- Jun 6, 2011
- 1,798
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Hey everyone. I used to do this a lot back in the day when we had an up and coming core that was looking to break through and win a Cup, and then we did win it, so I stopped (Amongst other reasons). I basically touch on all aspects of the organization from top to bottom, give my opinion using a mix of metrics (Almost always pulled from Natural Stat Trick, and unless otherwise stated, only taking into account the Montgomery time period) as well as eye test, and try my best to predict what needs to happen for us to take the next step and win the Cup! This is a loooooong thread, but that's mainly b/c I haven't really touched on each of these guys - moving forward it'll probably be much more concise. I know we have a lot of different threads that this could probably fit under, but I write my own so that I can more easily find my prior thoughts year over year (Plus this thing is a bear). OK, so without further ado, let's hop to it.
As I said, I like to start at the top. I think Tom Stillman is one of the best owners in sports overall, and I like to take a minute to tip my cap to him. This man has brought us our only Cup, and he clearly believes the Blues are a civic treasure. He has never, ever, once wavered in his willingness to invest in this franchise, even during down periods. Other owners might have scoffed at paying guys like Holloway and Broberg above market rates during a re-whatever, and he didn't blink. We are all lucky to have this man.
There was a pretty long stretch there under Monty (About 41 games from his hire until Parayko's injury) where we had legitimately the worst PK in the history of the NHL (67.4%, record is 68.2%). Funny enough our PK went from "Worst PK in NHL history" to the best PK in the league (88.2%) over the 17 games that Parayko missed (As an author, Memento will have to give us all a refresher, but I believe this is called Foreshadowing). Then there's the obvious 6v5 issue that was present through much of the regular season, as well as the backbreakers in G7 of the playoffs. According to Army today, we were the only team to give up more 6v5 goals against then score. Yikes. I attribute a lot of this to Monty shortening his bench far too much far too quickly and gassing out our players. I'll get into this more as we move into the player sections, but according to basically every public model available, of lines that played at least 150 5v5 minutes, the Joseph-Sunny-Bolduc line had the best xGA/60 on the entire team, coming in 11th overall in the NHL and sandwiched between the Verhaeghe-Barkov-Reinhart line (For those of you playing at home, that's the line with two Selke finalists on it) and the Jarvis-Aho-Blake line. Now obviously those lines probably had tougher deployment, but it's not like JSB were a bunch of slouches defensively. How many shifts did that line have together after the 15 minute mark in the third period of Game 7? Zero. Bolduc didn't see the ice at all after the 15 minute mark, Joseph got two shifts, and Sunny was basically out there as a backup faceoff guy before rushing to get off the ice. Monty needs to trust his players more, and stop relying on the WTF line (Which, funny enough, was our second WORST regular line in terms of xGA/60.) I also think a lot of this is due to the style Monty coaches, which is far too conservative for my taste in 6v5 situations. I'd rather we pressure teams way harder and smash the dagger in vs. sit back and hope nothing gets through. I was heartened to hear Armstrong put an emphasis on it in the presser today, as Monty needs to fix this if we want to go further in the playoffs. Still super pumped about his hire though, and believe he's the right guy to lead us to the promised land.
Jordan Kyrou - The second best offensive player on this team. 35 goals/35 assists is his floor moving forward and might only get higher as we put more talent around him. Made incredible strides defensively this year and found chemistry with Holloway. He's top 25 in goal scoring over the last three years, scoring two less the Kyle Conner and seven less the Kucherov. He's top 50 in points, with his most frequent linemate the corpse of Brayden Schenn. He was by far our best 5v5 g/60 at 1.45 - next best was Holloway at 1.12, a fairly massive dropoff. He had a rough playoffs from a production perspective, but he did lead the team in SC and HDSC. This was also his first time in the playoffs as "The guy," and while I wouldn't say he acquitted himself as well as Thomas, I would also say this - the Jets were probably the worst matchup for Kyrou in the entire league, sans maybe the Panthers. I know that might not mean much to some, but I've watched almost every playoff game of every series up to this point, and I cannot begin to describe how less physical every other series was compared to ours. Had we played any other Western Conference team, I think we'd be having a much different conversation around Kyrou right now. He needs to up his battle level because we will eventually have to beat a team like the Jets if we want to win a Cup, but I believe he can do it.
I know there's a lot of chatter around trading him, especially before his NTC kicks in. I am not completely opposed to trading him, especially if we could replace him with Marner (Which I think is a pipe dream). If we are trading Kyrou, it's gotta be for a Center or RHD that's in our core age group, locked up long term, and is a top player at his position. Basically guys like Larkin, Fox, or McAvoy. I'm not interested in a project or a prospect if we're moving on from Kyrou. And abso-f***ing-loutly no to Brady. There's no reason to trade our best chip for a slight upgrade with a much worse contract. Kyrou's contract is going to age very well and the flexibility it provides will pay dividends down the road.
