Draft Round 1 #23: New York Rangers Select RW Gabriel Perreault (Boston College, NCAA)

JCProdigy

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Not sure why. He’s not a bad skater by any means.
At the college level he's adequate. It's the one thing that I'm personally most concerned with when he makes the jump. Can he keep up with the pace of play and will he be effective in the realm of guys like Panarin and Fox when he slows the game down. We just won't know until he makes the jump.
 

SnowblindNYR

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Even if the NYR needed forwards, I believe it would be a horrible idea to rush him. I personally don't think introducing him to the NHL with playoff hockey being his first game action (with no camp) would be putting the top prospect in the best position to succeed.

We did it with Kreider though. I know he was a freak physically so maybe it's different.
 

Amazing Kreiderman

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Never say never, but it's highly unlikely. For one it's a lot to ask of anyone and secondly, as you said, there likely won't be a spot for him.

But ELC slated to start next year and AHL PTO? Yeah 100%

If he truly is up to 178 lbs then he should have little trouble getting to 180+ by the start of camp next year which is basically the baseline I wanted him to hit before making the jump to pro hockey.

The only way I see him signing an ELC that kicks in right away is if he and his agent fight for it. But even then I don't see him playing much.

If that's the case, his ELC would only be 2 years and expire in 2027, but he would be a group 10.2(c) RFA, which means he isn't eligible to sign an offer sheet. Could be beneficial.

We did it with Kreider though. I know he was a freak physically so maybe it's different.

He was also a year older. And joining a team that needed help on offence. Perreault doesn't really bring anything this team needs. Their top-9 is set.
 

Mike in Houston

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The only way I see him signing an ELC that kicks in right away is if he and his agent fight for it. But even then I don't see him playing much.

If that's the case, his ELC would only be 2 years and expire in 2027, but he would be a group 10.2(c) RFA, which means he isn't eligible to sign an offer sheet. Could be beneficial.



He was also a year older. And joining a team that needed help on offence. Perreault doesn't really bring anything this team needs. Their top-9 is set.

And Hagelin had just got suspended for his elbow on Alfredsson.
 

Amazing Kreiderman

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And Hagelin had just got suspended for his elbow on Alfredsson.

Yes! I forgot to include that. The stars aligned for Kreider to simply step in.

But Perreault at the moment will have a hard time adjusting to the NHL, especially in the play-offs. He's small and not the fastest skater. Let him marinate a bit in the AHL.
 

egelband

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Even if the NYR needed forwards, I believe it would be a horrible idea to rush him. I personally don't think introducing him to the NHL with playoff hockey being his first game action (with no camp) would be putting the top prospect in the best position to succeed.
Good point. When Kreider did it he was man-size and I imagine he was pretty familiar with physical play.
 
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Machinehead

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Still can't believe this kid fell in our laps at draft night...what the hell were other teams scouts doing.evidently not their job
The top 5-10 is usually pretty clean. Once you get into the mid first round, a lot of teams start outsmarting themselves.

Perreault was the BPA for like nine picks, but everyone has to reinvent the wheel for the fantasy of finding something nobody else saw.

The Rangers were the poster boys for doing that and it was refreshing to see us just click the name at the top of the list for once.
 

eco's bones

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Perreault's not the fastest of skaters but he's got really good edges/maneuverability and outstanding hockey IQ. I don't see Gabriel pushing any of our top 9 out come this year's playoffs but I do think he could be in our top 9 by 25-26. The most obvious guy he could replace is Reilly Smith who is only signed for this year and will be 34 next year. He's a better prospect and at least as ready now if not more ready than Othmann or Berard IMO.

His addition into our top 9 next year also would make it much easier for us to absorb Igor's new contract. I'm thinking he's not going to need much AHL time if any at all. If you compare him to someone like Derek Stepan who came straight out of college to the NHL and like Perreault with some skating issues---Perreault is just a better and higher IQ player and Stepan had a really good first year for us.
 

GAGLine

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He had success in Buffalo his last 2 years there, but they didn't want to pay him.

He got less ice time last year (both EV and PP) with Colorado than he did Buffalo. He's getting the ice time this year because of injuries and is doing well. Good on him, but it's a small sample size. It's too early to say that they made a mistake.
 

JCProdigy

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Good point. When Kreider did it he was man-size and I imagine he was pretty familiar with physical play.
...and have to remember back then, Torts probably told him to just keep his game simple. Use speed, North/South. Disrupt along boards with size. Torts also said that while he played great at times, he was still god-awful on the d-side in those playoffs.

I just don't think the introduction of Gabe and the type of player he is, into the NHL with the intensity and speed of the playoffs is best for him/the team.

Even if there were injury(s) to the top nine. I mean, what do we actually think his inclusion would accomplish? That he would come in and send us to the promised land? If the NYR aren't winning a Stanley Cup with their current forward group, I just don't see them winning it by removing one of the wings and replacing with a rookie Perreault playing in his first ever games.
 

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...and have to remember back then, Torts probably told him to just keep his game simple. Use speed, North/South. Disrupt along boards with size. Torts also said that while he played great at times, he was still god-awful on the d-side in those playoffs.

I just don't think the introduction of Gabe and the type of player he is, into the NHL with the intensity and speed of the playoffs is best for him/the team.

Even if there were injury(s) to the top nine. I mean, what do we actually think his inclusion would accomplish? That he would come in and send us to the promised land? If the NYR aren't winning a Stanley Cup with their current forward group, I just don't see them winning it by removing one of the wings and replacing with a rookie Perreault playing in his first ever games.

Intensity is true but the game does not speed up in the playoffs, it slows down considerably. Being able to create in tight spaces becomes so important and thats actually something he does very, very, very well. Colorado and the Oilers last year are the only teams that play a high octane system that have made the finals in the last decade (MacK and McDavid also help, ha) but slower, more methodical teams that find a way to create offense through pressure are the ones that normally win (your Florida/Vegas/Tampa x2/ St Louis, etc.)

This doesn't mean that he will be able to continue to do this at the NHL level off the jump or that its even a good idea (I'd rather not waste the ELC year, especially given what this roster is and their need for help in other areas to be a serious contender) but I wouldn't write him off just because he isn't a burner.
 
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JCProdigy

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Intensity is true but the game does not speed up in the playoffs, it slows down considerably. Being able to create in tight spaces becomes so important and thats actually something he does very, very, very well. Colorado and the Oilers last year are the only teams that play a high octane system that have made the finals in the last decade (MacK and McDavid also help, ha) but slower, more methodical teams that find a way to create offense through pressure are the ones that normally win (your Florida/Vegas/Tampa x2/ St Louis, etc.)

This doesn't mean that he will be able to continue to do this at the NHL level off the jump or that its even a good idea (I'd rather not waste the ELC year, especially given what this roster is and their need for help in other areas to be a serious contender) but I wouldn't write him off just because he isn't a burner.
We're in a agreement and I should clarify, It's not about being a burner as in straight away speed ala Kreider. It's about processing speed in those tight spaces in combo with his slight frame. There's just even less space/time there. Yes, he's doing it easily at the college level and his hockey sense/IQ is his strength but as we've even seen with the struggles of Panarin and Fox at times, the POs is the pinnacle of testing that and I'd rather not have him introduced to that big of a jump for practically no benefit to him or the org.
 

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