Prospect Info: 2024-25 Ducks Prospects

No accountability then? Look, the Ducks have an entire team of scouts who do nothing all year but watch these guys play both in person and watching countless tapes. That they could watch Gaucher (or Myatovic or Tracey or Perreault) for countless hours and draft them anyway is an indictment on their ability to judge talent. Some drafts are just bad and in hindsight there might not have been a better option but that is not the case with all the guys I mentioned. Especially Gaucher...as someone mentioned earlier, almost every pick taken after Gaucher looks 100x more promising than he does.

No accountability? Do you want the scouts who recommended him publicly flogged? We're also talking about a draft that's two years old. It might have been a bad pick, but the overall body of work of the Anaheim scouting department has been pretty good.
 
No accountability? Do you want the scouts who recommended him publicly flogged? We're also talking about a draft that's two years old. It might have been a bad pick, but the overall body of work of the Anaheim scouting department has been pretty good.
Average at best IMO.
 
No accountability then? Look, the Ducks have an entire team of scouts who do nothing all year but watch these guys play both in person and watching countless tapes. That they could watch Gaucher (or Myatovic or Tracey or Perreault) for countless hours and draft them anyway is an indictment on their ability to judge talent. Some drafts are just bad and in hindsight there might not have been a better option but that is not the case with all the guys I mentioned. Especially Gaucher...as someone mentioned earlier, almost every pick taken after Gaucher looks 100x more promising than he does.
I'm sorry, but thinking that watching Perreault in the OHL would clearly show he would bust is a little ridiculous. 30 goals as a 16 year old then 39 goals (and well over a PPG) as a 17 year old. Perreault was fantastic before he was drafted, unfortunately COVID pretty much ruined his development path forcing him into the AHL as an 18 year old who wasn't close to being ready for that level of hockey.

Perreault is the exact type of high potential (and granted high risk) forwards we should be targeting. You can't bemoan high floor/low ceiling picks like Gaucher/Myatovic then complain when Anaheim swings for the fences and that it doesn't work out.
 
Average at best IMO.
This is just factually wrong. They are average at worst in basically any category you look at since Madden took over, and top in a lot of them.

Lets ignore 2020-2024 since they are still developing, but I think we can say 2019 is at the point where it can be judged.
Tell me a standard you think they have come up short on.
NHLers? 33 players have played 100 games, with Dostal at 99 currently. Thats almost 3 players per draft.
Starting goalies? 3 out of the 8 they have drafted.
Top 4 defensemen? 10. Almost 1 per year.
Top 6 forwards? 6. 1 every other year.
1st/2nd round busts?
74% of 1st rounders play 100 games league wide. 93% for the Ducks.
34% of 2nd rounders play 100 games league wide. 57% for the Ducks.

What do you actually expect? Them to never miss on a pick?
 
Obviously its sexy to target the high offensive upside guys like Cristall, Lardis, etc. But with everything there is risk. I think it's all about how likely it is they reached their potential. With Gaucher they probably thought his floor was a 4th line center in the NHL and ceiling a 2nd line center.

No team hits on every draft pick, but I didn't like the pick at the time and still hate it now. Thought it was a complete reach.

I would not say Gaucher was a complete reach, but there were other forwards with higher upside/ceiling than Gaucher. Many scouting reports cited that Gaucher was most likely to be an NHL 3C.

Verbeek's first draft has some constraints. He doubled down on his constraints in his second draft. On his third draft, the 2024 draft, the heigh requirement got lifted, but not the NCAA guys in the top-4 rounds.

For the 2022 draft, I really liked 6'2 RW Snuggerud from the US NTDP, who was headed to the NCAA. He scored 24 goals for the NTDP, 6th in team goal scoring, where the high was 35 goals. But I think NCAA Thrun going FA must have affected GM Verbeek. Then there was 6'0 C/W Kulich from Czechia top men's league as a 17-year old. He grew an inch since being drafted. iirc, Verbeek had like a height requirement of 6'1 and above. Kulich wasn't tall enough yet to on Verbeek's radar.

