Friday 29 June 2012

Top 10: Modern Awesome Canuck Let-Downs


10)Byron Ritchie
Although Byron did essentially live up to his premise, if you watched him play it was lack luster every time. Byron was a good guy, but his play didn't ever seem NHL calibre.

Mika Noronen, what a devilish grin
9)Mika Noronen
Imagine this, the Canucks are going through Goaltender issues. They acquire a goalie who is said to have starter potential. This mentioned goaltender goes on to play four games and is never heard from again.

8)Jason King
After a decent season mainly playing with the Sedins on a line coined the “Mattress Line” in 2003-2004, King floated around on the Moose until his rights were eventually traded to the Ducks in exchange for Ryan Shannon.

7)Jason Krog
The AHL superstar had always been a little bit of a let down in the National Hockey League, but that didn't stop fans from getting excited to have him. Unfortunately he lived up to his own promise, and didn't do well at the NHL level yet again.

Reid with the speed
6)Brandon Reid
Reid had speed to burn, so much speed in fact that many thought he would be an amazing player in the NHL. His diminutive stature however, did not fit the NHL at the time. The Canucks decided to once again sign him in 2006-2007 to see how he would do in the new NHL, but the results were just as disappointing.

5)Nathan Smith
The former Canucks first round draft pick has managed zero points in 26 NHL games in his career since being drafted 23rd overall in 2000.
Isbister

4)Brad Isbister
Not only was his time with Vancouver disappointing, his whole NHL career was marked with not living up to expectations. The most he got from being in Vancouver was an unfortunate nickname involving male reproductive fluid and blisters. I'll let you work that one out.

3)Taylor Ellington
Many thought this second rounder was going to be a great NHL defence man after being drafted in the second round by the Vancouver Canucks. However, Taylor preferred to spend most of his time in the ECHL.

Schneider and his pearly whites
2)Mathieu Schneider
This player was expected to be a bit of a hero on the Canucks blue line. However, after playing a mediocre 17 games, Schneider was waived.

1)Patrick White
This former first round pick has never seen NHL, AHL, or even ECHL ice time in North America. The highpoint of White's short career thus far was being part of the trade that brought Vancouver Christian Ehrhoff.

Thursday 28 June 2012

Summer Summit Splash




http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQM4VXh4_JiqXg64RVMzwwvoWfgKqrFjbU_3PARA8Dl4csq6IxWxkK41jmFAccording to Canucks General Manager Mike Gillis at the Canucks summer summit, Cory Schneider has agreed in principal to a new deal with the club. Schneider who went 20-8-1 last season serving as backup to Roberto Luongo was set to become a Restricted Free Agent as of July 1st.

From user CanucksWino on the official team forum:
As per Mike Gillis at Summer Summet! Said agreement was met 15 minutes ago. 
 Interesting, speaks good about Cory's character if he indeed signed before the 1st, when many teams would probably be willing to throw ridiculous offer sheets at him. Good job on Gillis' part, and it will surely be interesting to see what the terms are.

The Roberto Luongo watch is going to be on high gear now. Should be quite the summer.

Update from Kypreos:

Nick Kypreos@RealKyper
#NHL signing. Canucks agree on new 3 year deal worth 12M with G Cory Schneider. 4M is his new cap hit.
 

Free Agency and the Fourth Line


Do the Canucks have openings on the fourth line? Probably. The Vancouver organization likes to have a plethora of fourth line capable players waiting in the wings in case they are needed. With the departure of Andrew Ebbett, the Canucks could look to free agency for that thirteenth forward or upgrade on the bottom six.

However, with the qualification of Dale Weise and the re-signing of Aaron Volpatti, the Canucks do have two capable fourth line forwards. Volpatti is an excellent spark plug; Weise is only 23 and showed flashes of offensive capabilities last season, even though he only achieved eight points during the season.

http://cdn.sportsoverdose.com/thumbs/dale-weise-32-nhl.jpgThough the likely hood of Vancouver seeking fourth line improvement through free agency is slim, due to inflating contracts and a shallow talent pool, these are hypothetical players that could be brought in to bolster the line generally known as the energy line.

