3) Steve Duchesne
- Undrafted D-men
- Perennial 50-70 points D-men
- 752 points in 1113 games
- Won SC with Red Wings in his last season
This is an interesting player to me, in a kind of "maybe underrated, maybe rated just fine, but warranting further conversation" sort of way. And maybe that's just me, but here's some things:
- He was on two separate, extremely young and green teams that made the jump to the playoffs, where Duchesne was clearly the most experienced and prominent defenseman on the team. The 1993 Nordiques had a 21 year old Adam Foote, 23 year old Curtis Leschyshyn as well as a 28-but-newer-to-Canada Alexei Gusarov, and he led the blue line in points by a mile. The 1997 Senators had a teenaged Wade Redden on their team, and not a whole lot of depth. I don't have TOI available, but I wouldn't be surprised if he was leaned on extremely heavily in both places. Then he was gone the next season both years. The Senators stayed good but the Nordiques cratered in 1994 before getting back on track in 1995 (adding Krupp and Lefevbre definitely helped there). Knowing more about his role on both teams - especially as it concerns Foote and Redden - would shed a lot of light on what he brought to the table.
- Nobody cares (or should care) about what players do in the ATD, but this might be somewhat illustrative: in the usual 30ish-team ATDs, there's usually a late run on PP2 guys for the 3rd pair that look more or less interchangeable on paper once you get past a few guys like Rafalski (won a lot), and Housley (cartoonish numbers if bad at other things). Duchesne is usually in that tier, but if you stack his numbers - whether we're talking adjusted, finishes among defense, VsX among defensemen, you name it - Duchesne handily clears players like Schneider, Kaberle, etc, even if you take away some of his Gretzky adjacent seasons. So in that exercise maybe you'd draft him higher than the rest of that tier. Doesn't tell you squat about his overall talent level, but he really did put up loads of points.
- I think it's a bit difficult for fans to find the words to talk about the guys who fall somewhere between a thunderingly incompetent defensive defenseman like Housley or Barrie, and someone you'd actually give the label "two-way" to. Obviously Duchesne wasn't pushing anyone around, but I think guys of his ilk are underdiscussed when it comes to their overall game - even if it wasn't very good, what skills were particularly deficiency and which ones were OK?