Sunday, December 29, 2013

KL Week in Review - Week 13 (plus a couple transactions)

Not a heck of a lot of action in the NHL over the past week owing to the Xmas break:



Big weeks from the Micahleks and the Fylanders have started to close the gap on 1st place. 

As well, the race for that final money spot is as tight as its ever been, with only 11 points separating 8th and 4th place.

On the other end, both the Schizzarks and the Stefans remain in free-fall with the two worst weeks in the league (11 and 15 points respectively. The Schizzarks are actually on pace to end up in last place by the end of next week, with the Stefans following soon thereafter.

Let's just all take a moment and appreciate that we are not the Mackhawks. I'm not sure I've seen 6 injuries on a roster before - and these are key players:

Transactions

A couple minor Xmas transactions:

Dec-23-13
The Schizzarks drop Matt Donovan and add Andy Greene

Dec-29-13
The Mackhawks drop Pascal Dupuis and (re)add Wayne Simmonds

Interesting note: the Dicklas Lidstroms are the only team to have not used or traded a FA add/drop.

Friday, December 27, 2013

KL Week in Review - Week 12

Its Xmas time so this is late and boring: 



Of note: 
  • The G-Phil's Flyers continue to be really good without Malkin.
  • Relatedly, the Micahleks had a terrible week and failed to make up much-needed ground
  • The Powder Rangers are still in 4th!
  • The Krupuls have had a stunning week with 45 points, putting them in spitting distance of the playoffs
  • The Patrik Stefans and Schizzarks continue to flounder.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Free Agent Targets

In this second instalment of free, unsolicited and perhaps unwanted fantasy advice, I present a few more free agents I would consider adding if I needed to address an injury or jettison Dany Heatley dead weight. I also check in on the five recommendations I made last week to see how they have fared. 

Add this guy:


F Michael Raffl, PHI - The Austrian winger cut his teeth in the Swedish First Division before coming to the Flyers as a 25 year-old rookie. He only has eight points this year, but seven of those points have come in the last seven games, not coincidentally around the time he moved up to the top line with Giroux and Voracek. Adding him would be a gamble for sure, but he was a near-point-per-game player in the SEL so it's a calculated gamble. 

F Andrew Cogliano, ANA - Cogliano is on pace for 45, which is exactly what he scored in his rookie year for the Oilers before following it up with five disappointing seasons. More importantly, Cogliano benefits from the Ducks' offence-oriented coaching philosophy and offensive depth. He has ten points in his last ten games, including three assists last night.

Last week's recommendations:

Wayne Simmonds, PHI - Four games last week; one goal. That gives him four points in his last eleven games. Garbage recommendation. 


Scottie Upshall, FLA - Four games; one assist. Upshall is coming back down to Earth - GMs in the Keeper League are too savvy to fall for Scottie's tricks. 

Matt Stajan, CGY - Five games; one goal. As the Great One would say, that recommendation was a "crock o' crap."

Andy Greene, NJD - Three games; one assist. Actually not far from the pace we would expect, and it's a small sample size. Call this one a tentative pass?

Matt Bartkowski, BOS - Four games, zero points, no increase in ice time as predicted. Failblog. 


That's a combined four points in 20 man-games. Welp, enjoy this week's recommendations guys.



Monday, December 16, 2013

KL Week in Review: Week 11

I was pretty hungover yesterday and didn't do this.

So here we go! Standings as of the end of play Saturday, December 14th:

Rank Team Name TTL PLN
1G-Phil's Flyers3508
2Milan Micahleks3255
3Fylanders3134
4Powder Rangers31113
5Mackhawks3065
6Moilers3007
7Winter Claassics2969
8Los Samjawors Kings2908
9Dicklas Lidstroms2844
10Teeyotes2842
11Patrik Stefans2767
12Joshfrey Krupuls27310
13Schizzarks27110
14Quebec Rordiques2643
15Vanrooser Canicks25110
16W-Benham/Scranton Parkers2493