Arron Asham – Though often called a headcase, the feisty Asham did manage 16 points last season with the Penguins, a number not bad for a fourth line forward. Asham may be too big of a risk for the Canucks though, as his penalty minutes remain quite high. Something the organization generally tries to avoid.

http://ducks.ocregister.com/files/2009/09/moen.jpgTravis Moen – Ask a handful Vancouver fans who they wanted the team to acquire at the trade deadline, and a good number of them will respond with Travis Moen. This gritty forward posts respectable point totals while player a bottom six role. He also has the ability to move up to the third line if required, which is loved of bottom six forwards by Vancouver's coaching staff. Moen does boast a higher cap hit than most fourth liner players though, with a cap hit of 1.5 million dollars last season.

Zenon Konopka – Probably the least likely as he plays center naturally, Zenon could be considered if they feel Malholtra wont be able to regain form and that Lapierre will take over the third line center job. Konopka does have a history of taking stupid penalties however.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/07/Maxim_Lapierre_Canucks_practice_2012b.jpg/250px-Maxim_Lapierre_Canucks_practice_2012b.jpgThe most likely option though is probably what Mike Gillis does every year, signing low key free agents (such as Steve Pinizzotto last season) and allowing them to compete for the roster spots along with Weise and company. Either way, with all the Luongo talk going on, the free agency period will probably take a backseat for most Canuck fans.



Prospect Spotlight: Alexandre Mallet

http://i.ytimg.com/vi/h90dy21m9DE/0.jpg This year's second round draft pick of the Vancouver Canucks, Alexandre Mallet caused a bit of a stir among Canuck fans. The fact that he has only posted great numbers in the QMJHL as an over-ager being the main backing behind this.

An argument against picking over age players is that they are more physically mature than the competition in junior. For instance, Darren Archibald — signed as a free agent by Vancouver in 2010 — was a hulking 6'3” 212 pounds, and able to out muscle most young players in junior. Archibald had a great prospects camp, followed by a disappointing start with the Chicago Wolves that ended up seeing him play with the Canucks ECHL affiliate, the Kalamazoo Wings, for most of this season. A prime example of the difficulties involved of transitioning from being physically dominant against boys, to playing against men.

There is no argument against Mallet being strong, but he doesn't have the hulking frame like Darren Archibald that would allow for pure physical domination. Mallet is a modest 6'1”, 194 pounds (modest for hockey players anyway), a height and weight that is not uncommon amongst hockey players.

Looking at Mallet's numbers prior to this season, and you would notice they are not very impressive. However, the 57th overall pick had a major breakout season this year, tallying 81 points in just 68 games, while still maintaining the physical edge that he's always had in the QMJHL.

The thing about Mallet, is even if he isn't able to produce hugely at the professional level he will still be able to bring energy and intensity to a team's bottom six forward core. The kid can hit, play with grit, and was a fairly tenacious fighter at the junior level. Not a bad prospect to have for an organization with mainly boom or bust top six prospects such as Jordan Schroeder.

If Mallet works hard, and comes into camp determined, the Canucks could have a very good energy forward with some offensive talent in the future. Though Mallet will probably start this season with the Chicago Wolves, he should be given a chance by the fans to show what he's capable of at the professional level of Hockey. Some players are just late bloomers, and hopefully such is the case with Alexandre Mallet.

Mallet Quick Stats:
                                            --- Regular Season ---  ---- Playoffs ----
Season   Team                        Lge    GP    G    A  Pts  PIM  GP   G   A Pts PIM
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2008-09  Rouyn-Noranda Huskies       QMJHL  10    1    0    1    0   1   0   1   1   0
2009-10  Rouyn-Noranda Huskies       QMJHL  39    4    5    9   31  --  --  --  --  --
2009-10  Rimouski Oceanic            QMJHL  26    5    5   10   54  12   2   0   2   6
2010-11  Rimouski Oceanic            QMJHL  60   10    9   19   86   5   0   2   2   7
2011-12  Rimouski Oceanic            QMJHL  68   34   47   81  132  21  10  15  25  22
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 Stats Courtesy of HockeyDB