ATD 2017 Draft Thread II

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I was hoping to land Middleton to play on the Lindsay/Cowley line, and drop Foyston down to play with Sittler/Recchi. Failing that, I would have scooped up Herb Gardiner....

I'm still trying to figure out who to pick here... total crap shoot right now :laugh:

This is the best range of the ATD - still some talent floating out there...but the training wheels are off and were into the crapshoot.
 
Not sure who to take so I'm going to take my time a bit with my pick. Feel free to PM a trade offer.
 
Wait, you tried him on a first line before?
A night to remember!

01-080020-the_johnnie_walker_range.jpg
 
All GM's Please Note:

Due to personal reasons Wrigley is unable to participate in the remainder of the ATD. Please send all messages regarding Strathcona to EdmontonExpress, who will be going the rest of the way on his own.
 
I'm still at work and have a lot to do. I popped in to comment on the trade thread because it seemed like it needed immediate attention, but I need some time for my pick. It likely won't be coming until later tonight.
 
I'm still at work and have a lot to do. I popped in to comment on the trade thread because it seemed like it needed immediate attention, but I need some time for my pick. It likely won't be coming until later tonight.

MB now's your chance to strike! :naughty:
 
I'm 5 picks away and hawkey town says his pick won't be until later so I'll forego sending a list and make my pick ASAP tomorrow when my clock comes up.
 
All GM's Please Note:

Due to personal reasons Wrigley is unable to participate in the remainder of the ATD. Please send all messages regarding Strathcona to EdmontonExpress, who will be going the rest of the way on his own.

Many thanks to Wrigley for his guidance and patience this year. I have thoroughly enjoyed having him as a mentor for the ATD experience, and hope that I can make him proud with a solid entry. :handclap:
 
Wrigley was in this draft?

Twice this draft I was gonna ask: who's that guy?

Maybe he's changed his username?

(The roster posts are no use in this regard.)
 
Wrigley was in this draft?

Twice this draft I was gonna ask: who's that guy?

Maybe he's changed his username?

(The roster posts are no use in this regard.)

He did, I think it says Yosemite Sam aka Wrigley on the PM links in first post.
 
I went back and forth between 2 guys for quite a while on this one, in the end I decided to pick the guy who I thought was the lesser player overall, but the better fit next to Harry Cameron on our 2nd pairing...

The Chicago Shamrocks select Lionel Hitchman, D

1924_Bruins_Lionel_Hitchman.jpg



AS Teams only existed for the last 4 years of Hitchman's career, but he did manage a 5th place finish the first year.

Hitchman's best year came in 1929-30 where he finished runner-up to Nels Stewart for the Hart, trailing Stewart by only 7 points, ahead of 3rd place by 15 points, and ahead of the next best defenseman by 17 points. I think we can easily call this the equivalent of a Norris trophy.

Hitchman was the big, physical, defensive minded partner of Eddie Shore. Hitchman's game allowed Shore to play his rushing style, and he should do the same for Cameron. Quotes from various bios...

Joe Pelletier said:
Lionel Hitchman was steady, aggressive and defensive-minded defenseman who was often paired with Eddie Shore to form one of the greatest defense tandems in hockey history. Hitchman's flawless defensive play allowed Shore more freedom to play an offensive game, a rarity among rearguards in the early days of hockey.

Pitseleh said:
Well, I just came across Mackenzie's defenseman article, and this is what he had to say (interestingly, he notes that it's very difficult to compare players from before the forward pass to after it because of the big changes in style of play):

- He calls Hitchman and Ching Johnson the best defensive defensemen of his day. Nels Stewart on Hitchman: "I'd rather carry a puck through a picket fence than try to get past Hitchman". He says that "Johnson broke every rule in the book, using his tremendous strength to hold, maul, and smear up opposing plays." and that he always got away with it. He goes on to say that he never took advantage of his strength in a mean way but "if he did not break every hockey law he at least bent them all considerably".

Hockey Outsider said:
Eddie Shore was not even regarded as the best defensive player of his era. Although he was known as a good offensive player, even during his absolute peak (1933), contemporaries thought that there were several other defensemen in the league who were superior defensively (ie King Clancy, Lionel Hitchman, Ching Johnson). Source: Globe & Mail, April 20, 1933

Milwaukee Journal Dec 20 1929 said:
"Shore is the most sensational player in hockey today. He is not only a stalwart on defense but he is a fine scorer. Hitchman is the hardest man to get around, the greatest checker and the greatest blocker in the game."
 
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