Ryan Van Horne
aka Scribe
His goal scoring is among the best in recent drafts. If he wasn’t so one-dimensional, I think he’d be a lock to go first. No one in this draft is that good. It’s hard to pass up that rate of goal-scoring, but that’s all he does, so it becomes easier.
What I like most about Eiserman is that his burning desire to score is matched by his talent. Lots of people want to score as much as he does, but don't have the talent. Some people have the talent, but not the desire. He's also able to score in the blink of an eye, which bodes well for his skills transferring to higher levels.
He can pass and be a good playmaker, but he's often the best scorer on his team. As he plays with better teammates, he will learn to do distribute the puck more.
As for checking, he can learn. He's a winger, so it's bread-and-butter stuff. There's a famous draft day story from 1977 about Mike Bossy, who lit up the QMJHL with four consecutive seasons of 70-plus goals and averaged well over a goal per game.
Several teams passed on him because he was soft and one-dimensional and the Montreal Canadiens had a chance to draft him at No. 10. As this story in the Seattle Times tells, Scotty Bowman and Claude Ruel both pleaded with GM Sam Pollock to draft Bossy, who grew up in the Habs' backyard.
Pollock deferred to his scouting director, who thought Mark Napier would be a better pick because of his better two-way play.
The Islanders turn came up at No. 15 and the choice was between Bossy and some other guy. GM Bill Torrey asked his scouts about why this goal-scoring machine named Bossy wasn't getting picked. "He can't check!" Torrey was told.
"Give me the goal scorer," Torrey said. "We'll teach him to check."
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