DobberProspects

Prospect Ramblings – Formidable Opponent

 

Welcome to the Thursday Ramblings where I thought I would bring back a classic (again), and the best Photoshop skills this side of North America. I figure since I do not get many fantasy hockey questions I would just ask myself some, since I am the smartest person I know sitting on my computer right now.

 

First I need to start with my #GoodTweet of the week:

 

{source} <blockquote class=”twitter-tweet” data-lang=”en”><p lang=”en” dir=”ltr”>If it is opportunity he is after I have some bad news about joining that Vegas roster <a href=”https://t.co/9lBEaE2ttV”>https://t.co/9lBEaE2ttV</a></p>&mdash; Pat Quinn (not that one) (@FHPQuinn) <a href=”https://twitter.com/FHPQuinn/status/1154130509737410562?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>July 24, 2019</a></blockquote>{/source}

 

 

Now on to the Questions and Answer section!

 

 

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Q1: Where would you rank Nikita Gusev against the 2019 draft, present and future?

 

A: I did steal this from the Dobber Forum (and answered it) but I want to elaborate on it a little more and add for present and future:

If Gusev plays in the NHL, and signs on a team where the top six is not already set (ie. Vegas), he will get the most points of the 2019 draft players for the first two to three years. He is 27 and more physically (and mentally) mature than anyone available.

If you are looking to win you league in the next one to three seasons you should add him now as the price will be much easier to handle with the uncertainty around him leaving to the KHL if he does not get his contract demands. Also if you look to acquire him now, do not pay a huge fee as there is no guarantee he stays.

If your team is rebuilding than easily take any one of Kakko or Hughes one or two, and Turcotte three.

If I was to put Gusev in the mix I would rank it:

Guaranteed Gusev will post the most points of any 2019 draftee for at least three seasons, as long as he is on a team that believes in his skill. It is unknown if Vegas does

 

 

Q2: Rank these defense prospects (Upside and Opportunity): Makar, Hughes, Fox, Boqvist and Merkley

 

A: This is a tough one, but there we go

Upside (points only not multi-cat):

I do actually believe, if developed properly Merkley would have the best upside of these five defensemen, but then the problem comes with his:

 

Opportunity (who is in front of the player and how long until they would be in a top role:

 

Overall (adding both up):

 

 

Q3: Best Ducks prospect to own out of Steel, Comtois, Zegras, Terry, Lundestrom and Jones

 

A: Well this question is vaguely defined, let me define it with some parameters:

No positional requirements, points only:

 

Positional requirements, points only:

 

Positional requirements, multi-category:

 

I just want to point out here that it is not like Lundestrom is bad; it is just that the players ahead are much better. Lundestrom is likely a better real life player than a fantasy player

 

 

Q4: What kind of impact will Nikolai Prokhorkin have with the LA Kings in 2019-2020?

 

A: Prokhorkin is set to start as the third line C in LA, or potentially as a middle-six winger if the Kings still have Carter and decide to keep Kempe at C. Let me just say Kempe is a much better winger, and there is also a chance Prokhorkin starts as the second line C if Cater is Moved and Kempe is the third line C.

The problem with LA is that outside of Kopitar there are no great scorers anymore as Kovalchuk and Carter are getting defeated by father time. I would project Prokhorin in the 35-45 point range, unless two things go right for him: Todd McLellan loves him and plays him a ton, and he can sneak on the 1PP. If that happens then he should be in the 52-63 point range

 

 

Q5: Doug Wilson was saying quite a few prospects could make the Sharks roster, any guesses on who could make it?

 

A: There are quite a few that could make the team or get called up:

 

High Chance:

 

Mid-Chance (a couple call ups if injuries occur):

 

Low Chance (Need AHL time but stranger things have happened):

 

Also take note: Jonathan Dahlen went back to Sweden for 2019-2020

 

{source}<blockquote class=”twitter-tweet” data-lang=”en”><p lang=”sv” dir=”ltr”>VÄRVNINGSBOMBEN: Jonathan Dahlén uppges vara klar för en återkomst till Timrå. <a href=”https://twitter.com/hashtag/twittpuck?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#twittpuck</a> <a href=”https://twitter.com/hashtag/timraik?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#timraik</a> <a href=”https://twitter.com/hashtag/hockeyallsvenskan?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#hockeyallsvenskan</a> <a href=”https://t.co/AP2ItvHNo3″>https://t.co/AP2ItvHNo3</a></p>&mdash; Hockeysverige.se (@hockeysverige) <a href=”https://twitter.com/hockeysverige/status/1153943679389880320?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>July 24, 2019</a></blockquote>{/source}

 

 

Q6: Do the Washington Capitals really have one of the worst prospect pools in the NHL?

 

A: Yes, especially for fantasy. However, I just want to say as an NHL prospect pool I do not think they are terrible. Let me go over the positions:

 

Goaltending:

The Capitals have one of the best prospects in the world in Ilya Samsonov that should be owned in all pools. Also the teams’ 2014 second round selection Vitek Vanecek is coming in to his own, and has a one-way contact for 2020-2021. Vanecek had better numbers than Samsonov in 2018-2019, but both will battle it out for the 1A spot in a much improved Hershey squad for this season.

 

Defense:

There is no star prospect here, but Alexander Alexeyev is the best own for fantasy (if it is a multi-cat league). They also have solid depth with Lucas Johansen and Martin Fehervary projecting as solid middle pairing options. Tobias Geisser could become a second/third pairing guy; Connor Hobbs needs to stay healthy for a season and he could be a legit PP threat in the NHL; and Kris Bindulis can be a competent bottom pairing guy.

 

Forward:

Connor McDavid McMichael is immediately the top forward prospect in the system. At best he can be a second line centre and at worst probably a third line center. Garrett Pilon is underrated but has been progressing nicely. Axel Jonsson-Fjällby is a goal scoring and short-handed threat but does not have a great upside but will be an NHLer. Leason may be able to become a second line power winger but I do not see it. Shane Gersich has the speed to play in the NHL but needs to start producing. Kody Clark and Riley Sutter both look like bottom six NHLers. Alexei Protas could be a wild card to develop but his outlook is pretty unclear.

 

The Capitals have plenty of NHLers but they are all bland middle to bottom line forwards and defense. Only McMichael, Alexeyev (multi-cat), Samsonov and Vanecek stand out

 

 

Q7: With Panarin, Duchene and Dzingle gone are there are rookies that can make an impact on the CBJ roster this season?

 

A: The easy two to make the roster and also make an impact are:

 

The “last chance” player

 

The long shots to make it, who still likely need another season or two of development

 

 

Q8: Will Kristian Vesalainen get a legit chance with Winnipeg this season?

 

A: He should as the Jets only have seven forwards signed to one-way contracts with Patrik Laine and Kyle Connor still to sign. The team has Jack Roslovic on the final year of his ELC but will need him for 2019-2020. That totals up to 10 players with only minor competition from the likes of Mason Appleton, Michael Spacek, and Seth Griffith (who I still think has NHL talent).

Vesalainen will be crucial for the Jets as they are an internal budget team and need all the small contracts of great young players that they can get. These Laine and Connor deals are going to hurt this team and they will likely (incorrectly) move Ehlers as a result.

 

 

 

Thanks for reading, if you have fantasy hockey prospect related questions send me tweets @FHPQuinn

 

Signing off with how I end my formidable opponent

 

 

 

 

 

 

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