I thought Gaucher was a taller and slightly faster straight-line skating BO Groulx b/c both had the same playing profile. We drafted Groulx in the 2018 2nd round. Maybe Gaucher plays better at the NHL level than Groulx. Groulx played well in the AHL, but that jump to the NHL was still too high for him in both instances (2021-22 and 2023-24).
 
This is just factually wrong. They are average at worst in basically any category you look at since Madden took over, and top in a lot of them.

Lets ignore 2020-2024 since they are still developing, but I think we can say 2019 is at the point where it can be judged.
Tell me a standard you think they have come up short on.
NHLers? 33 players have played 100 games, with Dostal at 99 currently. Thats almost 3 players per draft.
Starting goalies? 3 out of the 8 they have drafted.
Top 4 defensemen? 10. Almost 1 per year.
Top 6 forwards? 6. 1 every other year.
1st/2nd round busts?
74% of 1st rounders play 100 games league wide. 93% for the Ducks.
34% of 2nd rounders play 100 games league wide. 57% for the Ducks.

What do you actually expect? Them to never miss on a pick?
How many top 6 forwards have the ducks drafted in the last dozen years excluding top 3 picks? Terry is the only one by my count. How does that fit in with the league average?
 
How many top 6 forwards have the ducks drafted in the last dozen years excluding top 3 picks? Terry is the only one by my count. How does that fit in with the league average?
Palmieri
Rakell
Karlsson
Terry
Kase
Zegras

None are top 3 picks. The only one that is even close to questionable is Kase and I think most would agree it was concussions that derailed him, not his development.
 
Maybe they should just draft Dmen with late firsts ? Since Madden is so good at finding LaCombes, Thruns, Pettersons, Montours, Mansons that maybe picking one of those type of Dmen prospects with a late 1st they'll get a prospect that pans out and becomes trade value if they have too many Dmen as prospects.

When they'd picked Dmen with late 1st: Theodore was a late 1st as was Larson ( had a good chance of panning out if he hadn't been injured so much in his development).
 
Palmieri
Rakell
Karlsson
Terry
Kase
Zegras

None are top 3 picks. The only one that is even close to questionable is Kase and I think most would agree it was concussions that derailed him, not his development.
Good list. Note that all of them except zegras was drafted at least 10 years ago.
 
Good list. Note that all of them except zegras was drafted at least 10 years ago.
And? Why are we limiting it to that timeframe? How about looking at the whole body of work under Madden instead of 10 years, 5 of which are not really finished products yet.
If we looked at 2019 a year ago you would have used Lacombe as a bad pick.

How about looking at 2008-2019, a 12 year sample size where the development is done.

Terry is only 27 and you wouldn't consider his draft relevant? lol
 
To be fair, you have conveniently made sure that two of our current top 6 forwards are excluded.
Do we really need to applaud a scouting staff for a top 3 pick? Especially when we don’t even know if they made the right ones yet.

And? Why are we limiting it to that timeframe? How about looking at the whole body of work under Madden instead of 10 years, 5 of which are not really finished products yet.
If we looked at 2019 a year ago you would have used Lacombe as a bad pick.

How about looking at 2008-2019, a 12 year sample size where the development is done.

Terry is only 27 and you wouldn't consider his draft relevant? lol
Ok. Go back before 2013 and tell me about Ritchie and the other forward stars he drafted.
 
Do we really need to applaud a scouting staff for a top 3 pick? Especially when we don’t even know if they made the right ones yet.
Kakko, Dach, Kotkaniemi, Patrick...just a few of the recent top 3 picks that could be filed under disappointing.
 
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Do we really need to applaud a scouting staff for a top 3 pick? Especially when we don’t even know if they made the right ones yet.


