
  • Josh Bailey, C, Windsor (OHL) - Comparable: Cory Stillman.
    TSN: Regarded as a skilled playmaker, the Windsor Spitfire centre is a good, solid two-way player who is conscientious in his effort at all times although scouts would like to see a little more grit to his game.

    NHL Central Scouting: Josh is the quarterback on the power-play, from down low, for the Windsor Spitfires. He is a good play-making centerman with the ability to feed his linemates when he needs to and shoot the puck when the play requires that.
  • Colton Teubert, D, Regina (WHL) - Comparable: Shea Weber.
    TSN: The hard-rock defenceman, who draws comparisons to Shea Weber and Adam Foote, is as competitive and feisty a player as there is in this draft. What he lacks in offensive upside, he makes up for with his ferocity and defensive prowess. He relishes the opportunity to go head-to-head with the other teams' top players. By all accounts, there is no love lost between him and Kyle Beach.

    NHL Central Scouting: Colten is a smooth skating defenseman, who can skate the puck out of trouble and can jump up the ice with the puck. Has the ability to take charge of the game.
  • Maxime Suave, C, Val d'Or (QMJHL) - Comparable: Simon Gagne.
    TSN: The son of former NHLer J.F. Sauve has good speed and good skill, especially in the puckhandling department. A streaky player, scouts would like to see more consistency from him.

    NHL Central Scouting: He is a real good skater. He was traded from Quebec to Val D'Or and he had a pretty good second half on a not very good team. Once he plays with better players he'll continue to improve, he can skate and for today's game that is the number one most important criteria. He needs to continue to work hard at getting stronger and to continue trying to improve his game to make it to the next level.
  • Zak Dalpe, C, Penticton (BCHL) - Comparable: Travis Zajac.
    TSN: A late bloomer who left his home in Ontario to play in the B.C. Jr. A League, Dalpe showed enough to merit some first-round consideration. Best quality is his shot but some think he is mis-cast as a centre and plays better as a hard-shooting winger.

    NHL Central Scouting: He has a really quick release on his shot, he is a very busy player and he plays with a lot of energy out there. He is a player that is constantly in motion. He is offensive minded, but plays well defensively too and has made huge improvements from last year – he developed out of nowhere and had a really good year in the BCHL.
There you have it - a handful of guys the Caps won't pick (and some of those names are just lazy "hey, there's a Russian name - the Caps like Russians" picks). For what it's worth, TSN has Bailey, Teubert, Cuma and Carlson all rated higher than 23rd overall and the rest lower.

So given the brief descriptions and the comparables (and any other information you've got) and assuming the Caps sit tight and make their first pick in that #23 slot, who do you hope to see them take?

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Disappointing Indeed

SI.com's Allan Muir has his 2008 NHL mock draft* up, and while he has the Caps taking a two-way defenseman named Tyler Cuma with the 23rd pick overall, this line stuck out to me:

"A goaltender wouldn't be a surprise at this spot, considering the disappointing development of 2006 first-rounder Semen Varlamov..."

Huh?

Is he talking about the same Varlamov that made Russia's gold medal-winning World Championship team this past spring?

Is he talking about the same Varlamov that one of the world's foremost goalie coaches recently called "the most talented young goalie [he has] seen in many years" who "has potential to be a real NHL star in the future"?

Is he talking about the same Varlamov that at the 2007 World Junior Championship "was the second best goalie in the entire tournament, giving up only nine goals on 136 shots, with a 1.51 goals against average"?

Is he talking about the same Varlamov that was first in games played and shutouts, 12th in goals against average and 13th in save percentage in Russia's Super League this past season at the age of 19? [Update: And, as B19 points out in the comments, "Varlamov lead his team to the RSL finals. In 16 playoff contests, Varlamov had a 1.62 GAA."]

Nah. He must be talking about the Varlamov that had one bad series last summer that just happened to be televised in Canada.

Quality stuff, Allan.

* On a mostly unrelated note, if mock drafts are your thing, DC Pro Sports Report is your site - they've got the web's best collection of 'em, as far as I can tell.

L'il Sarge On The Radar?

Much has been made of the bloodlines in this year's NHL Entry Draft (the ever-wonderful Joe Pelletier takes a deeper look at many of those same names), but one surname that isn't making those lists is Schultz, as in the Caps' Jeff Schultz and his draft-eligible baby brother Ian.

