DobberProspects

Prospect Ramblings: How long will my guy be in the AHL?

image courtesy of NHL.com

 

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One of the most important factors when drafting in prospect drafts is knowing how long of a wait there will be before you see production. Is your pick going to be a bubble player right away or slowly groomed into a full-timer? Or something in between? So, this week I’m taking a look at how long players in different roles spent in the AHL.

 

What I’ve done is go through every team in the NHL and pick out the players who have graduated from the AHL to the NHL within the last 3 seasons. I’ve broken those down by which line they are playing on in the NHL, to see if there is a major difference in AHL seasoning time between a 1st-liner and a 4th-liner.

 

There are a few sources of error here I can’t control and just have to deal with:

 

That being said, here we go:

 

1st liners

Average AHL seasons: 1.04

Sample size: 7

 

2nd liners

Average AHL seasons: 1.61

Sample size: 16

 

3rd liners

Average AHL seasons: 1.55

Sample size: 26

 

4th liners

Average AHL seasons: 1.76

Sample size: 36

 

So what do we see?

 

 

 

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FIRST NHL GOAL TIME!

 

Joey Anderson smartly got his shot off before the goalie was ready to tally his first as a Devil:

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Drake Batherson also gets one through traffic and though an unsuspecting netminder for his first in Ottawa:

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One of the players in the dicusion above, Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson gets himself right in front of the net to chip in his first in the NHL:

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Thank you for reading, and best of luck as we hit the time in the season where teams start to show their true colors…time to sell high and buy low before its too late.

 

Hayden Soboleski

@soboleskih

 

 

 

 

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