Ramblings: Day One At The Draft

Cam Robinson

2018-06-22

 

 

 

The culmination of a year’s worth of scouting has come to fruition. As a prospect-junkie and self-proclaimed assessor of talent, this has been a particularly satisfying experience. The 40-degree temperature coupled with an afro and a suit hasn’t been as fun, but you take the good with the bad.

 

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After a whisper quiet day regarding trade talk or actual action, Colorado and Washington got us off the schneid. The Avs grabbed themselves the most-sought-after backup goaltender on the market in Phillip Grubauer. The cup-winner is joined by Brooks Orpik and his 5.5 million in salary for next season heading to the Mile High city. The Caps cleared cap space in order to try and re-sign John Carlson and also grabbed the 47th overall selection in the draft.

 

 

This represents a nice piece of work by Joe Sakic. The recent history of teams purchasing Grubauer-level assets has been higher than a mid-second, so taking on the salary clearly decreased the cost.

 

The Avalanche have been toiling away with sub-par goaltending for far too long. This move doesn't assure them anything, but Semyon Varlamov now has a true competitor for his crease. The oft-injured and inconsistent Russian netminder's value in fantasy leagues hasn't been high, but the Avs are clearly a team on the rise. 

 

Grubauer should get a good amount of attention on draft day as a potential sneaky pick that could pay massive dividends. He'll need to be signed as a restricted free-agent and that dollar amount will provide further insight into how much value the Avs will be placing on him. 

 

Here is Mike Clifford's breakdown of the trade

 

Sadly, this represented the only hockey trade of the day.

 

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The first round went as expected… Just kidding.

 

After the expected top two selection, all hell broke loose. The Canadiens took Jesperi Kotkaniemi third overall. That wasn’t overly surprising but should be considered a touch of a reach for the positional need. Ottawa went against my advice and held onto their pick, selecting Brady Tkachuk. I have a very strong feeling that they’ll live to regret that.

 

Next up, the Coyotes went way off the board selecting Barrett Hayton. Hayton was a consensus pick in the teens and was 17 on my rankings.

 

Filip Zadina, once considered an absolute lock at third overall fell into Detroit’s lap at six. Detroit almost did cartwheels up to the stage to grab the talented right-winger. 

 

He's not wrong. 

 

 

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Quintin Hughes became the second defender off the board as the Canucks hit an absolute homerun at seventh overall. Hughes immediately becomes the team's top defensive prospect and has expressed his desire to turn professional and step into the NHL this fall. Vancouver just got themselves a power play defender to gain entry into the zone and set up the power play for Elias Pettersson and Brock Boeser to snip away. He should be a highly-sought after asset in keeper league drafts this fall. 

 

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Despite rumours of trying to move the pick for immediate help on the blue line, Edmonton kept the 10th overall selection and grabbed Evan Bouchard. The volume-shooting, right-shot defender feasts on the powerplay and will add a dangerous weapon to the Oilers man-advantage unit in the near-future. As a late-1999 birthdate who is already physically mature, he may be ready to step into the NHL lineup next season. 

 

Fantasy-wise, this is a very good spot for him.

 

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The big winner of the first round is the New York Islanders. They landed Oliver Wahlstrom and Noah Dobson at 11 and 12 respectively. Those two could have easily gone in the top six and no one would’ve blinked an eye. Just imagine for a moment Mat Barzal feeding Oliver Wahlstrom for the next decade? Drool.

 

 

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The rest of the first round was basically a toddler pulling names out of a hat. There was little rhyme or reason to many of the picks.

 

Ryan Merkley going 21st overall to San Jose was interesting to see. Many believed the wildly talented right-shot defender would either slide to day two or go to a team that had multiple first round picks to mitigate the risk associated with him.

 

San Jose has shown with Evander Kane that they’re not afraid to work with a player who has reported (or actual) attitude concerns.  Merkley’s fantasy potential remains incredibly high.

 

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Excuse the brevity of this Ramble tonight. The exhaustion level is at an all-time high at this moment. Covering the draft has been an amazing and incredible draining exercise. And I've loved every minute of it thus far. I'll be back at the American Airlines Arena tomorrow morning bright and early to cover day two. It should be a blast!

 

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Thanks for reading and feel free to follow me on Twitter @CrazyJoeDavola3

 

 

 

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UPCOMING GAMES

Dec 27 - 19:12 DET vs TOR
Dec 27 - 19:12 BUF vs CHI
Dec 27 - 19:12 CBJ vs BOS
Dec 27 - 19:12 N.J vs CAR
Dec 27 - 20:12 DAL vs MIN
Dec 27 - 20:12 STL vs NSH
Dec 27 - 21:12 UTA vs COL
Dec 27 - 22:12 S.J vs VGK

Starting Goalies

Top Skater Views

  Players Team
LUKE HUGHES N.J
JACKSON LACOMBE ANA
PATRIK LAINE MTL
BRYAN RUST PIT
KIRILL MARCHENKO CBJ

Top Goalie Profile Views

  Players Team
KAREL VEJMELKA UTA
DUSTIN TOKARSKI CAR
FILIP GUSTAVSSON MIN
SERGEI BOBROVSKY FLA
MACKENZIE BLACKWOOD COL

LINE COMBOS

  Frequency BUF Players
21.3 JACK QUINN JJ PETERKA DYLAN COZENS
20.1 JASON ZUCKER ALEX TUCH TAGE THOMPSON
19.1 JIRI KULICH PEYTON KREBS ZACH BENSON

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