Dylan Holloway - Were you guys expecting that? Because I was NOT expecting that. Ho-ly. Offensively gifted with a non-stop motor. If we're drawing comparisons to our Cup team, Thomas is our new ROR, Kyrou is our new Tarasenko, and Holloway is 100% our new Schwartz, and maybe a better one to boot. (We can quibble about how those comparisons really match up, but I think they all fit those roles pretty well) He lead the team in xGF%, HDCF%, and was second in GF% and p/60 at 5v5. He was a PPG player under Montgomery, and it's an absolute shame he didn't get to play in these playoffs at all. I could write another five paragraphs on how fun it was to watch this kid play, and I am so happy we stole him from Edmonton, a franchise I do not respect at all.
Pavel Buchnevich - The reports of his demise were greatly exaggerated. After moving back to winger full time, Buch was pacing for a 23 goal, 67 point season, with a positive xGF% at 5v5 while drawing some of the hardest defensive assignments in the entire league. He plays in all situations, works well with Thomas (He creates so much space for Thomas to operate), and is a solid all around top 6 option. I wouldn't have been mad if we had traded him to say Vancouver for Willander+ last year, but that ship has sailed. I think he's going to be plenty good for the next 2-3 years, and should gracefully age into a middle six role as guys like Neighbors, Bolduc, Snuggy, and Stenberg hopefully move up. I'd have liked to see more production from him during the playoffs, but frankly, Snuggy/whomever we had with Buch/Thomas wasn't really ready for a top line role at the moment. The Buch-Thomas-Kyrou line was actually outstanding from an xGF% perspective in G7, but it was too little too late at that point.
Brayden Schenn - Schenn had a nice bounce back year numbers wise, but was buoyed by playing with our two best wingers for most of the season. His xGF% with Kyrou and Holloway was over 55%, but without those two guys, it plummeted to under 38%.......big yikes. I think everyone on here knows that he needs to get pushed down the lineup, at least to 3C, and imo, all the way down to 4C if we can manage it. I know that it's a tough nut to find two top/middle 6 Centers, but I really don't think Schenn is even capable of 3C play without dynamic talent on his wings, and unless we're willing to balance the lines a bit by breaking up Kyrou and Holloway, I just don't see how it can work. Without breaking those two up, our most likely 3W's are some combo of Neighbors, Bolduc, and Snuggerud. None of those guys really excel with the puck on their stick at this point of their development, and Neighbors and Snuggy are currently our two worst defensive wingers, with Schenn grading out as our worst defensive Center. As I said earlier, our third line of Joseph-Sunny-Bolduc was one of the best overall defensive lines in the league this year - to go from that to Neighbors-Schenn-Snuggy looks pretty painful. I think we can tread water for a bit early on, but we need to push Schenn down to the Steen role ASAP if we have any real hope of success in the playoffs.
Jake Neighbors - After a breakout campaign last season, I was excited to see Neighbors come into this season and show some improvement in at least one aspect of his game. For the first 50-55 games, I was very underwhelmed. He hadn't seemed to really grow his game in any meaningful way over the summer - footspeed, puck skills, shot, defensive acumen, etc. He was easily the player I least wanted to see leading an odd-man rush, especially a 3 on 2, as he would continually look lost upon zone entry and generally make a bad pass to no one in particular or to the opposing team. Lucky, development isn't linear, and in the last 20-25 games or so, he really started to turn a corner. His passing became much better, his puck decisions became much better, and he showed that he could potentially become a 25/25 type guy.
I think his playoffs was a bit of a mixed bag, but still fairly positive for a kid getting his first taste of NHL playoff action. He made some soft plays in the D-zone that hurt us, and he took some undisciplined penalties that I would mark down as youthful exuberance. He also needs to learn to get to the net front faster in the playoffs, as there were multiple times that some loose change dropped in front of the crease and he wasn't close/fast enough to cash in. If I have one wish for him this off-season, it's to continue to improve on the defensive side of the puck. I'd love it if we could turn him into a PKer at some point, as Joseph and Sunny are probably not every night starters moving forward and we need someone to replace them on the PK. I'm not sure what his true ceiling is, but if his floor is a 20/20 guy, that's pretty solid.
