No outrage, I’m just not impressed with our forward drafting outside of slam dunk picks. Really going back to about 2016 (mostly because the guys we actually drafted vs who we could’ve).
I’m not saying it’s awful by any means, but I’m not impressed by it. And unearthing just 1 or two more forwards later in the draft since that time would’ve helped the team’s depth a lot.
Maybe that will change with Pasta, Sidorov etc, but too early to say.
I'm not complaining about not having found any star forwards after 2003 because the team was good for a long time. All i'm literally saying is that we haven't drafted enough top/middle 6 guys later in the 1st and 2nd rounds since 2016.Well there was a stretch when we did get legit NHL forwards at a high rate. Rakell, Palmieri, DSP, Karlsson, Kase, Terry, Steel ... all that in 8 drafts. That is WAY above the normal hit rate.
But yes, that well dried up for about 3 years, and that's hurt, but I don't think if we'd found 1 additional guy even of Terry's caliber that it would have drastically changed things.
Anything after that is just starting to trickle in (Colangelo the first of that next group). But that said, it could just be the law of averages. A 3 year series of misses really isn't much statistically. Individual drafts are miniscule sample sizes ... a 3 year period without a useful forward is to be expected from time to time no matter how good you are at drafting.
Objectively, I don't think you'll find many teams who were finding 7 NHL forwards in 8 years in the late 1st and beyond. And I'd also be careful of labeling high draft choices as "slam dunk picks." Plenty of teams whiff near the top of the draft, yet thus far it appears the only potential full on bust we have among our recent high picks is the one we traded for Gauthier. Top 10 picks usually fail at a much higher rate than 1 out of 6. Just consider, Ryan Strome was a top 5 pick, and he's actually a decent outcome for his draft position.
The biggest reason for our decline isn't the inability to draft well at a particular position ... it's that we didn't unearth any core star-level forwards for a long time after 2003. But to get a superstar forward even with high picks takes a lot of fortune; you can pick 2nd overall in a year where it's Kakko or Legwand, or you can pick 2nd in a year where it's Malkin or Eichel. To get a star forward outside of the top of the draft is mostly dumb luck ... no way the Bruins were expecting Pastrnak to be what he was.
I'm not complaining about not having found any star forwards after 2003 because the team was good for a long time. All i'm literally saying is that we haven't drafted enough top/middle 6 guys later in the 1st and 2nd rounds since 2016.
I'm also not expecting the team to be a lot better right now if we had drafted a Thompson, Debrincat, Kyrou, Geekie, Dorofeyev, etc necessarily. I'm just saying that when our lotto pick level forwards do start producing, they'd have more support and we wouldn't have to hope we can get aging vets to sign here.
I'm not surprised you came back with that and you could very well be right. But we would've gotten something decent in return, much more than we did for Steel, Jones, Comtois, Perreault, Tracey, Ritchie, Etc. You could be right too that we wouldn't have bottomed out as hard, but still it shows a deficiency in forwards drafting. I don't find gross metrics like total games played by guys we drafted to be very relevant either, but that's just me. Like Steel, he wasn't a good pick to me.I'm guessing that had we had a few of those types, we'd 1) not have bottomed out as hard and would likely not have quite as good a set of youngsters, and 2) some might have been sold off anyway.
Regardless, overall in looking at the draft lists, I see no indication that we haven't drafted well. I don't think the team (Murray especially) made the most of the young assets he was given though. There was enough talent drafted at D and at F, that a shrewd GM would have found more than sufficient to keep the team good.
Well there was a stretch when we did get legit NHL forwards at a high rate. Rakell, Palmieri, DSP, Karlsson, Kase, Terry, Steel ... all that in 8 drafts. That is WAY above the normal hit rate.
But yes, that well dried up for about 3 years, and that's hurt, but I don't think if we'd found 1 additional guy even of Terry's caliber that it would have drastically changed things.
Anything after that is just starting to trickle in (Colangelo the first of that next group). But that said, it could just be the law of averages. A 3 year series of misses really isn't much statistically. Individual drafts are miniscule sample sizes ... a 3 year period without a useful forward is to be expected from time to time no matter how good you are at drafting.
Objectively, I don't think you'll find many teams who were finding 7 NHL forwards in 8 years in the late 1st and beyond. And I'd also be careful of labeling high draft choices as "slam dunk picks." Plenty of teams whiff near the top of the draft, yet thus far it appears the only potential full on bust we have among our recent high picks is the one we traded for Gauthier. Top 10 picks usually fail at a much higher rate than 1 out of 6. Just consider, Ryan Strome was a top 5 pick, and he's actually a decent outcome for his draft position.
The biggest reason for our decline isn't the inability to draft well at a particular position ... it's that we didn't unearth any core star-level forwards for a long time after 2003. But to get a superstar forward even with high picks takes a lot of fortune; you can pick 2nd overall in a year where it's Kakko or Legwand, or you can pick 2nd in a year where it's Malkin or Eichel. To get a star forward outside of the top of the draft is mostly dumb luck ... no way the Bruins were expecting Pastrnak to be what he was.
Yeah but so can 31 other teams, and historically we lose the FA battle.It's guys like this that make me pissed we drafted Gaucher with our 1st. You can find a 3C or 4 C through NHL or college FA.
No need to spend first round picks there.
I think we kinda messed up between 2016-2018 drafts. In those drafts, we neglected drafting defenseman as we spent two picks in three drafts on d-men: Mahura in the 3rd round of the 2016 draft and Hunter Drew in the 6th round of the 2018 draft (who then converted to forward in the pros). Anaheim drafted more goalies in that 3-year draft set than defensemen! We hit more often on defensemen than forwards. Then we would use our pool of talented d-men to help acquire NHL forwards.
We all thought Comtois was a rising star. He got 7 pts in 10 games as a 20-year old before getting sent back to juniors. At age 22, he lead the Ducks in scoring and landed a new contract. Once he got paid, then he stopped working hard and it went all downhill from there. Comtois was our biggest flash.
So was the incentive to sign about 97k for him to play one game with us this season?
Yeah. With multiple teams pursuing him you’d have to think it was about organizational fit and negotiating that RFA contract ahead of time. Will be interesting to see what he gets next year and how soon it is announced.It gets him to his 2nd contract negotiations immediately (assuming something hasn't already been agreed to). He could potentially be a rookie next season, while playing on a contract that pays more than an ELC. It's almost like he gets to skip the ELC entirely.
Yeah. With multiple teams pursuing him you’d have to think it was about organizational fit and negotiating that RFA contract ahead of time. Will be interesting to see what he gets next year and how soon it is announced.
Other teams wanted to sign him so you have to get creative when you are a small market team.So was the incentive to sign about 97k for him to play one game with us this season?
I always wonder if maybe those years they actually didn't like the dmen available, which is valid ... or if they were trying to draft for "need," which I think is always a mistake. I can't imagine there were 3 years of so few D they liked though.
Bottom line though ... in terms of overall pipeline of talent, the scouting dept gave us enough to be better than we were. At some point it's up to the GM to convert that raw material into a proper roster.
The Ducks were just pioneers back then. None of Andy or Kunitz would be available. And if I remember correctly it was mainly David McNab doing it.Bringing this back to Washe, the Ducks used to be at the forefront of snagging college UFA a long while back. Grabbing college UFA Washe is a good sign for Madden circling back to the college ranks. Let's hope he can be as successful as Andy Mac, Kunitz, or Penner.