A few notes:
  • The Vanrooser Canicks have been one of the hottest teams in the league lately. Last week they were 28 points back of 15th - now they are 3 points up on the WBS Parkers.
  • A big week from the Los Amjawors Kings has put them in a playoff spot. They also completed a soon-to-be-announced trade that will provide additional depth down the stretch. 
  • The Powder Rangers are not letting go of a money spot without a fight, with a huge Saturday night
  • The G-Phil's Flyers are falling to earth a little bit, and with an injury to Malkin, the Micahleks are salivating
  • The Fylanders are finally in the money
  • Ben fuckin' Bishop is now second only to MAF for KL goalie points. A wonderful pickup for the Teeyotes, and a somewhat ironic result for the Quebec Rordiques, whose 42 points from Niemi is now good for 3rd in goalie points.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Transaction

Pretty big stack of players moving teams yesterday (and this close to the Christmas break - for shame). 

The Dicklas Lidstroms send:
Jakob Silfverberg, Dougie Hamilton, Artem Anisimov

To the Milan Micahleks for:
Justin Williams, Slava Voynov and Steve Downie

I confess to being a bit confused by this trade for the Micahleks. They are trading three guys who have combined for 52 points for guys who have a combined 27 points. Also, Hamilton and Silfverberg are both currently injured. 

Presumably the Micahleks want a top 2 finish, but in the short term the Lidstroms get the edge in this trade. Long term, the Micahleks are well positioned with a couple of good young players. 

Here's my assessment from the outside looking in:


Silfverberg has long term upside and could be a PPG player, but not this year. He had 7 points in 11 games, but that was at the start of the season when the Ducks were pouring goals into the net. If he hits 45 points I will be surprised. 

Justin Williams, on the other hand, has 22 points in 33 games. Much of that can be attributed to Jeff Carter's absence, but he is good for 50 points this year.

This year: Williams = Silfverberg
Two years from now: Silverberg >> Williams

Dougie Hamilton is a long-term keeper and should be a 45-50+ pt d-man - but again, not this year. He is on pace for 20 points and sits on the IR with a lower body injury. He is, however, prospect-eligible.

In exchange, the Micahleks give up Voynov - who should also be a 45-50+ pt d-man longer term. Remember, this dude led the Kings in scoring in the playoffs last year and is tied with Wayne fucking Gretzky for 2nd place in franchise history for playoff GWGs.

This year: Voynov > Hamilton
Two years from now: Voynov = Hamilton

Lastly, Steve Downie has 17 points in 28 games to Anisimov's 13 in 32. These guys actually have remarkably similar career numbers to date. Anisimov probably has more top end talent but is an "enigmatic Russian" - also he plays for the Blue Jackets. 

This year: Downie > Anisimov
Two years from now: Downie = Anisimov




Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Free Agent Targets

In 2010/2011 it was Jeff Skinner. In 2011/2012 it was Adam Henrique. In 2012/2013 it was Nazem Kadri. Each year there is a young guy who flies under everyone's radar at the draft but emerges as a fantasy stud, only to be too young to qualify as a free agent under our rules. Skinner went first overall the following year, ahead of Ryan Nugent-Hopkins. Henrique went third in 2012, before David Perron and Alex Galchenyuk.* This year, Kadri went second, the only player selected in the top five who was not part of the 2013 NHL draft class.

This season, we are still waiting for that coveted young player to emerge. I like to think that we are becoming better scouts, that Tomas Hertl is this year's Jeff Skinner and that we (okay, Rome) got him. In fact, nine of the current top 10 rookie scorers were owned or drafted before the season began.

One early candidate for the player we all want but can't have is Reilly Smith. Acquired from the Dallas Stars as part of the trade that saw Boston give up Tyler Seguin, Smith is a a relatively unheralded third-round pick that later developed into a sniper in college. In his last two collegiate years he netted 58 goals in 77 games. College success does not always translate to NHL success (as Smith's former college teammate and 71-point scorer, Andy Miele, knows all too well), but Smith had 35 points in 45 games as a rookie for the AHL's Texas Stars, so we know that he can play the professional game. Projected as a third-liner this year, Smith has been promoted at times to the second line with Patrice Bergeron and Brad Marchand. He is on pace for 54 points.