Ian, "a raw winger ranked No. 92 by the Central Scouting Bureau," recently completed his first full season for the WHL Calgary Hitmen, where he was a teammate of current Caps prospects Karl Alzner and Keith Seabrook. He finished the campaign with 15 goals, 15 assists and 128 penalty minutes (not to mention 18 fights and more PIMs than the elder Schultz had in four full seasons for the Hitmen) in 67 games.

The Caps apparently have shown some interest in the younger Schultz, but if they pass on the opportunity and the Schultz brothers end up opponents on the ice? "I'll make the best of it," says Ian. "I'll just make sure I hit him extra hard when I do play against him."

Wait... are we sure these guys are brothers? Really?

Monday, May 12, 2008

Sloppy Seconds

[Ed. Note: Despite the title, this post has nothing to do with Dion Phaneuf, Elisha Cuthbert and Sean Avery.]

As you've no doubt heard, this year's NHL Entry Draft is supposedly one of the deepest in a while. As a result, at last year's draft the Caps were happy to stock up on 2008 picks, specifically second-rounders - they've got three of 'em: their own, San Jose's and Philly's (53rd, 56th and probably 57th overall).

On the surface, that sounds like a good thing... but history says otherwise.

Here's a list, by round, of all the skaters who the Caps have drafted after the second round who racked up more points in their NHL careers than the most prolific second round pick in Caps history, Stephen Leach (who had 283 career points):
  • 3rd - Michal Pivonka (599 career points)
  • 3rd - Steve Konowalchuk (396)
  • 3rd - Jason Woolley (314)
  • 4th - Bengt Gustafsson (555)
  • 4th - Trent Klatt (343)
  • 5th - Dean Evason (372)
  • 6th - Dmitri Khristich (596)
  • 7th - Andrew Brunette (549 and counting)
  • 8th - Peter Bondra (892)
  • 10th - Richard Zednik (346 and counting)
That's ten players picked in the third round or later who went on to score more points than the highest-scoring second round pick in franchise history (by ridiculous comparison, the best second round pick in Islanders history had 1,425 points, and no one they drafted in the later rounds had more than that).

On the surface, that might not seem all that noteworthy (though a little anomalous, perhaps). But the point isn't to highlight the Caps' later round gems (did I just call Trent Klatt a gem?) as much as it is to show how collectively mediocre-at-best the organization's second round picks have been. Do you know how many individual 61-plus point seasons there have been in the NHL since the Caps' first draft back in 1974? Try 2,198. Do you know how many of those 2,198 have been by any of the 37 second round draft picks in Caps history? You guessed it - not a single one (Leach's sixty points for the '91-'92 Bruins is tops among D.C. second rounders).

Now, before you start clamoring for GMGM to unload that trio of picks, note that most of the current regime's second round picks still have some time to prove themselves (I hear that Michal Sivek is on the verge of a breakout season... no?). And besides, the Caps have a strong draft record on second round goalies, taking Byron Dafoe in 1989 and future Vezina-winner Jim Carey in 1992, with Michal Neuvirth (Class of '06) a promising prospect (of course, then there are Maxime Daigneault (2002) and Jomar Cruz (1998)).

But should the Caps keep and use any or all of their second round picks, take comfort in the fact that John Druce was a second round pick back in 1985... and every team needs a John Druce come springtime.

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Feelin' Drafty

With the Caps' draft position set and some folks already mockin' things up (thanks for the link, Kyle), we're starting to get in the mood as well. Couple that with the ridiculous amount of information over at Hockey-Reference.com and you've got all the makings for a stat dump.

