Jungle Boy
Registered User
With the other 3rd we could land Alexei Protas.Seider is ranked from 17 to 27 with several scouting services, so i would stay put.
Karl Henriksson as 3rd round pick would be nice.
With the other 3rd we could land Alexei Protas.Seider is ranked from 17 to 27 with several scouting services, so i would stay put.
Karl Henriksson as 3rd round pick would be nice.
I'm interested in Knight but with Peterson seemingly in the bank I'd hate to use pick 22 on him.
And now I’m back to;
#5)-Alex Turcotte/Bowen Byram/Kirby Dach
#21)-Moritz Seider/Bobby Brink/Ville Heinola
#33)-Bobby Brink/Ryan Johnson?
We should get 3 really good players... BPA
Not sure about that, Reaper.Shafigulin had a terrible year. Stay away from the kids who may never come over!
So watch them surprise us all and draft
5 - Caulfield
21 - (AVS will win!, pick 21) Tobias Bjornfot
33 - Yegor Afanasyev
and we're all...what? They often surprise with the Vilallta's, Lintuniemi, Pearson 1st rd. They
will pick ones no one has talked about. I like that they drafted Finn - Kupari, Rus - Shafigullin and
Swe - Sodergran last year. Also have gone USHL and college. Should be interesting.
Not sure about what? He had 2 assists in 31 games. He had 2 assists in 17 games last season.Not sure about that, Reaper.
What does that say about the Russians in this upcoming draft who are 1-1,5 year younger and have much worse numbers than him.
That is purely the KHL.Not sure about what? He had 2 assists in 31 games. He had 2 assists in 17 games last season.
The main issue is the lack of a transfer agreement. I dont see the point in wasting a high pick on a kid who odds are high will never come over. It's not a knock on their talent or anything I'd feel the same way with Finns or Swedes if there was a lack of a transfer agreement with those countries too.
IMHO, i think we should make 2 trades
21st(246pts)+64th(99pts) for 14th-15th and guarantee we get a Seider, Harley, maybe even a Boldy if he slips.. 1st+our 3rd to move up, we still have Wash 3rd
33rd(154pts)+95th(68pts) for 22nd-23rd, 2nd+ our 4th and whose to say we still dont get Seider..and we still have Cal's 4th..
Out of curiosity, which draft pick value chart are you using? Those seem a bit light to move up unfortunately. Just some trades for reference:
2010: 15th = 19th+59th
2012: 14th = 21st+42nd
2013: 16th = 18th+58th
2010: 30th = 35th+58th
2011: 22nd = 30th+39th, 24th = 35th+48th
2014: 28th =35th+57th
2015: 28th = 33rd+72nd
Guys like Gusev, Kucherov and Panarin didn't produce in their first stints in the KHL either.Not sure about what? He had 2 assists in 31 games. He had 2 assists in 17 games last season.
The main issue is the lack of a transfer agreement. I dont see the point in wasting a high pick on a kid who odds are high will never come over. It's not a knock on their talent or anything I'd feel the same way with Finns or Swedes if there was a lack of a transfer agreement with those countries too.
Michael Shuckers Drfat Pick Value Chart... the MIT stats professor
EDIT: I think that because after te top 10-12ish players the talent level is pretty damn equal and theres a ton of parity.. so its a BPA type draft from the mid-teens to mid-second round... so teams will look to add more value... atleast i think so
Michael Shuckers Drfat Pick Value Chart... the MIT stats professor
EDIT: I think that because after te top 10-12ish players the talent level is pretty damn equal and theres a ton of parity.. so its a BPA type draft from the mid-teens to mid-second round... so teams will look to add more value... atleast i think so
The data that we use is demographic (e.g, heights and weights), pre-draft performance (e.g., points per game and goals against average) and scouting (rankings from the NHL’s own Central Scouting Service (CSS)).
We focused on two cohorts of players: those drafted in the 1998 to 2002 drafts and those eligible to be taken in the 2004 to 2008 drafts.
Looking over his page, he does have this blip which is concerning:
Central's list tends to be inaccurate. Tends to be a combination of them not having the same resources of an NHL team and they have a self-imposed deadline to create a final list by early April before the U18s start.
I'm curious why he chose those years, while omitting the historically deep year in 2003. In particular 1999-2002 were below average drafts. That would skew his analysis.
Even if the probabilities of the 15th pick and 21st pick aren't that much different, I don't know if many teams would want to trade down just to add an extra 3rd and risk missing out on a target.
Really enjoy Sam Cosentino's work. He has a real strong knowledge of the Canadian junior ranks...
It’s getting crowded at the top.
Several things have happened since our last rankings were published. We witnessed the New Jersey Devils win the NHL Draft Lottery. We’ve seen most of the very best first-year draft eligibles participate in the World U18 Championship. Playoffs continue to eliminate potential picks, while those who still remain are getting additional platforms on which to prove their worth.
A few events remain, including the men’s World Championship, the Memorial Cup presented by Kia and the NHL Combine. Once those events are done, teams will meet, debate and deliberate en route to Vancouver in June.
Sportsnet’s 2019 NHL Draft Prospect Rankings: May - Sportsnet.ca