Another candidate is Eric Gelinas, a New Jersey Devils defencemen you've probably already noticed if, like everyone except Greg, you're desperately looking for help on the blueline. Although ineligible as a free agent, the second-round pick is scoring at a 45-point pace (which is almost certainly unsustainable, although it's not too far off from his AHL pace).

I have a few other candidates in mind but I'll save them for future posts.

In the meantime, here are some eligible free agents I would consider adding if I needed to patch up an injury or just shake things up (I don't, my team is awesome):

F Wayne Simmonds, PHI - The Mackhawks let this beloved keeper go after a slow start. As the Flyers have righted the ship, Simmonds' fantasy game has improved, earning 10 points in his last 14 games. He's working the top powerplay unit with Claude Giroux. I recommend adding him and rubbing it in the Mackhawks' face.

F Scottie Upshall, FLA - One of my favourite hockey-isms is when guys have nicknames as first names, like Scottie, Dougie, and Johnny. That aside aside, injury-prone Upshall has never had any fantasy Up-side-at-all, until this year. On pace to demolish his career best 32 points, Upshall presently has 17 points, all but one of which have come in the last 19 games(!). The veteran is getting it done with Huberdeau and Bjugstad on the Panthers' top line and top powerplay unit. Add him and cross your fingers that he stays hot and stays off the IR.

F Matt Stajan, CGY - This pass-first centre will not get you a lot of goals, but he is second amongst Flames' forwards in TOI per game, averaging 19.5 minutes. After missing most of October, Stajan has been scoring at a 55-point pace, although he does not play with the man advantage.

D Andy Greene, NJD - Veteran Andy Greene once put up 37 points, but that was four seasons ago. This season he's on pace for exactly 37 again. Two encouraging signs are that Greene is manning the second powerplay unit and he has found 11 of his 14 points in the last 16 games. He's putting up points despite the Devils' difficulty scoring goals (28th in NHL).

D Matt Bartkowski, BOS - The 25-year-old had seen just 20 NHL games over the past three seasons, but has dressed for 16 games this year and earned 6 assists. The main reason he warrants consideration is that the Bruins blueline has been decimated by injuries. With Adam McQuaid, Johnny Boychuk and Dougie Hamilton all out, Bartkowski simply has to get more time and will certainly feature on at least the second powerplay unit.

*Schizz was probably the only person who would have taken Henrique in the first round.

10 Weeks, 2013

One of my very favourite posts from the golden age of this blog was this one, in which Commissioner Micah charted out our positions in Excel.

I've tried my best to recreate that, updated for the current year. 

I call this one simply "Spoons"


I call this one "A Tale of Two Teams":


I call this one "A Child Printing a C"


This one I call "Every Stock Bubble Chart Since the Tulip Bulb Crash of 1636-37" (the Rordiques are just entering the "Capitulation" portion of the "Blow-off" stage):


This one is called "Tender Love in a Field of Forget-me-nots"


"That Scene in Cliffhanger When Sly Almost Saved That Girl's Life But His Grip Was Not Strong Enough":


I call this one"The Dictatorship of the Bourgeoisie":



"Two Fates Intertwined" or "The Chart That Looks the Most Like a Chart in a Stock Photograph of a Board Room"



And last, I call this one "As Close as a Line Chart Can Possibly Get to Representing Matt Schissel's Thought Process"
 
 













Sunday, December 8, 2013

KL Week in Review: Week 10 (also a transaction)

The standings 10 weeks in:


We're starting to enter the NHL winter hockey doldrums, where the playoff races aren't yet particularly interesting, the trade deadline is ages away, and even the on-ice product lacks a lot of energy. 

That's why we have the KL, though, right??? 

