F A N
Registered User
- Aug 12, 2005
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- 6,553
Regarding the comparison between EP2 and Mynio, I have to respectfully disagree with your statement. EP2 may have had terrible production in the SHL, but his junior stats were promising, showing notable potential (14 GP, 5 G, 10 A). His scouting report also highlighted his projectible frame, strong skating, and shooting abilities, which were well-validated by his highlight clips. On the other hand, Mynio seems to lack all the aforementioned qualities EP2 possessed.
I get that you don't like Mynio as a prospect but can you at least acknowledge that some may view him differently? EP2, like Mynio, was not ranked to go in the first 2 rounds. EP2 had a good shot and a projectable frame at the time of the draft. But there were discrepancies in his scouting reports. It seems that when he was good he was good but there were some reports about him being inconsistent and having questionable hockey sense. Despite having offensive potential, he also played in the U18 in his draft-eligible year and had 0 points in 6 games. I'm excited to have EP2 in the pipeline but he was hardly considered a home run pick at the time of the draft.
Mynio is a good player. He knows how to defend. Every scouting report I've read suggests this. Are there areas of improvement? Of course. But in comparison to EP2 (the draft-eligible prospect), there seems to be less questions about his ability to defend. EP2 had a very good draft+1 season. If Mynio has similarly good draft +! season the conversation would be similar.
As for Jayden Perron, I disagree with your assessment. While it is true that there are many small scoring forwards in junior hockey that don't become anything, again a certain type of small players are better bets. I was very impressed with Perron's high hockey IQ and smarts which he displayed all over the ice (not just when he possessed puck). You mentioned that Perron is "sort of finished product", and I partially agree since I dare to say his hockey sense seems almost NHL-ready. With the right development, gaining strength and further refining his skating and shooting skills, I believe Perron's chances of becoming an impactful NHL player are far greater than those of an average 3rd round selection or many other small scoring forwards in junior hockey.
Perron is a talented player but he drastically fell from his preliminary draft rankings. That often doesn't bode well for players who are small skilled players. I agree with @biturbo19 that these guys don't often make it. Sure his chances of becoming an impactful NHL player is greater than those of an average 3rd round selection but his chances of becoming an NHL player is about as high as his chances of becoming an impactful NHL player. Like I said previously, I would have been excited had the Canucks taken a chance on him but if the Canucks choose to pass at that point I don't really have an issue with that.