Canada left a forward spot open hoping that Zach Benson or Matthew Poirras will be made available, if neither player is released Firkus will probably get that spot. Or Riley Heidt possibly.He’ll likely get called back imo
Canada left a forward spot open hoping that Zach Benson or Matthew Poirras will be made available, if neither player is released Firkus will probably get that spot. Or Riley Heidt possibly.He’ll likely get called back imo
With Jeff Skinner going to IR it's now much less likely that Zach Benson will be released for the WJC due to the need for him to play top six minutes with the Sabres.Canada left a forward spot open hoping that Zach Benson or Matthew Poirras will be made available, if neither player is released Firkus will probably get that spot. Or Riley Heidt possibly.
Heidt obviously won't be broughtCanada left a forward spot open hoping that Zach Benson or Matthew Poirras will be made available, if neither player is released Firkus will probably get that spot. Or Riley Heidt possibly.
Yeah but he couldn't have done anything useful for team Canada. And they didn't need goals or assists anyways.The kid flew to Sweden, never played a game, he's back and has a 1G, 4A night tonight.
Sidney CrosbyWhat’s his honest ceiling v floor? Is he almost a guarantee NHLer
Holy Crap...Why is this kid so low on Prospect Lists, Dobber has him at #50 of forwards. What am I missing?22 points in his last 6 games... lol
15 game point streak; 10+25=35
3 points shy of 80 points, (in 37 games).
Holy Crap...Why is this kid so low on Prospect Lists, Dobber has him at #50 of forwards. What am I missing?
Great response, thanks. I actually thought the same about the Heponiemi comparisonHe is certainly slept on a bit, but there is more to it than just that.
Taken on his own, Firkus definitely shows great potential as a possible future top 6 player in the NHL as he is really skilled, fast, sees the ice well, and his shot is good too.
But Firkus similarly has a couple of glaring flaws as a player that make him quite hard to reliably project at the NHL-level and may ultimately preclude him from being a good NHLer.
The simple fact of the matter is that right now Firkus is extremely light and weak physically by NHL standards, plays an immature "junior" type of game in how he produces offense, is quite soft, and definitely below-average defensively for the NHL.
Worse, Firkus also does not really have any elite defining trait right now (again, elite vs. other NHLers, not junior-level players) that could elevate his game past projectability concerns teams might have with him, or questions about how he'd hold up physically against tight NHL checking.
So yeah, with more strength/weight, fortuitous adjustments here and there, progression all-around and the like Firkus could end up a significant contributor in the NHL and great piece for Seattle.
But Firkus could also end up sharing Heponiemi's fate, and never manage to put on the weight/muscle necessary for him to be effective at the pro level.
And to me, that is because of that risk factor, lack of projectability at the pro level, combined with a certain "underrated-ness" of his that leads Firkus to being rated lower on lists like Dobberprospects than most would like.
Razzle dazzle -
got 60 and leading point getter in the WHL. Where are the Kraken fans to pump his tires?