Zach Bolduc - If anyone has paid attention to these boards over the last couple of months, then you know I'm a massive Zach Bolduc truther. He's got a good frame, he skates well, and has a cannon for a shot. He has no issue getting greasy and laid some of the biggest f***ing hits of the season. He's also pretty defensively responsible, with the second best xGA/60 on the entire team, while not getting sheltered much at all with a Ozone faceoff rate just above 50%. I have really no idea what Monty was doing with this kid. I know he was a rookie, but he had the second best xGF% on the entire team, matched Holloway in g/60 and iHDSC/60, and all this with Sunny and Joseph as his most often linemates. He had a sparkling xGF% in limited time with either Holloway or Thomas (Both above 63% xGF%, and didn't overlap with both at the same time), so playing him with better players didn't sewer anyone. On a per/60 basis, he was one of the top 5 highest scoring rookies, and scored goals at a better rate then anyone other then Mitchkov. I think we really underutilized him most of this season to our detriment, and I hope that next year Monty gives him more of an opportunity.
His playoffs was also a bit of a mixed bag. He took a couple of dumb, DUMB penalties early in the series, letting his emotions get the better of him and retaliating in stupid spots. He also looked a bit out of sorts in the first few games 5v5. However, as the series went on, he improved dramatically. He drew two penalties while instigating, instead of retaliating, and in game 6 he had a .6 xGF with a zero! xGA (For an xGF% of 100%!!!). In game 7 he had a xGF of .57 and an xGA of .28, for an xGF% of 67.21, third best on the team. Again, all this with Sunny and Joseph as his linemates.
If I have one thing that I'd like to see him work on this off-season, it's getting more comfortable with the puck on his stick. There were a lot of times this season where he looked a bit lost in transition, or if he got the puck somewhat outside our regular structure. We need more play drivers on this team, and I'd love to see him develop into one. Then again, if he turns into a 40 goal guy I won't really f***ing care lol.
Jimmy Snuggerud - We had only a limited viewing of Snuggy, but I was extremely impressed by what I saw. I'm still in shock that anyone was questioning his skating at this point - it looked completely fine to me, if anything he already looks like one of our better skaters. His shot is as advertised. That whistler he sent over Helly's blocker was all world. His passing was also NHL caliber, and he seemed to find some chemistry with Neighbors in the little time they played together, especially in transition. Clearly, he has defensive deficencies, and is in real need of gaining some muscle/strength. I'm very excited to see this kid next season, I think the sky is the limit for him. He looks every bit the guy who could potentially become a multi-faceted gamebreaking offensive player.
Dalibor Dvorsky - We only saw two games from Dalibor this season, but that's OK, b/c he is clearly not ready. His skating is a real concern, he looks like a baby fawn trying to walk for the first time (Yes I'm stealing that line again). His puck skills, IQ, and shot will play at this level I think, but man he needs to get his skating figured out pronto.
Ok in an effort to not make this post any longer then it's already becoming, I'm going to lump all the other bottom 6 guys together and simply say, WTF was solid, Sunny is pretty cooked, and Joseph I think was better then most believed but made braindead plays at the worst time. In a perfect world, we bring back Faksa for less and move Sunny to wing on the 4th line or the pressbox, with Joseph and Tex fighting for the 14th forward spot. On to the Defense.
Philip Broberg - I'm still a bit in awe of his play this year. I mean I know I said it with Holloway, but I feel it bears repeating here - did ANYONE see this coming? This is a guy that had played 81 games over three seasons and had averaged less then 13 minutes a game. He comes here, plays 20:30 a game over 68 games and might be one of the top 5-10 best defensive defenseman on the season, all while chipping in almost 30 points. I am about as high on him as I have been on a Blues defenseman in the last 10-15 years. His skating is absurd, his positioning and stick work is fairly advanced from a guy with only 81 NHL games to his name prior to this year - and his offense looks like it's only a matter of time. He's already a solid #2, and if he can find another level offensively, he's going to come a bona-fide top 10 guy. Thanks again Edmonton, you f***ing losers.
Colton Parayko - Had a great season. Really can't argue that. But he's not the guy who can be the #1D and lead us to playoff success. He simply cannot transition the puck up the ice with consistency against a reasonable forecheck. Good news is, now he doesn't have to be, with Broberg and Fowler here. I still think he sucks on the PK, and I could go down that road a bit more (I already mentioned it a bit earlier up) but I'm running out of steam on this and kinda just want to finish lol. I'm sure someone will tell me I'm stupid and after I get some sleep I'll bust out all the stats on why he blows, but until then, just trust me bro
Glad he's a Blue, but I always feel like I'm wanting more from the guy.
