Jake Gardiner played more minutes than any other Leafs player and then Jake Gardiner was a healthy scratch. The next game, Jake Gardiner played more minutes than any other Leafs player.
If you're not a Leafs fan then this may seem crazy but if you *are* a Leafs fan then you know it's just another day in Toronto.
You see, this is the franchise that continues to trot out Mark Fraser on defense rather than JM Liles, some nights Morgan Rielly and yes, some nights, Jake Gardiner. It's also the franchise that continues to smash its metaphorical head against the metaphorical wall -- 'our feelings' being the head in this metaphor and 'Tyler Bozak on the first line' being the wall.
We start Bernier more than Reimer, we pay big money for Clarkson and Bozak while buying out Grabovski and watching MacArthur walk, and did I mention we keep skating Bozak on the first line?
The decisions that this organization has made since Randy Carlyle took over as coach are mind-numbing. I'm sure that there are those of you who'll say, "who could have predicted x or y," and to you people I say, "everyone, basically."
Rumours have been flying for the past few weeks that the Leafs are looking to bolster their defense. Also, they plan on trading Gardiner for a top-6 forward. What? Normally, I'd say that it's just the Toronto media trying to sell copy but this came from Darren Dreger and if there's a bigger shill in sports over the last 18-months, I'm not aware of him or her. The Leafs are trying to do those things, bet on it, and Dreger is going to do everything in his power to oversell Toronto's assets and undersell whoever it is that Nonis may have his beady little eyes on.
Having said these things, it hasn't all been bad. The record is pretty good because the goalies have been great and one of those goalies (albeit the lesser of the two) was a Nonis acquisition. Also Bolland was a hell of a lot better than I'd expected him to be, if I'm being honest. But seriously, I have a hard time coming up with a more directionless team in the league. OK, maybe the Flyers.
So go on Twitter ( @bcphockeyblog ) and call me negative, ask me if I hate the Leafs, or tell me to watch a game instead of sticking my head in spreadsheet but do those things knowing that I don't like being negative about my team, and I'm this frustrated because I do love the Leafs, and that the chances are I probably watch more hockey more closely than you do (assuming you said those things in the first place, that is.)
The truth is, I'm fed up. We deserve better decision-making than what we've seen from Nonis and Carlyle so far. There's a limit to what any manager can achieve with the set of assets they're given but we've consistently mis-used the range of goods we have at our disposal, and that's something for which I can't abide. Enough is enough -- fire them both.
Monday, December 2, 2013
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Time On Ice: Guessing At Carlyle's Favourites
If you ask your average advanced stat guy what's the single best metric for judging a player's talent relative to the rest of his teammates, most will say time on ice. You see, contrary to popular belief, most of us don't think NHL coaches are stupid or can't judge talent or any of the things that we're often accused of. Sure, we point out perceived mistakes when we see them but that doesn't mean we think coaches are inept -- just fallible.
Randy Carlyle falls prey to these critiques more often than most. Part of it is because the Leafs do so poorly in a lot of the advanced stat metrics that proponents of the discipline have shown correlate very closely to success and the other part comes with the territory. Leafs fans, you see, are a critical and jaded bunch.
For a lot of last season, I found myself infuriated with Carlyle's player selection. In my view, Franson, Grabovski, and Kadri weren't getting nearly enough icetime while Bozak was getting far too much. Add to this the Jake Gardiner demotion and I had ample fodder for my critiques.
Given that three of these underused assets were young, I wondered if Carlyle had an anti-youth bias. Having given Carlyle the lockout shortened season to figure things out with this roster, I thought I'd have a look at who he's using to start this year and, crucially, in what situations to see if his own assessment of players is closer or further to my own this season.
Randy Carlyle falls prey to these critiques more often than most. Part of it is because the Leafs do so poorly in a lot of the advanced stat metrics that proponents of the discipline have shown correlate very closely to success and the other part comes with the territory. Leafs fans, you see, are a critical and jaded bunch.
For a lot of last season, I found myself infuriated with Carlyle's player selection. In my view, Franson, Grabovski, and Kadri weren't getting nearly enough icetime while Bozak was getting far too much. Add to this the Jake Gardiner demotion and I had ample fodder for my critiques.
Given that three of these underused assets were young, I wondered if Carlyle had an anti-youth bias. Having given Carlyle the lockout shortened season to figure things out with this roster, I thought I'd have a look at who he's using to start this year and, crucially, in what situations to see if his own assessment of players is closer or further to my own this season.