Even here, we have much the same as last week:
  • The Vanrooser Canicks are still exactly 111 points out of 1st place (which is actually remarkable, since it means they have had a stellar week). 
  • The gap between 8th and 9th has grown from 9 points to 10 points. 
  • The top 5 is unchanged, with the Fylanders just barely out of the money again
  • The Flyers are still about 30 points ahead of everybody
That said, there are a few changes of note:
  • The Moilers have had a strong week, breaking a three-way tie for 6th on the strength of a 30 point week. In typical December hockey fashion, this doesn't actually change their position at all, they just get to say "I'm in sole possession of 6th" instead of "tied for 6th"
  • Uh I guess the WBS Parkers and the Quebec Rordiques switched positions
  • Seriously that it
Transaction


Dec-7-13 The Schizzarks drop Cory Conacher and add Nick Bonino

Conacher hasn't scored a point in 8 games and hasn't scored a goal since October 15. The dude has seen his ice time slashed and he may be playing his way out of a job. 

Bonino on the other hand has 22 points and would be a key part of any KL team's roster had he been drafted at the start. 

Great pickup -- I was wondering when someone was going to pull the trigger.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Transaction

A minor free-agent add/drop to announce:

Dec-04-2013
The Moilers drop Francois Beauchemin and add Niklas Hjalmarsson

The good: Beauchemin has been disappointing thus far (and is currently hurt), with 6 points since the start of the season. Hjalmarsson, on the other hand, looks poised to smash his previous best (17 points) with 13 points so far.

This provides the Moilers with some good depth on the back end as a bit of a gap develops between 8th and 9th. 

The bad: It serious took me like 8 tries to get these guys names right. Could the Moilers have picked a harder pair of names to spell?

Monday, December 2, 2013

November Awards

This is the second of a series of monthly awards recognizing some of the high points in the month gone by. If you missed October's, check out the link to "All Monthly Awards" on the left side of this post. 

Offensive Player of the Month The criteria for this is not simply the player with the most points, but rather the player who has most significantly impacted their GM's roster by playing above expectations, being incredibly hot, etc.  

This award isn't always going to go to the player who scores more points than anyone else in a given month, but this month it simply has to go to the G-Phil's Flyers Evgeni Malkin.  He scored 25 points in 14 games - a run that coincides with the return of James Neal.

HMs: James Neal, who has 16 points in 12 games and providing a much-needed boost to the Milan Micahlek's forward ranks. Also Johan Franzen, who has returned from injury and been an impact player for the Mackhawks with 12 points this month. I also have to mention Chris Kreider - remember when we made fun of the Winter Claassics for picking him last year, and kept him this year? Yeah, that no-talent hack had 13 points this month and its impossible to hear a Calder conversation without his name coming up.    


Defensive Player of the Month As above, the criteria is not merely the most points, but the player with the biggest impact relative to expectations.

Duncan Keith. With 16 points this month, he is not only the most productive defenceman, but one of the most productive players period. While Keith does have a 69 point season under his belt, his second-highest scoring season was 45. In a way its a shame he having what may be a personal-best season while on the 15th place WBS-Parkers - who need a 1st overall pick more than they need a 2nd or 3rd. 
 

HMs: Torey Krug. The Patrik Stefans were pretty high on this kid and for good reason. His 9 points keep him 2nd in rookie scoring - as a defenceman. Also, the Joshfrey Krupuls continue to get excellent production for Ryan McDonagh, who had10 points in 15 games. Not bad for a kid whose best year to date was 25 points.

Goaltender of the Month

Ben Bishop takes this award for the Teeyotes. With 20 more points this month, this trade continues to pay dividends and could be the difference between a playoff team and a lottery team - heck, with continued production from Bishop, a money spot is not out of the question for the Teeyotes. 

HMs: Undrafted Marek Mazanec would have provided 16 points for a team in the KL, had he been picked up. Also Semyon Varlamov put up very respectable numbers for the Los Amjawors Kings Quebec Rordiques, considering he's an alleged felon. 

GM of the Month This is a subjective award based not so much on activity, but on a general sense of how the moves (or in some cases, the lack of moves) made during the month benefits the team both now and in the future. 
 
Congratulations to the Powder Rangers. In a vacuum, Hagelin for Stamkos is the worst trade in the history of fantasy hockey. However, the Powder Rangers managed to keep Stamkos (and I know the sharks smelled the blood in the water) and are somehow maintaining 3rd place.   