Justin Faulk - I think he's been beat up enough on these boards over the last couple of days, so I'm not going to pile on too much. Suffice to say he's clearly the weak link in our top 4. I think he'd be fine down on the third pair and on the PP2, but we need to find a guy to take his place in the top 4. The good news is that with Broberg's ascension, we could look for a guy with a slanted tool kit instead of a well rounded tool kit - what I mean by that is, I think we could get a mainly offensive guy to play in the top 4 (Think Shatty or like Ghost) and let Broberg cover for those deficiencies - or we could get a really solid defensive guy and hope that Broberg throws off the reins and goes bonkers on offense. I think we tried to kinda split the difference with Faulk, and he's just not capable of it anymore.
Leddy, Suter, and Tucker - I think Suter had a solid season, but for the second or maybe third year in a row, he couldn't handle the speed as the intensity ramps up in the playoffs. We should look at him as defensive depth, not a regular moving forward. Leddy is straight up cooked, he looks like he can barely skate anymore. Get rid of him for anything you possibly can. Tucker is fine, getting a 7th rounder to play NHL games at all is cool. I think we really need to rebuild the entire third pair though.
Joel Hofer - I think Hofer had a solid season. Goaltending is voodoo, and he's good enough as a backup for now.
Another potential is Marner. Now I know it's a pipe dream, but IF we could get Marner to sign here, that would make me feel a lot more comfortable about using Kyrou as trade bait. We sign Marner then trade Kyrou for Larkin or one of the Seattle Centers? What about for a stud young RHD? I think the targets are well established by now - Dobson, Nemec, Clarke, Morrow, and Willander are the usual suspects. I wouldn't trade Kyrou straight up for any of them, but they could be the centerpieces of the deal.
Finally, with the cap going up, we are in a position to offer one of the UFA Centers a big AAV, short(er) term deal. Would Tavares come here for a 2 year 10-12M AAV contract? How about Duchene? I want to stay far away from Bennett. I think unless we can upgrade on Schenn at both 2C AND 3C though, it would probably behoove us to split up Holloway and Kyrou. I am operating under the assumption that Dvo is not ready next year, which I think is fair, unless his skating takes a massive jump (Unlikely) We could run:
Buch-Thomas-Kyrou
Neighbors-Tavares-Snuggy
Holloway-Schenn-Bolduc
Toro-Faksa-Sunny/Walker
Joseph
I really really don't want to see a Neighbors-Schenn-Snuggy/Bolduc line, that line will struggle to generate AND defend. I don't think Snuggy is ready for top line deployment, as we use Thomas too much as a matchup. I think Bolduc slots well into that spot, but it seems that Monty disagrees, and until I see otherwise, I'll operate under the assumption it won't happen. Bolduc had success with Holloway and Sunny, so I'm guessing Schenn can fill that role reasonably well. If I had my druthers though, I think I'd setup our lines like this:
Buch-Thomas-Bolduc
Holloway-Schenn-Kyrou
Neighbors-Tavares-Snuggy
Anyway, I think I've been writing this for going on like 5 hours now, and I need to pass out. Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk, and as always, Flame On
Ownership
As I said, I like to start at the top. I think Tom Stillman is one of the best owners in sports overall, and I like to take a minute to tip my cap to him. This man has brought us our only Cup, and he clearly believes the Blues are a civic treasure. He has never, ever, once wavered in his willingness to invest in this franchise, even during down periods. Other owners might have scoffed at paying guys like Holloway and Broberg above market rates during a re-whatever, and he didn't blink. We are all lucky to have this man.
GM
Huh that's weird. You guys hear that? Nope? Yea, that's because the Fire Armstrong crowd has been awwwwwful quiet recently. As well they should be - after fleecing Edmonton out of two now-core players in Holloway and Broberg, bringing in a guy who played like a true Franchise D for peanuts in Fowler, and hiring one of the best coaches in the NHL, along with showing that our amateur scouting team is still as strong as ever with the recent success of Bolduc, Snuggy, Tucker, and a plethora of prospects at the WJC/AHL, Doug Armstrong is reminding everyone that he still has plenty of zip on his fastball. I think this off-season has the potential to have massive ramifications for the future of this franchise. We have cap space, we have attractive assets, and we have fairly defined needs. We laid a lot of potential trade groundwork in the lead up to the Deadline as we weren't sure which direction the club was going to go. The UFA class actually has some interesting players for the first time in forever, and a lot of other teams that sync up well with our needs are facing crossroads, such as LA, Seattle, and both New York clubs. I'm excited and hopeful that Armstrong has one or two more rabbits to pull and really set us up for the next decade of thrilling, successful Blues' hockey, then riding off into the sunset Indiana Jones style (Yes I know he's staying as President, but allow me the metaphor).
