Columnists/Articles

Need a D?

By |2015-07-24T11:07:28-04:00December 12th, 2007|z-Archives (other articles)|

Dennis Wideman

 

First off this week, let me apologize to all who listened to my advice and got rid of Nik Antropov. I was way wrong on him. He’s been scorching hot lately and it now looks like his fast start was for real. He may just have a shot at 80 points if he stays healthy. You should still expect ups and downs throughout the season though. What can I say? Sometimes you hit it on the head, like I did with Martin Gerber and Mike Comrie and sometimes you’re off the mark.

 

Need a D?

By |2015-07-24T11:07:26-04:00December 12th, 2007|z-Archives (other articles)|

Dennis Wideman

 

First off this week, let me apologize to all who listened to my advice and got rid of Nik Antropov. I was way wrong on him. He’s been scorching hot lately and it now looks like his fast start was for real. He may just have a shot at 80 points if he stays healthy. You should still expect ups and downs throughout the season though. What can I say? Sometimes you hit it on the head, like I did with Martin Gerber and Mike Comrie and sometimes you’re off the mark.

 

Need a D?

By |2015-07-24T11:07:24-04:00December 12th, 2007|z-Archives (other articles)|

Dennis Wideman

 

First off this week, let me apologize to all who listened to my advice and got rid of Nik Antropov. I was way wrong on him. He’s been scorching hot lately and it now looks like his fast start was for real. He may just have a shot at 80 points if he stays healthy. You should still expect ups and downs throughout the season though. What can I say? Sometimes you hit it on the head, like I did with Martin Gerber and Mike Comrie and sometimes you’re off the mark.

 

Enstrom turning heads

By |2007-12-10T08:40:59-05:00December 10th, 2007|The Dobotomy|

Tobias Enstrom

 

Only a handful of NHL teams can boast two elite offensive players who are in the same class as Atlanta’s dynamic duo of Marian Hossa and Ilya Kovalchuk. So you can imagine the potential production of a skilled rearguard if he can stick on that top power play unit.

Clearly, the team has found one in rookie Tobias Enstrom, a diminutive blueliner who came over from Sweden. 

 

Enstrom turning heads

By |2007-12-10T08:40:59-05:00December 10th, 2007|The Dobotomy|

Tobias Enstrom

 

Only a handful of NHL teams can boast two elite offensive players who are in the same class as Atlanta’s dynamic duo of Marian Hossa and Ilya Kovalchuk. So you can imagine the potential production of a skilled rearguard if he can stick on that top power play unit.

Clearly, the team has found one in rookie Tobias Enstrom, a diminutive blueliner who came over from Sweden. 

 

Enstrom turning heads

By |2007-12-10T08:40:59-05:00December 10th, 2007|The Dobotomy|

Tobias Enstrom

 

Only a handful of NHL teams can boast two elite offensive players who are in the same class as Atlanta’s dynamic duo of Marian Hossa and Ilya Kovalchuk. So you can imagine the potential production of a skilled rearguard if he can stick on that top power play unit.

Clearly, the team has found one in rookie Tobias Enstrom, a diminutive blueliner who came over from Sweden. 

 

Over Their Head

By |2007-12-09T11:27:53-05:00December 9th, 2007|The Dobotomy|

Tomas Holmstrom

 

(Originally posted by The Hockey News November 30, Antropov's piece updated for relevency)

It’s easy for a fantasy owner to determine which players are ‘buy low’ candidates – usually, players on his or her own team qualify. The ‘sell high’ players, well, that one’s more difficult.

 

Go to Top