HMs: The G-Phil's Flyers, who shored up a serious goaltending problem by grabbing Jaroslav Halak. Also the Fylanders, who probably got an upgrade from Timonen in Boyle, and then managed to put Monahan into his non-scoring roster while he heals up. 

Sunday, December 1, 2013

KL Week in Review: Week 9

Here we are, 9 weeks in:


The top 4 remains the same as last week. The G-Phil's Flyers continue to pull away from the pack, with 41 points this week (and 164 points in the month of December). 

There is a bit of separation developing between the top 3 and the rest of the league - the 4th place Mackhawks, amazingly, are closer to 15th place then they are to 1st. The Mackhawks can't rest on their laurels though (that is for the Powder Rangers GM) - the Fylanders have moved into sole possession of 5th place and are 1 point back of a money spot.

Sticktaps to:
  • The Moilers, who have moved from 13th to a 3-way tie for 8th on the strength of a league-leading 44 point week
  • The Los Amjawors Kings, who have leapfrogged several teams to 9th place, from 14th
The Gary Bettman Boo to:
  • The Quebec Rordiques 15 point week.  Wow.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Transaction

Two related transactions to announce:
 
The Fylanders send Kimmo Timonen + a 2nd round pick in 2014 
To the Quebec Rordiques for Dan Boyle + a 7th round pick in 2014 + FA add/drop
 
Condition:  Boyle must OUTSCORE Timonen the rest of the way otherwise the 7th turns into a 4th.
 
Then the Fylanders:

Add Colton Orr and drop Sean Monahan
Add Sean Monahan and drop Brent Burns
Add Brent Burns and drop Colton Orr (using their newly acquired FA add/drop).

Conditional trades are pains in my ass and don't get commentary.


Monday, November 25, 2013

The Case for Goalie OTL/SOL Points

The authors of this post support a minor Keeper League rule change that would give goalies one point for overtime and shootout losses, similar to the way NHL teams are given the "loser point."  Before accusing us of being out to lunch, or insisting that sometimes goalies are simply shit out of luck, we encourage you to read our discussion below.

In addition to being closer to NHL rules, this change would also have the advantage of reducing the effect of chance. Shootouts are essentially random and the difference between zero points and two points [or occasionally five points if it's a 0-0 game] for your team should never be a Mason Raymond spin-o-rama).*

One concern that comes to mind is that loser points would result in slightly increased point totals for the goalie, who is already typically the highest scorer on about half the teams in our format. However, it will not be a lot of points. In 2011-12, the goalie with the most OTL/SOLs would have gained an additional 13 points. On average we would expect a five-to-10 point bump. Moreover, as Greg pointed out in a previous post, he and Eric are sitting pretty at the top despite having few points from their goaltenders. In fact we would argue that our league significantly undervalues goaltenders at just one slot out of 14. 

On that note, we have three other goalie suggestions for consideration:

1) We should consider having two goaltender slots on the scoring roster, thus expanding the scoring roster to 15 and the in-season roster to 23, but retaining the keeper roster at 10+2. 

2) Goalie goals should be worth more than one point. We propose somewhere in the neighbourhood of ten points. The goalie goal is so rare that it should be truly exciting for the GM who owns that goalie, although it shouldn't make or break a season.

3) A statistic which reflects save percentage and adds points for every x decimal points a goalie is above some save percentage value (perhaps .915 which Kelly Hrudey remarked on HNIC last night was the league average) per y amount of shots (perhaps 100).  This would be similar to the statistic that Fy came up with for his Auction Keeper League, and one we were particularly reminded of when we saw that Ben Bishop stopped 41 of 42 shots in his 1-0 OT loss to LA on Friday night.  Ben Scrivens followed that up with a 32 for 33 night for the same outcome last night against the Avalanche.  These great goaltending performances, we submit, should be rewarded in some form.  If there is interest in learning more about this stat, we can provide some sample calculations for some various possible values.

For reference, below is a list of KL goalies and their "loser points" as of November 24, 2013.