Coach
While there are some nits I'd pick about player usage and man down situations, in the big picture, Jim Montgomery was nothing short of a revelation this season. After two years of abysmal 5v5 play under two different head coaches, where we ranked in the bottom 5-7 in almost every relevant category, (And more importantly, putting me to f***ing sleep) Montgomery walked in and took us into the top half of the league in GF%, xGF%, and HDCF%. Under Monty we had the second best GF%, with only the Jets ahead of us. We had the 3rd highest GF/60 and the 4th best GA/60 under Montgomery. Our Powerplay went from 16.7% (25th in the league) under Bannister to 23.8% (12th) under Montgomery. The one area we struggled, our Achillies Heel if you would, was man down situations.
There was a pretty long stretch there under Monty (About 41 games from his hire until Parayko's injury) where we had legitimately the worst PK in the history of the NHL (67.4%, record is 68.2%). Funny enough our PK went from "Worst PK in NHL history" to the best PK in the league (88.2%) over the 17 games that Parayko missed (As an author, Memento will have to give us all a refresher, but I believe this is called Foreshadowing). Then there's the obvious 6v5 issue that was present through much of the regular season, as well as the backbreakers in G7 of the playoffs. According to Army today, we were the only team to give up more 6v5 goals against then score. Yikes. I attribute a lot of this to Monty shortening his bench far too much far too quickly and gassing out our players. I'll get into this more as we move into the player sections, but according to basically every public model available, of lines that played at least 150 5v5 minutes, the Joseph-Sunny-Bolduc line had the best xGA/60 on the entire team, coming in 11th overall in the NHL and sandwiched between the Verhaeghe-Barkov-Reinhart line (For those of you playing at home, that's the line with two Selke finalists on it) and the Jarvis-Aho-Blake line. Now obviously those lines probably had tougher deployment, but it's not like JSB were a bunch of slouches defensively. How many shifts did that line have together after the 15 minute mark in the third period of Game 7? Zero. Bolduc didn't see the ice at all after the 15 minute mark, Joseph got two shifts, and Sunny was basically out there as a backup faceoff guy before rushing to get off the ice. Monty needs to trust his players more, and stop relying on the WTF line (Which, funny enough, was our second WORST regular line in terms of xGA/60.) I also think a lot of this is due to the style Monty coaches, which is far too conservative for my taste in 6v5 situations. I'd rather we pressure teams way harder and smash the dagger in vs. sit back and hope nothing gets through. I was heartened to hear Armstrong put an emphasis on it in the presser today, as Monty needs to fix this if we want to go further in the playoffs. Still super pumped about his hire though, and believe he's the right guy to lead us to the promised land.
Forwards
Robert Thomas - Easily our best player and franchise pillar. The center beam that holds up the house as some posters used to call AP. I'm not sure if he's a top 10 C in the league, but he's -right- outside it if not. When accounting for his production and contract, there's almost no one in the league I'd move him for. We should feel very comfortable putting him down for 25 goals, 60 assists, and stellar defensive play for the next 5-7 years, with the potential for even more if one of our better shooters like Snuggy or Bolduc find chemistry with him. I think he had a bit of a rough playoffs, but this was his first time as "The guy," and all things considered he showed well. We can 100% build a Cup contender around him. Bonus fun fact - From Nov. 24th (The day we hired Monty) until the end of the season, of players who had at least 100 minutes 5v5, Thomas had the 3rd best p/60 5v5 in the entire league. Better then McDavid, Mackinnon, Drai, and Kucherov. He's a f***ing gem.
Jordan Kyrou - The second best offensive player on this team. 35 goals/35 assists is his floor moving forward and might only get higher as we put more talent around him. Made incredible strides defensively this year and found chemistry with Holloway. He's top 25 in goal scoring over the last three years, scoring two less the Kyle Conner and seven less the Kucherov. He's top 50 in points, with his most frequent linemate the corpse of Brayden Schenn. He was by far our best 5v5 g/60 at 1.45 - next best was Holloway at 1.12, a fairly massive dropoff. He had a rough playoffs from a production perspective, but he did lead the team in SC and HDSC. This was also his first time in the playoffs as "The guy," and while I wouldn't say he acquitted himself as well as Thomas, I would also say this - the Jets were probably the worst matchup for Kyrou in the entire league, sans maybe the Panthers. I know that might not mean much to some, but I've watched almost every playoff game of every series up to this point, and I cannot begin to describe how less physical every other series was compared to ours. Had we played any other Western Conference team, I think we'd be having a much different conversation around Kyrou right now. He needs to up his battle level because we will eventually have to beat a team like the Jets if we want to win a Cup, but I believe he can do it.