So let's take a look at some tidbits from the Caps' draft history, by the numbers:
  • Most Draft Picks, Single Year: 25 (1974)
  • Fewest Draft Picks, Single Year: 5 (1979)
  • Number of Career NHL Points Scored by the 25 1974 Draftees: 245 (led by Greg Joly's 97)
  • Number of Career NHL Points Scored by the 5 1979 Draftees: 1481 (led by Mike Gartner's 1335)
  • Fewest Career NHL Points-Per-Pick by a Draft Class: .77 (1986; 13 picks, 10 NHL points)
  • Most Career NHL Games for a Draft Class: 4373 (1984; the Caps' first four picks - Kevin Hatcher, Stephen Leach, Michal Pivonka and Kris King - each played more than 700 NHL games)
  • Fewest Career NHL Games for a pre-2003 Draft Class: 103 (1998; Jomar Cruz was the Caps' first pick... 'nuff said)
  • Most Players to Play in the NHL of any Draft Class: 10 (1978; this class included Ryan Walter, Bengt Gustafsson and Lou Franceschetti)
  • Fewest Players to Play in the NHL of any Pre-2003 Draft Class: 2 (1987 and 1997; Steve Maltais and Tyler Larter in the former, Nick Boynton and J.F. Fortin in the latter).
  • Most NHL Points by a Draft Class: 2019 (1984, led by Hatcher's 677)
  • Most Points-Per-NHL-Game-Played by a Draft Class: .86 (1979; 2006 is right behind at .84 thanks to Nicklas Backstrom's brilliant rookie year and 2004 is third)
  • Most Goals by a Draft Class: 752 (1979, led by Gartner's 708)
  • Most Goals-Per-NHL-Game-Played by a Draft Class: .44 (1979 again; 2004 is second even if you take Jeff Schultz out of the mix)
  • Fewest Goals by a pre-2003 Draft Class: 4 (1998 and 1986; Krys Barch has all four for the former class and Jeff Greenlaw had three and John Purves the other for the latter)
  • Best Plus/Minus by a Draft Class: 279 (1982; Scott Stevens finished his career with a plus-393 rating, but current Caps assistant coach Dean Evason was a minus-86 over his career to drag it down a bit)
  • Worst Plus/Minus by a Draft Class: -381 (1974; Joly, taken first overall, had a career plus/minus of minus-163)
  • Most Penalty Minutes by a Draft Class: 6,228 (1984; King had 2030 of 'em)
  • Anything to do with Goalies: 1989, the year in which the Caps picked Olie Kolzig and Byron Dafoe with their first two picks. The pair have combined (should I remove "have"?) for 1126 games played and 472 wins.
OK, I'm almost spent. But before I go, here for no good reason at all is a list of all of the Caps' first round picks (draft year in parens), ranked by NHL games played:

1635 - Scott Stevens (1982)
1432 - Mike Gartner (1979)
1178 - Bob Carpenter (1981)
1157 - Kevin Hatcher (1984)
1003 - Ryan Walter (1978)
904 - Sergei Gonchar (1992)
899 - Robert Picard (1977)
845 - Rick Green (1976)
783 - Brendan Witt (1993)
711 - Olaf Kolzig (1989)
552 - Jason Allison (1993)
511 - Darren Veitch (1980)
437 - Nick Boynton (1997)
365 - Greg Joly (1974)
304 - Brian Sutherby (2000)
280 - Yvon Corriveau (1985)
268 - John Slaney (1990)
245 - Alex Ovechkin (2004)
212 - Steve Eminger (2002)
204 - Boyd Gordon (2002)
198 - Kris Beech (1999)
192 - Alexander Semin (2002)
174 - Mike Green (2004)
134 - Pat Peake (1991)
131 - Nolan Baumgartner (1994)
131 - Greg Carroll (1976)
113 - Jaroslav Svejkovsky (1996)
110 - Jeff Schultz (2004)
82 - Nicklas Backstrom (2006)
57 - Jeff Greenlaw (1986)
48 - Eric Fehr (2003)
47 - Tim Coulis (1978)
34 - Reggie Savage (1988)
17 - Trevor Halverson (1991)
3 - Alexandre Volchkov (1996)
2 - Brad Church (1995)
2 - Miika Elomo (1995)
1 - Alex Forsyth (1975)
0 - Karl Alzner (2007)
0 - Simeon Varlamov (2006)
0 - Sasha Pokulok (2005)
0 - Joe Finley (2005)
0 - Alexander Kharlamov (1994)

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Hopin' For Hannan? Maybe Meszaros?

With the Caps draft position now set in stone (they're picking 23rd), let's take a look at what type of player they might expect to find there.