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Supply, Demand, and Toronto’s Defence
I wasted most of my University years taking Philosophy and
Science classes, meaning there wasn’t a ton of time left over to learn the
principles of economics.
However, the most basic of all economic theories, and the
one I have at least a rudimentary understanding of, is Supply and Demand. It plainly
states that the value, or price of a particular item, will vary depending on fluctuations
in both supply and demand.
For instance, if demand for a product skyrockets than there
is the potential for a shortage to occur. A shortage results in a higher price
point, since there is limited supply. Conversely, if the supply rises quickly
enough the item will enter into what is called a surplus. In this case there is
so much of an item available to everyone that its price decreases substantially.
Why am I boring you with economics terms you could have
looked up in Wikipedia yourself?
Well, I think there is something here that can be applied to
the Toronto Maple Leafs, specifically to the team’s defencemen.
Every season, especially around the trade deadline, I am inundated
with report after report echoing the importance of the vaunted “puck moving
defencemen”. The majority of TSN’s 12 hour trade deadline coverage will be
split screens of Dreger, Duthie and McKenzie checking in on the availability of
veteran puck moving blueliners around the league who could be that final piece of the puzzle.
All this brings us to the Maple Leafs, and the log jam that has
been created on defence. With Mark Fraser now close to fully recovered from a
knee injury the team will feature seven NHL caliber defencemen: Phaneuf,
Gunnarsson, Franson, Rielly, Fraser, Gardiner, and Ranger. You could say eight
if you include John-Michael Liles and his $3.8 million dollar contract currently
playing for the Marlies.
The term “puck moving” is a bit flexible and open to
interpretation. For the sake of argument let’s identify Phaneuf, Franson,
Rielly, and Gardiner as players that could be considered in that category.
Dion represents a much larger discussion and we’ll likely
devote more than a few blog posts to his future. As captain and an unrestricted
free agent at season’s end, Nonis will need to decide if he is worth upwards of
$7 million dollars over five plus years.
Cody Franson is coming off of a fantastic 2012-13 season in which
he finished with 29 points in 45 games. He’s off to another great start this
year with 8 assists through the first 11 games. In addition, because none of
the Leafs are ambidextrous (at least to my knowledge) he carries increased
value as a right handed shot. I have a hard time believing the Leafs would
consider moving him at this time.
Through process of elimination we are left with the two
youngsters, Morgan Rielly and Jake Gardiner. In a perfect world, one that sadly
doesn’t yet exist, both of these guys would be given a spot on the team and
Fraser and/or Ranger would spend time in the press box. But we know coach Randy
Carlyle is a strong supporter of Mark Fraser and he’ll skate in the team’s
third pairing most evenings.
At 19 and 23 years old I don’t think it is wise for the
development of either Morgan or Jake to be sitting and watching hockey games
every night. However, with the recent annoucnment that Rielly will
not be returned to his junior club we know that this is a strong
possibility. If their development is being put at risk then it behooves Nonis
to at least consider trading one of them to shore up a need elsewhere.
I know some rumors have been bantered about to send Gardiner
and Reimer to land a top six centermen. Personally, I just don’t see how the
math or value will work out. Reimer is a solid goalie but how many teams with a
top line centermen would be willing to send him away? Add to that the small cap
hit of Reimer and Gardiner combined and the salaries wouldn't align. Reimer
helps establish a depth in goal the Leafs haven’t had for half a decade; I’m
happy to have him for now, at least until there is a better understanding of
what Bernier is.
The scenario that does seem plausible and helps to solve an
organizational need is moving Gardiner for a top level center prospect. Outside
of Frederik Gauthier and Greg Mckegg the Leafs don’t have a ton of center
prospects in the pipeline. With all due respect to Gauthier and Mckegg, at this
moment neither player projects as a top six forward in the near future.
What kind of deal would make sense?
I look back to the Zack Kassian and Cody Hodgson deal as a
template Toronto could build around. Trading Gardiner to a team over indexed
with forward prospects, but in need of the ever popular puck moving defencemen.
This would help both teams address an area of weakness while also minimizing
cap issues that would subvert a larger move. I don’t necessarily want to get
into speculation on players to target since the list would be expansive. You
can review the center prospects of all teams on
Hockey Futures.
I absolutely love Jake Gardiner as a player. He’s capable of
doing things on the ice that very few defencemen can replicate. At times during
the Boston series last spring he was far and away the Leafs’ best player. Unfortunately,
this may end up being a case of supply and demand where the surplus of Toronto
defencemen necessitates a move. Let’s hope it’s one that helps the team take a
positive step in its never ending quest to find a first line centerman.