I know there's a lot of chatter around trading him, especially before his NTC kicks in. I am not completely opposed to trading him, especially if we could replace him with Marner (Which I think is a pipe dream). If we are trading Kyrou, it's gotta be for a Center or RHD that's in our core age group, locked up long term, and is a top player at his position. Basically guys like Larkin, Fox, or McAvoy. I'm not interested in a project or a prospect if we're moving on from Kyrou. And abso-f***ing-loutly no to Brady. There's no reason to trade our best chip for a slight upgrade with a much worse contract. Kyrou's contract is going to age very well and the flexibility it provides will pay dividends down the road.
Dylan Holloway - Were you guys expecting that? Because I was NOT expecting that. Ho-ly. Offensively gifted with a non-stop motor. If we're drawing comparisons to our Cup team, Thomas is our new ROR, Kyrou is our new Tarasenko, and Holloway is 100% our new Schwartz, and maybe a better one to boot. (We can quibble about how those comparisons really match up, but I think they all fit those roles pretty well) He lead the team in xGF%, HDCF%, and was second in GF% and p/60 at 5v5. He was a PPG player under Montgomery, and it's an absolute shame he didn't get to play in these playoffs at all. I could write another five paragraphs on how fun it was to watch this kid play, and I am so happy we stole him from Edmonton, a franchise I do not respect at all.
Pavel Buchnevich - The reports of his demise were greatly exaggerated. After moving back to winger full time, Buch was pacing for a 23 goal, 67 point season, with a positive xGF% at 5v5 while drawing some of the hardest defensive assignments in the entire league. He plays in all situations, works well with Thomas (He creates so much space for Thomas to operate), and is a solid all around top 6 option. I wouldn't have been mad if we had traded him to say Vancouver for Willander+ last year, but that ship has sailed. I think he's going to be plenty good for the next 2-3 years, and should gracefully age into a middle six role as guys like Neighbors, Bolduc, Snuggy, and Stenberg hopefully move up. I'd have liked to see more production from him during the playoffs, but frankly, Snuggy/whomever we had with Buch/Thomas wasn't really ready for a top line role at the moment. The Buch-Thomas-Kyrou line was actually outstanding from an xGF% perspective in G7, but it was too little too late at that point.
Brayden Schenn - Schenn had a nice bounce back year numbers wise, but was buoyed by playing with our two best wingers for most of the season. His xGF% with Kyrou and Holloway was over 55%, but without those two guys, it plummeted to under 38%.......big yikes. I think everyone on here knows that he needs to get pushed down the lineup, at least to 3C, and imo, all the way down to 4C if we can manage it. I know that it's a tough nut to find two top/middle 6 Centers, but I really don't think Schenn is even capable of 3C play without dynamic talent on his wings, and unless we're willing to balance the lines a bit by breaking up Kyrou and Holloway, I just don't see how it can work. Without breaking those two up, our most likely 3W's are some combo of Neighbors, Bolduc, and Snuggerud. None of those guys really excel with the puck on their stick at this point of their development, and Neighbors and Snuggy are currently our two worst defensive wingers, with Schenn grading out as our worst defensive Center. As I said earlier, our third line of Joseph-Sunny-Bolduc was one of the best overall defensive lines in the league this year - to go from that to Neighbors-Schenn-Snuggy looks pretty painful. I think we can tread water for a bit early on, but we need to push Schenn down to the Steen role ASAP if we have any real hope of success in the playoffs.
Jake Neighbors - After a breakout campaign last season, I was excited to see Neighbors come into this season and show some improvement in at least one aspect of his game. For the first 50-55 games, I was very underwhelmed. He hadn't seemed to really grow his game in any meaningful way over the summer - footspeed, puck skills, shot, defensive acumen, etc. He was easily the player I least wanted to see leading an odd-man rush, especially a 3 on 2, as he would continually look lost upon zone entry and generally make a bad pass to no one in particular or to the opposing team. Lucky, development isn't linear, and in the last 20-25 games or so, he really started to turn a corner. His passing became much better, his puck decisions became much better, and he showed that he could potentially become a 25/25 type guy.
I think his playoffs was a bit of a mixed bag, but still fairly positive for a kid getting his first taste of NHL playoff action. He made some soft plays in the D-zone that hurt us, and he took some undisciplined penalties that I would mark down as youthful exuberance. He also needs to learn to get to the net front faster in the playoffs, as there were multiple times that some loose change dropped in front of the crease and he wasn't close/fast enough to cash in. If I have one wish for him this off-season, it's to continue to improve on the defensive side of the puck. I'd love it if we could turn him into a PKer at some point, as Joseph and Sunny are probably not every night starters moving forward and we need someone to replace them on the PK. I'm not sure what his true ceiling is, but if his floor is a 20/20 guy, that's pretty solid.