Here's a list of the last twenty 23rd overall picks:

2007 - Jonathan Blum, D (NSH)
2006 - Simeon Varlamov, G (WSH)
2005 - Nicklas Bergfors, F (NJD)
2004 - Andrej Meszaros, D (OTT)
2003 - Ryan Kesler, F (VAN)
2002 - Ben Eager, F (PHX)
2001 - Tim Gleason, D (OTT)
2000 - Nathan Smith, F (VAN)
1999 - Steve McCarthy, D (CHI)
1998 - Milan Kraft, F (PIT)
1997 - Scott Hannan, D (SJS)
1996 - Craig Hillier, G (PIT)
1995 - Miika Elomo, F (WSH)
1994 - Yan Golubovsky, D (DET)
1993 - Todd Bertuzzi, F (NYI)
1992 - Grant Marshall, F (TOR)
1991 - Ray Whitney, F (SJS)
1990 - Jiri Slegr, D (VAN)
1989 - Travis Green, F (NYI)
1988 - Jeff Christian, F (NJD)

There are definitely a couple of gems there and more than a few solid NHLers, but the morale of the story seems to be (wrapped up in a tidy little rhyme) "draft D at 23."

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Hockey's Future Reviews The Caps' Draft

Hockey's Future has posted their review of the Caps' 2007 Draft and found a couple of common attributes amongst the draftees, namely "character and leadership" - traits that never go out of style in the NHL, regardless of era.

Hopefully we'll be seeing a number of these newest Caps out at KCI later this week and getting a sneak peek at what they can do on the ice.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

More On J-God

Apparently the Caps had been stalking Josh Godfrey for a long time, and the young blueliner likes his chances of making it to D.C. sooner rather than later: "It's not like I'm going to a team like Anaheim, a team that's loaded on defence. There's a good chance I'll be there in two or three years or earlier."

Easy there, Bucko - let's conquer the AHL before etching your name on the Norris Trophy, shall we?

Sunday, June 24, 2007

More Prospect Profiles

Via the Caps' site, here's a little more information on D.C. draftees Brett Leffler, Nick Larson and Andrew Glass.

Caps Surprise DeSimone, Stay On This Side Of The Pond With All Picks

When the Caps selected Phil DeSimone with the 84th pick yesterday, it caught many by surprise, including DeSimone himself.

DeSimone finished second in the USHL last season and was named the League's most valuable player.

Like the other nine players the Caps selected this weekend, DeSimone is North American-born, which wasn't necessarily coincidental. Last night, Tarik's blog had a quote from GMGM about how the Caps had "enough" Europeans and how if you looked at the last few Cup Champs, they were composed predominantly of North American players. Tarik has since pulled the quote as it was being taking out of context (see the comments).

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Sixth Round Throw-Down

Here's a clip of a couple of sixth round picks (the Caps' Justin Taylor and the Pens' Dustin Jeffrey) having at it:

Get To Know: Brett Bruneteau

Here's a little on the Caps' fifth pick (4th round, 108th overall), Brett Bruneteau:

Omaha • USHL
5'10.5", 183 lbs. Center, shoots left
Born: January 5, 1989 in San Francisco
Final Ranking: 122 • Mid-Term Ranking: 88 • North American Skater

Nicknames are Bruno and Bretsky… wears number 15 because his grandfather used to wear the number – his grandfather Eddy played for the Omaha Knights and the Detroit Red Wings and was the brother of Red Wing star Mud Bruneteau… says that his grandfather has had the most influence on his career – “he was a role model for me”…patterns his game after Calgary’s Jarome Iginla… his pre-game superstitions always include a simple prayer before he hits the ice… most memorable hockey game played: coming back from a five goal deficit in a 2006-07 regular season game… most memorable hockey game watched: seeing Mario Lemieux play in Tampa Bay and have two goals plus two assists… admires Lance Armstrong – “he has triumphed over adversity and had success through determination”… if he could invite any three people to dinner he would choose: Wayne Gretzky – “to know how he dealt with skeptics growing up”, Sidney Crosby – “to see what the NHL is like and how it is different from Juniors” and Gary Bettman – “to learn the direction and business side of the game”… favorites include: Detroit Red Wings (NHL team), Pavel Datsyuk (NHL player), “fake shot, deke backhand to forehand and shoot five hole” (shootout move), NHL 2007 (video game), Scrubs (TV show), Boondock Saints (movie), John Travolta (actor) and Lynyrd Skynyrd (group).