Darren is a fantasy
hockey writer who can’t escape his Maple Leaf roots. If you’re ever looking to
kick around some trade ideas or want a second set of eyes on your team you can
follow him @FantasyHockeyDK
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Through Three: Early Observations on the Leafs Season
The Toronto Maple Leafs are 3-0-0 and are the only team in the NHL who can make that claim. Awesome.
To win three games in a row, some things have to be going well and there have certainly been some positives in the early going for Toronto but it hasn't been all sunshine and smiles. With three games in the books, I thought I'd share some of my observations from the early days of the 2013-14 season.
The Good and the Bad of Tyler Bozak
I'll preface this by saying that I've been on Bozak's case for an awfully long time now but he really hasn't done anything in the first three games to alter my opinion of him. He throws the puck to Kessel in all situations and doesn't have the skill or offensive instincts to capitalize when Kessel gives it back. There have been at least a half-dozen opportunities in the early stages of the season where Bozak has either feebly put a one-time shot in the direction of the net or missed the puck entirely. What it all boils down to is that Bozak is a disaster at 5-on-5 and the fact that he's still skating with Kessel is either a damning reflection of the job Burke/Nonis have done at filling the centre position or an indictment of Randy Carlyle's deployment of the centres we do have.
Having said all of that, Bozak has looked awfully good on the penalty-kill. He's been playing the points very aggressively and twice in the first three games it's paid off -- once with a shorthanded goal and once with what nearly turned into a shorthanded breakaway. Couple this with his proficiency in the shootout and Bozak has it in him to be a useful player in select situations.
Van Riemsdyk's Steady Play
Is it just me or has Van Riemsdyk quickly become one of the most consistent Leafs forwards? He seems to create at least one scoring chance for himself every game at even strength and he always looks dangerous on the powerplay. I've been very impressed with Van Riemsdyk's play thus far and I've got a feeling he's going to put up some pretty gaudy special teams numbers.
To win three games in a row, some things have to be going well and there have certainly been some positives in the early going for Toronto but it hasn't been all sunshine and smiles. With three games in the books, I thought I'd share some of my observations from the early days of the 2013-14 season.
The Good and the Bad of Tyler Bozak
I'll preface this by saying that I've been on Bozak's case for an awfully long time now but he really hasn't done anything in the first three games to alter my opinion of him. He throws the puck to Kessel in all situations and doesn't have the skill or offensive instincts to capitalize when Kessel gives it back. There have been at least a half-dozen opportunities in the early stages of the season where Bozak has either feebly put a one-time shot in the direction of the net or missed the puck entirely. What it all boils down to is that Bozak is a disaster at 5-on-5 and the fact that he's still skating with Kessel is either a damning reflection of the job Burke/Nonis have done at filling the centre position or an indictment of Randy Carlyle's deployment of the centres we do have.
Having said all of that, Bozak has looked awfully good on the penalty-kill. He's been playing the points very aggressively and twice in the first three games it's paid off -- once with a shorthanded goal and once with what nearly turned into a shorthanded breakaway. Couple this with his proficiency in the shootout and Bozak has it in him to be a useful player in select situations.
Van Riemsdyk's Steady Play
Is it just me or has Van Riemsdyk quickly become one of the most consistent Leafs forwards? He seems to create at least one scoring chance for himself every game at even strength and he always looks dangerous on the powerplay. I've been very impressed with Van Riemsdyk's play thus far and I've got a feeling he's going to put up some pretty gaudy special teams numbers.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Toronto Maple Leafs Roster Shakedowns
My morning started with the news that Joe Colborne had been traded to the Calgary Flames for a fourth round draft pick that could become a third round draft pick if the NHL decided mid-season that all 30 teams would make the playoffs starting this year.
Next came the news that John-Michael Liles was on waivers and then finally word that Morgan Rielly would be starting the season in the NHL.
My feelings on the roster that's about to start the 2013-14 season is a bit of a mixed bag. On the one hand, I'm pleasantly surprised that the Leafs decided to keep Rielly for the time being. For one thing, I think he'll do more learning at the NHL-level than he will in the WHL with a pretty woeful Moose Jaw team and for another, I think he's a much better defenseman today than a guy like Mark Fraser. As long as Phaneuf, Gunnarsson, and Ranger are eating PK minutes, I don't see any reason to carry Fraser ahead of Rielly.
