Kevin Woodley: I do know that Freddie Andersen was on the market around January/February. I do know the Calgary Flames were very interested at the time. They just didn?t like the price. The price was too high for them. Obviously, I think the expansion draft changes things. Clearly Anaheim had a decision to make with John Gibson and Freddie Andersen. Time will tell if they made the right one. I get to say this because I was on record before the playoffs started: I think they made the wrong choice to start the playoffs with John Gibson. I would argue that they may still have been playing long after the first round if they started Freddie Andersen. I do actually believe, as much as they are enamoured with the raw skill and the upside that presents with John Gibson, I don?t think there is that big of a falloff in terms of the skill of Freddie Andersen. I like his size and his technical game, which is where consistency comes from and is much further along than John Gibson is. To be honest with you ? and I said this before this trade was made, so it?s not hindsight ? I would?ve been looking to acquire, if I was a team looking to acquire goaltending, Frederik Andersen before John Gibson every time at this point in their careers.
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What I like most about Freddie Andersen is his desire to get better. I know that kind of sounds like an intangible almost. How do you measure that? To me, I measure that based on what I?ve seen him do over the past couple of years with his offseason to make sure he is getting better every time. We talk about the skills about Freddie Andersen. What else does he having going? He?s got the size. He?s a big body. That technical ability allows him to put that body in position more often than not.
But what I really like about Freddie are the things he does. The Anaheim Angels baseball team ? going and meeting with their hitting coach and learning what they do from a vision science perspective to get their hitters to be able to read the seams and read the spin on pitches, and seeing how he can apply that to his own game in order to read the puck and be able to track the puck better. That?s one example.
He was clearly heavy when he came over to the NHL for the first time. He played heavy in his first year in the NHL. He recognized that he couldn?t be a number one and play regularly at that weight. What did he do? He went to work in the offseason, he found a trainer in Los Angeles, he canceled his trip home to Denmark, and he dropped almost 30 pounds and put on a lot of muscle. Again, another example of a guy who is not satisfied with the status quo.
Freddie Andersen is a guy who looks for advantages. Another example ? last summer, his tracking was what let him down in the playoffs. It was tangible. You could see where he stopped tracking the puck against the Chicago Blackhawks. It was a clear deficiency in his game. There was a lot of talk about this. There was a lot of talk about the Leafs bringing in Lyle Mast. In terms of that tracking, Freddie Andersen is a guy who recognized that deficiency last summer. I don?t know if you remember he was one of the goaltenders who went to the NHL kick-off media session in Toronto where they do photography and interviews and things like that. Rather than fly from Toronto to Anaheim after that, he flew to Halifax because that is where the coach who teaches it was working that week. He spent an entire week on the ice trying to get better with his tracking, trying to understand this philosophy called head trajectory. Again, just one more example that Freddie Andersen is not someone who is going to be satisfied with here he is now.
You?re not just getting what you have in Andersen now. You?re getting a goaltender who is motivated to constantly evolve, to constantly improve, and he?s always looking for details in his game where he can get better. I compare it to Cam Ward. I hate to say it ? he signed a contract recently this week ? but there?s a guy who hasn?t done the work in the past few years. Ever since he won a Cup, he got content with where he was at and thought he could survive on the skill and never went to work on the technical game. It?s polar opposite with Andersen. He?s a kid who is always looking to get better. Again, it?s intangible/immeasurable, so how much can he improve through these efforts? I guess we?ll find out, but I sure like a guy that is trying as opposed to a guy who just thinks he?s good enough right now.