Zach Bolduc - If anyone has paid attention to these boards over the last couple of months, then you know I'm a massive Zach Bolduc truther. He's got a good frame, he skates well, and has a cannon for a shot. He has no issue getting greasy and laid some of the biggest f***ing hits of the season. He's also pretty defensively responsible, with the second best xGA/60 on the entire team, while not getting sheltered much at all with a Ozone faceoff rate just above 50%. I have really no idea what Monty was doing with this kid. I know he was a rookie, but he had the second best xGF% on the entire team, matched Holloway in g/60 and iHDSC/60, and all this with Sunny and Joseph as his most often linemates. He had a sparkling xGF% in limited time with either Holloway or Thomas (Both above 63% xGF%, and didn't overlap with both at the same time), so playing him with better players didn't sewer anyone. On a per/60 basis, he was one of the top 5 highest scoring rookies, and scored goals at a better rate then anyone other then Mitchkov. I think we really underutilized him most of this season to our detriment, and I hope that next year Monty gives him more of an opportunity.
His playoffs was also a bit of a mixed bag. He took a couple of dumb, DUMB penalties early in the series, letting his emotions get the better of him and retaliating in stupid spots. He also looked a bit out of sorts in the first few games 5v5. However, as the series went on, he improved dramatically. He drew two penalties while instigating, instead of retaliating, and in game 6 he had a .6 xGF with a zero! xGA (For an xGF% of 100%!!!). In game 7 he had a xGF of .57 and an xGA of .28, for an xGF% of 67.21, third best on the team. Again, all this with Sunny and Joseph as his linemates.
If I have one thing that I'd like to see him work on this off-season, it's getting more comfortable with the puck on his stick. There were a lot of times this season where he looked a bit lost in transition, or if he got the puck somewhat outside our regular structure. We need more play drivers on this team, and I'd love to see him develop into one. Then again, if he turns into a 40 goal guy I won't really f***ing care lol.
Jimmy Snuggerud - We had only a limited viewing of Snuggy, but I was extremely impressed by what I saw. I'm still in shock that anyone was questioning his skating at this point - it looked completely fine to me, if anything he already looks like one of our better skaters. His shot is as advertised. That whistler he sent over Helly's blocker was all world. His passing was also NHL caliber, and he seemed to find some chemistry with Neighbors in the little time they played together, especially in transition. Clearly, he has defensive deficencies, and is in real need of gaining some muscle/strength. I'm very excited to see this kid next season, I think the sky is the limit for him. He looks every bit the guy who could potentially become a multi-faceted gamebreaking offensive player.
Dalibor Dvorsky - We only saw two games from Dalibor this season, but that's OK, b/c he is clearly not ready. His skating is a real concern, he looks like a baby fawn trying to walk for the first time (Yes I'm stealing that line again). His puck skills, IQ, and shot will play at this level I think, but man he needs to get his skating figured out pronto.
Ok in an effort to not make this post any longer then it's already becoming, I'm going to lump all the other bottom 6 guys together and simply say, WTF was solid, Sunny is pretty cooked, and Joseph I think was better then most believed but made braindead plays at the worst time. In a perfect world, we bring back Faksa for less and move Sunny to wing on the 4th line or the pressbox, with Joseph and Tex fighting for the 14th forward spot. On to the Defense.
Defenseman
Cam Fowler - Hey does anyone else have a slightly used defenseman they'd like to trade us for nothing that will suddenly turn into a top 10 caliber guy? Cuz that would be super. Wow and I mean WOW did Fowler have an exceptional season once he got here. He scored at a 58 point pace, had the lowest xGA/60 of all D-men on our roster, all while playing against the toughest matchups and getting an Ozone faceoff rate of under 45%. Then he went on and scored 10 points in 7 playoff games and was the highest xGF% of any player on our roster. Take a bow sir, you played out of this world for us this season.
Philip Broberg - I'm still a bit in awe of his play this year. I mean I know I said it with Holloway, but I feel it bears repeating here - did ANYONE see this coming? This is a guy that had played 81 games over three seasons and had averaged less then 13 minutes a game. He comes here, plays 20:30 a game over 68 games and might be one of the top 5-10 best defensive defenseman on the season, all while chipping in almost 30 points. I am about as high on him as I have been on a Blues defenseman in the last 10-15 years. His skating is absurd, his positioning and stick work is fairly advanced from a guy with only 81 NHL games to his name prior to this year - and his offense looks like it's only a matter of time. He's already a solid #2, and if he can find another level offensively, he's going to come a bona-fide top 10 guy. Thanks again Edmonton, you f***ing losers.