Ok. Go back before 2013 and tell me about Ritchie and the other forward stars he drafted.
What the actual f*** are you talking about? I never mentioned Ritchie and youre moving the goalposts. Noone is saying they have not made a bad pick. You're either ignorant to the reality of drafting in the NHL and how few players work out, or you're intentionally ignoring the facts because they don't match up with your opinion.

By the way, from 2008-2012 (before 2013 just like you said) he drafted 3 top 6 forwards, 6 top 4 defensemen, and 2 starting goalies. Wanna keep going?
 
Colorado last drafted a top 6 forward in 2015 (Rantanen).
Tampa Bay last drafted a top 6 forward in 2015 (Cirelli) - if you consider him a top 6 forward.
Dallas last drafted a top 6 forward in 2021 (Johnston) then 2017 (Robertson).
Edmonton 2015 (McDavid) though Holloway (2020) is trending that way
Florida 2020 (Lundell) then Tippett (2017)
Vegas 2017 (Suzuki) though Dorofeyev (2019) is trending that way

Just a few examples, vast majority of these are either top 10 or low teens in terms of picks too. Basically hitting on top 6 forwards is REALLY f***ing hard.

Anaheim's forward drafting isn't fantastic (compared to defence especially), but teams aren't hitting on multiple top 6 forwards every year by any stretch. I daresay that our heavy D focus in our drafting skewers it a little too.

I feel pretty confident that in 5 years time we'll look back at the 2024 draft where we finally hit on some good forward talent too.
 
I'm hoping Gaucher has a Helleson-like transition to the NHL, he just needs to play a simple mistake free game and fill the bottom role nicely
 
How many top 6 forwards have the ducks drafted in the last dozen years excluding top 3 picks? Terry is the only one by my count. How does that fit in with the league average?

I like you made the cutoff at 12 years when Madden has been here 16 years. Fourteen years ago (the 2011 draft), Rakell (Rd 1, 30th) and Wild Bill (Rd 2, 53) are top-6 forwards and still playing in the NHL. Sixteen years ago (the 2009 draft), there was Palmieri (Rd 1, 26th) and he's still playing in the NHL. Palmieri has 37 points this season and would rank as the Ducks' 2nd best scorer this year!

Anyhow, top-6 forwards drafted by the Ducks in the last 12 years excluding top-3 picks:
2014: Rd 7, RW Kase (Concussion derailed his play.)​
2015: Rd 5, RW Terry​
2019: Rd 1, 6th overall, C Zegras​
--- Still to early to tell beyond 2019 (Remember, it took Terry in his D+7 season to breakout ---

Notice how you only address the forwards, but sidestepped defensemen and goalies. Maybe you should just direct your bad scouting criticism at forwards drafted outside the top-3 picks? Your standard is not a likely outcome when searching for "impact" forwards.


Top-3 and Top-10 picks under Murray & Madden.


Do you know how many top-3 picks Madden has had under Murray between 2009 and 2021, a 13-year span? One. That was C McTavish in the 2021 draft.

Do you know how many top-10 picks Madden has had under Murray between 2009 and 2021? Five. 2012, 6th OA in LD Lindholm, 2014; 10th OA in LW Ritchie; 2019, 9th OA in C Zegras; 2020, 6th OA in RD Drysdale; and 3rd OA in C McTavish. Three picks used on forwards, with two of them during the rebuild that started in 2019.

These bits of info is pertinent for the charts I'll be sharing below.



"What's an NHL Draft Pick Worth" by Michael Schuckers

This was a 10-year study between 1988-1997. The standard for this research was a prospect playing 200 games. Schuckers included positional breakdowns of reaching 200 games played (GP) along with the round they were drafted within. Only 35% of first round forwards play 200 games, or 65% failure rate. It gets worse after each passing round.

1739384702781.png




"NHL Draft Pick Probabilities" by Jokke Nevalainen

This was a 10-year study between 2000-2009. We see this chart at 100 Games Played (GP) is similar to Schuckers' chart at 200 GP (the chart above). Two different researches with similar conclusions.

