Xspyrit
DJ Dorion
Brannstrom was one of the top d-prospects available in that 2017 draft, and teams obviously knew all about his size issues. I mean he's always been listed at 5'10" and 185. The figuring was that he could use his skating and finesse to overcome the size concerns.
But landing in Ottawa when he did was probably a disaster for his development. The version of the Sens under D.J. Smith and Pierre Dorion were a defensive nightmare. And because he was the key piece coming back for one of the most popular Senators, Mark Stone, it only made the hole deeper.
He may finally be in the exact role he should be in with Vancouver. He's playing limited minutes with a big, stay-at-home d-man who can absorb punishment and get him the puck with time and space.
It's all promising so far......and really cost the Canucks nothing but a fourth round draft pick which they'd already acquired for Podkolzin.
This is spot on. Look at my avatar and what is written below. DJ Dorion hockey was torture for hockey fans who know about the game. There is a LOT of talent on Ottawa but the rebuild has been wasted so far under their utter incompetence. DJ is a nice guy too and there's probably nothing wrong with him as an assistant but he's not a head coach. Dorion is an amateur scout. They ended up in these positions because Melnyk. Unfortunately, they were leading a rebuild so people shouldn't act surprised if it took much longer than expected and it's not even guaranteed that it will ever work out.
Actually, the Canucks may have really lucked out that Brannstrom wasn't claimed on waivers by somebody.
The reason Ottawa didn't qualify him as an RFA is that he was due a raise on a base salary of $2m a season. But he signed in Colorado as a UFA for only $900,000 a season.
It's hard to believe when the Canucks acquired him and then put him on waivers, that some bottom-feeding team wouldn't have claimed him. After all, he's still only 25 and is still an RFA heading into next season. And $900,000 is barely $150,000 over the league minimum.
So if the Canucks want to qualify him and bring him back next season, it's only going to cost them a 15 percent raise on his base salary this year. Still a bargain.
I mean where are you going to find a depth d-man with two full NHL seasons under his belt in Ottawa for a number barely above the league minimum?
Yeah was very surprised too, knowing how big on advanced stats some teams are. Of course, most teams have a lot of players at the beginning of the season and several prospects knocking on the door but it also tells me that one of the major traits they look in a D-man is size
I wouldn't waste his ice time on that when he is much more productive in other situations.
Brannstrom is not particularly great on special teams but he is quite efficient at ES. If you look at ES production the last 2 years, only 99 D-men have had more ESP. Brett Pesce had 1 more ESP than him, for example. It means on average that only 3 D-men per team have outscored Brannstrom at ES, pretty decent for a 3rd pairing guy