Colton Parayko - Had a great season. Really can't argue that. But he's not the guy who can be the #1D and lead us to playoff success. He simply cannot transition the puck up the ice with consistency against a reasonable forecheck. Good news is, now he doesn't have to be, with Broberg and Fowler here. I still think he sucks on the PK, and I could go down that road a bit more (I already mentioned it a bit earlier up) but I'm running out of steam on this and kinda just want to finish lol. I'm sure someone will tell me I'm stupid and after I get some sleep I'll bust out all the stats on why he blows, but until then, just trust me bro

Justin Faulk - I think he's been beat up enough on these boards over the last couple of days, so I'm not going to pile on too much. Suffice to say he's clearly the weak link in our top 4. I think he'd be fine down on the third pair and on the PP2, but we need to find a guy to take his place in the top 4. The good news is that with Broberg's ascension, we could look for a guy with a slanted tool kit instead of a well rounded tool kit - what I mean by that is, I think we could get a mainly offensive guy to play in the top 4 (Think Shatty or like Ghost) and let Broberg cover for those deficiencies - or we could get a really solid defensive guy and hope that Broberg throws off the reins and goes bonkers on offense. I think we tried to kinda split the difference with Faulk, and he's just not capable of it anymore.
Leddy, Suter, and Tucker - I think Suter had a solid season, but for the second or maybe third year in a row, he couldn't handle the speed as the intensity ramps up in the playoffs. We should look at him as defensive depth, not a regular moving forward. Leddy is straight up cooked, he looks like he can barely skate anymore. Get rid of him for anything you possibly can. Tucker is fine, getting a 7th rounder to play NHL games at all is cool. I think we really need to rebuild the entire third pair though.
Goaltending
Jordan Binnington - Glad to see Binner get his flowers at the 4 Nations. He's been an absolute beaut for us over the last 6-7 years. He didn't have the best regular season, especially compared to last year but he did enough to get us in and give us every chance to win. He deserved a better outcome in that Game 7.
Joel Hofer - I think Hofer had a solid season. Goaltending is voodoo, and he's good enough as a backup for now.
Summary
Overall this was a very positive year for the franchise. We incorporated a lot of young, new players, gave them bigger roles then before, and watched them mostly succeed. We had a franchise long winning streak, and we 100% should have beat the President's Trophy winners. Moving forward, I think there are a lot of directions we could go. We clearly need a 2C, and maybe even a 3C. While I'd like to upgrade on Faulk, I think Center(s) is the bigger priority. We cannot go into next season with Sunny as a full time regular, especially down the middle. I think one team we should reach out to is Seattle. They have three Centers already in Beniers, Wright, and Catton, and there's a good chance they will be in a position to draft another at #8 this year. We have a plethora of wingers and D prospects - could we work something out?
Another potential is Marner. Now I know it's a pipe dream, but IF we could get Marner to sign here, that would make me feel a lot more comfortable about using Kyrou as trade bait. We sign Marner then trade Kyrou for Larkin or one of the Seattle Centers? What about for a stud young RHD? I think the targets are well established by now - Dobson, Nemec, Clarke, Morrow, and Willander are the usual suspects. I wouldn't trade Kyrou straight up for any of them, but they could be the centerpieces of the deal.
Finally, with the cap going up, we are in a position to offer one of the UFA Centers a big AAV, short(er) term deal. Would Tavares come here for a 2 year 10-12M AAV contract? How about Duchene? I want to stay far away from Bennett. I think unless we can upgrade on Schenn at both 2C AND 3C though, it would probably behoove us to split up Holloway and Kyrou. I am operating under the assumption that Dvo is not ready next year, which I think is fair, unless his skating takes a massive jump (Unlikely) We could run:
Buch-Thomas-Kyrou
Neighbors-Tavares-Snuggy
Holloway-Schenn-Bolduc
Toro-Faksa-Sunny/Walker
Joseph
I really really don't want to see a Neighbors-Schenn-Snuggy/Bolduc line, that line will struggle to generate AND defend. I don't think Snuggy is ready for top line deployment, as we use Thomas too much as a matchup. I think Bolduc slots well into that spot, but it seems that Monty disagrees, and until I see otherwise, I'll operate under the assumption it won't happen. Bolduc had success with Holloway and Sunny, so I'm guessing Schenn can fill that role reasonably well. If I had my druthers though, I think I'd setup our lines like this:
Buch-Thomas-Bolduc
Holloway-Schenn-Kyrou
Neighbors-Tavares-Snuggy
Anyway, I think I've been writing this for going on like 5 hours now, and I need to pass out. Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk, and as always, Flame On