1739384951281.png


Here is another chart by Nevalainen, but done in pick by pick breakdown. The blue line (log trend line) cleans up raw plots to see a trend. Notice the steep drop between pick 1 and pick 8. It becomes less steep between pick 9 and pick 15. And then again, it becomes less steep from pick 15 to pick 31. The failure rate is far more significant within the first round than any other round. Again, the Schuckers table reflects this as well.

1739385059017.png


Ducks drafted Forwards with at least 200 NHL games
2011
Rd 1, 30. RW Rakell = 777 NHL games
Rd 2, 53. C Karlsson (Wild Bill) = 723 NHL games
2014
Rd 1, 10. LW Ritchie = 481 NHL games
Rd 7, 205. RW Kase = 258 NHL games
2015
Rd 5, 148. RW Terry = 399 NHL games
2016
Rd 1, 24. LW Jones = 265 NHL games
Rd 1, 30. C Steel = 392 NHL games
2017
Rd 2, 50. LW Comtois = 211 NHL games
2018
Rd 1, 23. C Lundestrom = 309 NHL games
2019
Rd 1, 9. C Zegras = 243 NHL games
2021
Rd 1, 3. C McTavish = 201 NHL games


"Odds Not Great for the NHL Draft" by Paul Osborne

"The truth is that very few players taken in the NHL draft this weekend will ever play in the NHL. In order to get an accurate read of how many drafted players played at least 200 games in the NHL, a study by proicehockey.about.com looked at the drafts between 1990 and 1999. Of the 2,600 hundred players drafted just 494 or 19% played in at least 200 contests. 63% of first round picks played but less than 25% of second round picks survived and only 12% of third rounder selections. Former NHL general manager Doug MacLean said his math over the last decade showed that only 15% of second round picks ever become impact players."


Conclusion

You have a vast misconception of how many players make an impact in the NHL, let alone forward impact. I gave you three sources that all used a 10-year span of research that reflect only a small percentage of drafted prospects play 100 or 200 NHL games.

Lost in all this is the fact the Ducks, under Madden, have found impact defensemen and goalies outside the top-3 picks to outside the first round. We have an overabundance of defensive talent youth at the NHL level that we are rotating between three out of the four youth D. Then there are other young d-men talents in RD Luneau in the AHL, LD Solberg in the SHL, LD Dionicio in the NL-A, and RD Moore in the NCAA. At goal, Dostal is only 24 years old with Clang, Clara, and Buteyets behind him. But our best goalie behind Dostal, IMO, is UDFA Suchanek, who has been placed on IR for this whole season.

Because they are above the average at drafting goalies and defensemen, they can focus on acquiring top-10 forwards to supplement. Why are we complaining about not hitting on forwards beyond the top-3 picks? Remember, Anaheim was a consistent playoff participant in eight of the 10 years (2009-2018) and didn't see a top-3 pick until 2021 under Murray & Madden. Playoff teams generally are stuck later in the first round, which, according to all those charts, do not have a great chance of being an impact NHL player compared to being a top-10 or top-3 pick.

Youth Forwards accumulated since the Rebuild of 2019
  • 2019: Rd 1, 9OA in C Zegras
  • 2021: Rd 1, 3OA in C McTavish
  • 2022: Rd 1, 5OA in LW Gauthier (via trade of 2020 Rd 1, 6OA RD Drysdale and 2025 2nd rd pick)
  • 2023: Rd 1, 2OA in C Carlsson
  • 2024: Rd 1, 3OA in RW Sennecke

Throw Terry into that mix, then that is enough talent to fulfill all top-6 forward positions. Which should mean all we have to worry about are bottom-6 forwards. This season in the AHL, it looks like we have some high-end scorers in RW Colangelo, RW/LW Pastujov, and RW/LW Sidorov. But we don't know how they'll pan out at the NHL level yet.
 
Anybody who tries to say that our drafting is poor is just silly.

I don't think there is a team that is better at drafting defensemen than the Ducks. Guys we drafted are playing on the top four for like 6 different teams right now.
 

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