G-Phil's Fylers
Halak - 2
Rinne - 1

Powder Rangers
Anderson - 2
Harding - 2

Mackhawks
Quick - 0
Backstrom - 2

Milan Micahleks
Rask - 2

Fylanders
Fleury - 0
Thomas - 1

Winter Claassens
Hiller - 2
Bobrovsky - 2 

Dicklas Lidstroms
Lundqvist - 0
Ramo - 1

Schizzarks
Price - 2
Markkstrom - 3

Moilers
Luongo - 4
Crawford - 3

Teeyotes
Bishop - 1
Ward - 4

Joshfrey Krupuls
Lehtonen - 2 
Miller - 0

Los Amjawors Kings
Niemi - 5
Nabokov - 3

Patrik Stefans
Pavelec - 3
Schneider - 3

Quebec Rordiques
Holtby - 1
Varlamov - 0

Vanrooser Canicks
Howard - 6
Bernier - 1

Wilkes-Benham/Scranton Parkers
Smith - 4
Dubnyk - 1

[Commissioner edit:

Since this may come up for vote, the "loser point" will have a minor effect on the standings. Everyone stays where they are except the:
Patrik Stefans move up to 8th from 9th
Dicklas Lidstroms move down to 9th from 8th
Joshfrey Krupuls move down to 11th from 10th
The Los Amjawors Kings move up from 13th to 14th
The Quebec Rordiques move down to 14th from 13th

Thanks - G]

This has been a joint post by the GMs of the Milan Micahleks and the Patrik Stefans. We invite your comments.

*Since the initial draft of this post, we have made the following observations regarding Mason Raymond: he has actually picked up his scoring pace, currently at the 60 pt mark adjusted for 82 games; he is an unremarkable 1 for 4 in the shoutout this year; his spin-o-rama is no longer a legal move in the shootout. Additionally, we note that a goalie does indeed get awarded for a shutout in the event of a 1-0 shootout loss, BUT NOT for an overtime loss (as was the case for Bishop and Scrivens, mentioned in the sv pct stat suggestions).

Sunday, November 24, 2013

KL Week in Review: Week 8

The standings right now:


The G-Phil's Flyers have stormed back from a disappointing week, putting up 44 points. They have had the best week and best month to date by a significant margin. The upstart Micahleks, who have been jockeying with the Flyers for 1st place for the last two weeks, have fallen flat but remain within striking distance.

A few observations:
  • The 4th place Mackhawks are closer to 15th place than they are to 1st. They are also as close to being out of the playoffs as they are to 3rd place. This is going to be a wild ride to see who makes the playoffs. 
  • Tense days in the Aikenhead/Schissel household as both teams are continuing to  struggle. I had the Moilers in 2nd and the Shizzarks in 4th at the outset of the season.
  • As Commissioner I am supposed to remain unbiased, but I'm really rooting for the Patrik Stefans to make the playoffs after finishing in the worst possible positions the last 3 seasons (11th-13th-11th - too high for the best draft picks, but out of the playoffs). 
  • In the same vein I am really happy to see the Winter Claassics cementing themselves a position in the top 8 over the last few weeks. 
  • The best team this week (the Flyers) have more than three times as many points in that period as the worst team (The Vanrooser Canicks). The ratio approximates Ï€ and in fact the use of 44/14 (or 22/7) as a stand-in for pi dates back to both Greek (Archimedes) and Chinese (Zu Chongzhi) antiquity
  • Speaking of the Vanrooser Canicks, they can no longer use the absence of Kovalchuk as an excuse for sitting at the bottom of the standings - if Kovy was leading the league with 30 points, the Canicks would still be no higher than 15th place.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Transactions

A couple minor transactions to report:

Nov-15-2013
The Wilkes-Benham/Scranton Parkers add Danny Dekeyser and drop Matt Irwin

Nov-19-2013
The Teeyotes add Kris Russell and drop Marc Staal

Danny Dekeyser has 9 points in 21 games. Matt Irwin has been a benchwarmer for parts of this season, with 3 points in 14 games.  

Kris Russell as 11 points in 21 games. Marc Staal has 3 points in 20. 