Next came the news that John-Michael Liles was on waivers and then finally word that Morgan Rielly would be starting the season in the NHL.
My feelings on the roster that's about to start the 2013-14 season is a bit of a mixed bag. On the one hand, I'm pleasantly surprised that the Leafs decided to keep Rielly for the time being. For one thing, I think he'll do more learning at the NHL-level than he will in the WHL with a pretty woeful Moose Jaw team and for another, I think he's a much better defenseman today than a guy like Mark Fraser. As long as Phaneuf, Gunnarsson, and Ranger are eating PK minutes, I don't see any reason to carry Fraser ahead of Rielly.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Puck Handling: How Jonathan Bernier Can Help Toronto With More Than Just His Fists
On Sunday night there was bedlam at the ACC, with John Scott
attempting to punch the face of Mr. Kessel, leading to 239 minutes of penalties
and at least a couple of suspensions from the league.
Unfortunately the Leafs only dressed one of their three
resident tough guys, that being goaltender Jonathan Bernier…
Ok, maybe he isn’t exactly an “enforcer” per se, but as it
turns out our newest tender throws a pretty mean right hook.
The twitterverse was taken over by news of the brawl, with
many comparing the goalie dust up to the unforgettable Potvin versus Hextall
fight in 1996. While I wouldn't quite put the confrontation in that realm, it
did provide us all with an excuse to watch this video again.
Those observing the fight live stood and cheered, loving a
goalie tussle in the way one would love to witness two T-Rex in a boxing
match. I imagine Nonis was in a corporate suite somewhere covering his eyes, as
a broken wrist or dislocated shoulder from Bernier would have further
complicated the teams cap woes and left them $2.9 million dollars in the press
box.
Bernier was of course brought to Toronto not to fight
others, but to fight for starting minutes with James Reimer. I’ll try to avoid
going down the path of “was the trade necessary” given the team already had a
capable number one, since that story has been covered quite a bit.
Instead I want to talk about what Bernier can do outside of
his crease, specifically with his stick. A couple days ago I came across a
great article from the Edmonton Journal on Martin Brodeur. The post looks at how
Marty’s puck handling effects the flow of a game.
The author looks at a five game series between the Devils
and Flyers, keeping track of every time
either Brodeur or Bryzgalov touches the puck. The results were very
interesting. During only 5 games Brodeur made a “good pass” to a teammate 90
times, compared to Bryzgalov’s 15. When it came to clearing the puck to a less dangerous
spot on the ice Brodeur had 32 successful occurrences, while Bryzgalov was 13. I
would encourage you to read the full article, as it goes into quite a bit more
detail.
So what does this mean for the Maple Leafs?
While for starters everything I have been able to find on
Bernier says he is a fantastic puck handler. His comfort leaving his crease to
stop a dump in, or an end a round is evident when you observe him playing.
Conversely, handling the puck has never been James Reimer’s
greatest asset. He routinely looks a bit awkward outside his net and will make
an effort to avoid playing pucks whenever possible. I don’t have data on how
much this has or hasn’t impacted the Leafs defensively. However, anecdotally, I
have witnessed a number of frantic scrambles in Toronto’s end as a direct
result of poor decision making from Reimer with the puck.
If Bernier can improve this for the Leafs it could have a
positive effect on their shot differential. I couldn’t find a definitive analysis
on how much shot differential and Corsi is impacted by a strong goalie, but it
stands to reason that if your tender clears the puck to safety the opposition
will have the puck less often.
If the opposition is unable to gain possession of the puck
on a fore-check, then they will conceivably have less shots on net. The common
sense approach says this would be the case, but I’d be very interested to see a
full study (if you have anything toss it up in the comments). NHL numbers also looked at the Journal article and did
some work on this, but the results were a bit inconclusive.
For instance, in the Brodeur and Bryzgalov example Marty
would routinely pass 15 to 20 pucks to his teammates, no doubt helping to them
advance the play forward. On the other hand, Bryzgalov would make between 1 and
5 good passes per game.
I won’t pretend to know exactly what the difference is
between Reimer and Bernier’s ability here, but it is clear a difference exists.
If Bernier can utilize his stick handling and work cohesively with Leafs blueliners
he could add a nice wrinkle to their defensive strategy.
For a team that was out shot 32 to 26 last season (2nd worst in the NHL),
it certainly wouldn't hurt.
Darren is editor of The Man Advantage, a fantasy hockey
blog, and contributor to Blue Chip Prospects. You can follow him
@TMA_Hockey_blog
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