If Sprong and Svechnikov were off the table (plus nobody like Konecny drops big time), I'd consider moving down. But I wouldn't want to drop out of the top-40, so Columbus and New Jersey would be the only teams I'd be looking at.
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Potvin29 said:I want them all. Strome, Marner, Barzal, Zacha, Konecny, Bueller.
bustaheims said:Potvin29 said:I want them all. Strome, Marner, Barzal, Zacha, Konecny, Bueller.
I'd pass on Bueller. Takes too many days off.
bustaheims said:A 2nd or 3rd round pick has generally been the price to move up a couple spots, though, and if a team really likes one prospect more than everyone else available, it's not uncommon to see moves like that. As for the Leafs end of things, if they don't feel that way about a particular prospect or if they feel they can still get the guy they want a couple slots later, then picking up any other asset in a deal that works in their favour.
Nik the Trik said:Fair enough. The only other team(besides the ones I mentioned) that seems likely there would be Winnipeg then at #25. They have 47 and 78 which I guess might be worth moving up a spot. Montreal at #26 doesn't have their second so could only offer 87 to move up two spots which seems, again, like a bad deal for the Leafs.
CarltonTheBear said:If Sprong and Svechnikov were off the table (plus nobody like Konecny drops big time), I'd consider moving down. But I wouldn't want to drop out of the top-40, so Columbus and New Jersey would be the only teams I'd be looking at.
lamajama said:At 4 we're going to get a great player regardless unless someone tries to prove they are better than all the scouting reports....
It's the later rounds 3+ that we need to make count. We do have some potential from the later rounds in the past few years but none that the hockey world is excited about (as indicated with the Futurewatch rankings).
Personally I hope Dion and Bozak are gone for higher picks and prospects for this draft and we pick up some 2nd round picks at minimum.
I did some spreadsheet work on draft eligible players, thanks to CHLstats.com (awesome site, btw). I recently saw some research that secondary assists are essentially useless, and not really indicative of talent at all, at least at the NHL level. While I haven?t done any testing to prove this, it wouldn?t surprise me that the same thing holds true for junior (I?ll test that out later, but it?s probably true, and like the undergrad I am, I?ll skip steps and be lazy). And we all know that ES scoring is a more ?true? representation of a player?s talent. So I calculated a bunch of draft-eligible players? ES Primary Points per game ((ES Goals + ES 1st assists)/GP). I did this for each league (O,W,Q) and took the top 50 players in each (I figured we wouldn?t really care about anyone lower than that). This doesn?t capture every draft eligible players, as it?s age based, not draft year based, but every player in the sheet is draft eligible.
herman said:From: http://www.pensionplanpuppets.com/2015/5/25/8654451/mondays-ftb-laying-down-the-stammer
I did some spreadsheet work on draft eligible players, thanks to CHLstats.com (awesome site, btw). I recently saw some research that secondary assists are essentially useless, and not really indicative of talent at all, at least at the NHL level. While I haven?t done any testing to prove this, it wouldn?t surprise me that the same thing holds true for junior (I?ll test that out later, but it?s probably true, and like the undergrad I am, I?ll skip steps and be lazy). And we all know that ES scoring is a more ?true? representation of a player?s talent. So I calculated a bunch of draft-eligible players? ES Primary Points per game ((ES Goals + ES 1st assists)/GP). I did this for each league (O,W,Q) and took the top 50 players in each (I figured we wouldn?t really care about anyone lower than that). This doesn?t capture every draft eligible players, as it?s age based, not draft year based, but every player in the sheet is draft eligible.
herman said:From: http://www.pensionplanpuppets.com/2015/5/25/8654451/mondays-ftb-laying-down-the-stammer
I did some spreadsheet work on draft eligible players, thanks to CHLstats.com (awesome site, btw). I recently saw some research that secondary assists are essentially useless, and not really indicative of talent at all, at least at the NHL level. While I haven?t done any testing to prove this, it wouldn?t surprise me that the same thing holds true for junior (I?ll test that out later, but it?s probably true, and like the undergrad I am, I?ll skip steps and be lazy). And we all know that ES scoring is a more ?true? representation of a player?s talent. So I calculated a bunch of draft-eligible players? ES Primary Points per game ((ES Goals + ES 1st assists)/GP). I did this for each league (O,W,Q) and took the top 50 players in each (I figured we wouldn?t really care about anyone lower than that). This doesn?t capture every draft eligible players, as it?s age based, not draft year based, but every player in the sheet is draft eligible.
Chev-boyar-sky said:I'm not an advanced metrics guy by any means (that's why I used a baseball term!).
Does this take into account line mates? Would Strome have higher numbers because he's on a better team/line? I'd be interested to know how many ES points he scored with McDavid on the ice. Were his linemates better than Marner's?
They're impressive numbers but without that info it's hard to really put the numbers in context.
herman said:Chev-boyar-sky said:I'm not an advanced metrics guy by any means (that's why I used a baseball term!).
Does this take into account line mates? Would Strome have higher numbers because he's on a better team/line? I'd be interested to know how many ES points he scored with McDavid on the ice. Were his linemates better than Marner's?
They're impressive numbers but without that info it's hard to really put the numbers in context.
I haven't done any of this research myself, but the premise of ignoring the 2nd Assist sounds like a way to control the linemate variable to a degree, using only surface stats. Obviously more data is required at all levels, but this casual glance highlights how big a gap there is between McDavid and the rest of the draft group (Eichel not shown as he is not in the CHL where the stats were gathered).
I haven't watched any of the OHL games so I can't even begin to surmise what context accounts for in these numbers.
lamajama said:At 4 we're going to get a great player regardless unless someone tries to prove they are better than all the scouting reports....
It's the later rounds 3+ that we need to make count. We do have some potential from the later rounds in the past few years but none that the hockey world is excited about (as indicated with the Futurewatch rankings).
Personally I hope Dion and Bozak are gone for higher picks and prospects for this draft and we pick up some 2nd round picks at minimum.