I'm seeing mixed reviews on Dean. After being at both games, I side with the cautious viewpoint. I don't see a player who is developing to be anything other than a JAG at this point. He could be a 4th liner, but he's not particularly big or fast. He's not afraid to try to be physical but he's not very explosive. His offensive game was not noteworthy in either game. I'm not trying to slam him. I just don't see him fitting in with what DA is currently doing with the bottom 6. Yes, he does a lot of little things right, but because he's not particularly dynamic in any area ... he's just a guy at this point.
I don't disagree with the assessment of his toolbox and I won't be surprised if he ultimately winds up being 'just a guy.' However, I think there is still very much upside to be more than that.
I think it is still in the cards for Dean to become a better player than Oskar Sundqvist ever was (and I say that as a big fan of Sunny). He may fall short of that mark and he may fall well short of that mark. But I still see the him with a legit chance to be a 14+ minute a night NHL center and I definitely consider that to be more than just a guy. Generally speaking, 'pretty good at everything, but not great at anything' guys are long term projects who aren't busting down the NHL doors at 21 years old.
Sunny's first NHL game was in his D+4 season just a month before he turned 22. He played 18 games that year and then played 10 games the next year. He came to the Blues in advance of his D+6 season, where he got 42 games as a pure 4th liner. 2018/19 was his D+7 season and he established himself as a legit, jack-of-all trades bottom 6 guy.
Barby got here quicker and had more obvious offensive skill. He played his first NHL game shortly after turning 21 in the middle of his D+3 season. He played 30 NHL games that year and then 53 NHL games in his D+4 season. He stuck around full time in his D+5 season (as a bottom 6 guy on the Cup team), gave us 2 more cheap bottom 6 seasons, and then 1.5 dirt cheap middle-to-top 6 seasons before being traded as a rental for...Zach Dean. Vegas won a Cup with him riding shotgun to Jack Eichel (and middle 6 minutes) and then promptly paid him like a 2nd line caliber guy.
To compare, Dean played his first NHL game shortly after turning 21 in his D+3 season. He played 9 garbage time games for a mediocre team and while he didn't look like a fish out of water, he was kind of just there.
I think Dean's upside falls somewhere in the middle of these two guys. He's already better at the dot than either and I think he is better defensively than either of them were early in their careers. I think that Dean is better suited to play center long term than Sunny or Barby. However, Sunny is noticeably bigger. Barby's shot and offensive instincts were noticeably better at this stage of development.
I don't see 2C upside. I don't see him as a guy who can change/define your franchise and he very well might not have his best success in the NHL for us. However, I could very much see him being the kind of guy that takes 4-6 years post-draft to get ready to contribute in the NHL, but then gives you 4+ cost controlled years where he is giving you quality play on your 3rd and 4th lines. That's definitely more than 'just a guy' status and those cost-controlled years would come right when we're hoping to be in a contention window. There is real value there and I do believe such a guy fits into the front office's plan for the bottom 6 through the mid/late 2020s. I'd move him in the right deal if another team really likes him, but realistically his value to the franchise is to be developed as a Swiss Army Knife bottom 6 center. Army loves those guys and I'd wager Steen does too.