I think Nieuwendyk and Kamensky were eligible for this draft too.
kirk muller after roberts is just flat out wrong. kirk muller after richer is probably wrong. kirk muller after suter might be wrong too.
for the first ten years after the draft, muller is clearly the fifth best player in the draft, with an outside argument for #4 in a toews vs kessel way.
I came really close to swapping Muller and Roberts on my list. Probably should have. Still don't think Muller had the upside of Suter though.
i have a really hard time with suter. how do you evaluate a guy who was never ever the best defenceman on his team, or at least not until he was 35?
on the other hand, that's a top ten and top twenty dman all time that he had ahead of him the first fourteen years of his career.
i feel like i'd have a much better sense of just how good he was if he hadn't gotten injured in 1989.
from your list olczyk is another guy who probably should make the top 20 but because he peaked so early, vs mellanby, cliff ronning, etc, we remember him more as a washed up 20 goal journeyman than as a who averaged 35 goals and more than a point/game over a consecutive five year peak. he was a one-dimensional scorer, definitely, but so was ray sheppard.
i have a really hard time with suter. how do you evaluate a guy who was never ever the best defenceman on his team, or at least not until he was 35?
on the other hand, that's a top ten and top twenty dman all time that he had ahead of him the first fourteen years of his career.
i feel like i'd have a much better sense of just how good he was if he hadn't gotten injured in 1989.
from your list olczyk is another guy who probably should make the top 20 but because he peaked so early, vs mellanby, cliff ronning, etc, we remember him more as a washed up 20 goal journeyman than as a who averaged 35 goals and more than a point/game over a consecutive five year peak. he was a one-dimensional scorer, definitely, but so was ray sheppard.
From a GM perspective, couldn't drafting Roy #1 be very defensible considering how his and Lemieux's careers played out?...
i am here for this
Suter also missed the final two rounds when the Flames went to the finals in '86. Of course, in this case, his team won one series (against the Blues) and lost one series (against the Habs) without him.That awkward moment when you miss the playoffs due to injury but your team wins anyway...and the other star defenceman on the team wins the Conn Smythe.
Was MacInnis rated that far ahead of Suter, if at all, going into the 1989 playoffs? Both had been second team all stars and neither had been a first team all star at that point. MacInnis certainly separated himself with the 89 playoff run and then finishing as a first team all star in the next two regular seasons.
That awkward moment when you miss the playoffs due to injury but your team wins anyway...and the other star defenceman on the team wins the Conn Smythe.
Was MacInnis rated that far ahead of Suter, if at all, going into the 1989 playoffs? Both had been second team all stars and neither had been a first team all star at that point. MacInnis certainly separated himself with the 89 playoff run and then finishing as a first team all star in the next two regular seasons.
looking back, this was a really really good draft. daigneault at #10, with his solid contribution to a cup winner and 900 games over a 15 year career, is probably the second worst player in the top 12.
anyone know the story with craig redmond? sixth overall, stepped into the league right out of the draft and scored 39 points as a dman. barely scored 39 points for the rest of his career and was done before he turned 24.
Not really. And if you're The Penguins, you obviously draft Lemieux again if given a 2nd chance. If the Pens had drafted Roy, the franchise would have moved in about 1991 and would now be the Seattle Salmon. And they probably wouldn't have gotten Jagr.From a GM perspective, couldn't drafting Roy #1 be very defensible considering how his and Lemieux's careers played out?...
looking back, this was a really really good draft. daigneault at #10, with his solid contribution to a cup winner and 900 games over a 15 year career, is probably the second worst player in the top 12.
anyone know the story with craig redmond? sixth overall, stepped into the league right out of the draft and scored 39 points as a dman. barely scored 39 points for the rest of his career and was done before he turned 24.
Was MacInnis rated that far ahead of Suter, if at all, going into the 1989 playoffs?
From a GM perspective, couldn't drafting Roy #1 be very defensible considering how his and Lemieux's careers played out?...
If the Pens had drafted Roy, the franchise would have moved in about 1991 and would now be the Seattle Salmon.
If you put Roy on the 1OA Pittsburgh Penguins, we have no way of telling how his career with the Hamilton Steelers would have unfolded with that little to work with.
Any other bets?