These analyses don't always write themselves, but sometimes they totally do.

Monday, November 18, 2013

KL Week in Review: Week 7



As noted, I've changed the date of this update to reflect the end of competition on Saturday. Saturdays are typically the busiest days in the NHL, so it makes sense. 

Here are the standings as the morning after Saturday, November 17: 



As the Patrik Stefan's GM pointed out, he was in 5th place after Friday's contests. Funnily, the day he posted his video he was actually back down to 8th, as above. 

What this illustrates is not so much the Stefan's acumen as a GM, but how tight this league remains, especially though the middle. A mere 14 points separate 10th and 4th place, or put another way, a non-playoff team with a money spot. As the Micahleks have shown, a good week (41 points) coupled with a poor week by a competitor (the G-Phil's Flyers 28 points) can result in big leaps up (or down) the board. 

Worst week: The Shizzarks and the Vanrooser Canicks, both with 17. 
Best week: The Milan Micahleks, with 41 points.
League average: 27.75. 

Does anyone else see the Teeyotes sitting in 5th right now?

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Back in the mix


Granted, I had a much anticipated set-back last night with only 1 point in 5 man games, but the Patrik Stefans have steadily climbed their way from the bottom of the pack back a playoff spot over the last 3 weeks.  There was much to celebrate as I checked the standings yesterday morning to find myself in 5th!

Saturday, November 16, 2013

(Belated) 2013 Keeper League Awards Ceremony!

I know, its a bit late and the new season is upon us, but in fairness, last season was a shit-show. It is also kind of fun to look at how some of these award-winners are faring thus far into our new season. 

Thanks to the other members of the Awards Committee (Past-Commissioner and Deputy Commissioner) for your assistance in putting your thoughts together on this like, months ago.

So without further ado, here are the award winners for the 2013 season!


Calder: 
The best fantasy player drafted for the first time in the Keeper League.
This year's trophy goes to Braden Holtby and the team that drafted him, the Powder Rangers. Holtby put up 60 points as a goaltender, which was good for 2nd in the league (behind only Antti Niemi's 61). 

HM: The Mackhawks' Justin Schultz, with 27 pts - not only was that good for 12th in the league in defensive scoring, but put him within 4 points of the rookie scoring lead (as a defenceman).


Doug Wilson:  
Awarded to the most active GM.
In perhaps the least surprising result in this entire ceremony, Fy Virani wins this one by a landslide, with 15 discrete transactions entered. 

I have to share an email I got that describes, perfectly and hilariously, the stages Fy's trading partners go through (I'll leave it anonymous but if the author wants to take credit, step forward):

1. Denial ("No, I won't even consider it."); 
2. Anger ("How can he insult me with an offer like that?"); 
3. Bargaining ("He's right, swapping my 9th for his 8th does make this fair."); 
4. Depression ("OMG everyone is laughing at me. I suck at GMing"); 
5. Acceptance ("Write it off. Fy got me this time, but next year will be different!")

HM: The Columbus Blue Jaworskis (before their relocation to sunnier climes) were very busy as well, with 9 entered transactions. 



Ken Holland:  
Best draft pick.
This one is was very hard as there were a LOT of candidates and the Awards Committee struggled mightily. At the end of the day:

The Teeyotes with Evgeni Nabokov (drafted in the 10th round, 159th overall). Nabokov earned 59 points for the Teeyotes, good for the 3rd best goalie in this format.

HMs: Many, but of note, the G-Phil's Flyers got 211 points out of players drafted between 149th and 195th overall. The Mackhawks snagged Brendan Gallagher 194th overall and got 28 points out of him. Relatedly, the Powder Rangers drafted Lars Eller in 189th, earning 30 points. The Powder Rangers actually ended up dropping Eller, but it doesn't change the fact that the selection itself was inspired.


Rick DiPietro
Worst draft pick.
No competition - Chris Krieder, chosen 6th overall by the Winter Claassics. Krieder earned three points in his 2013 campaign. Hilariously chosen AGAIN by the Claassics at the most recent draft, it is worth pointing out that he has 10 points in 11 games so far.   

HMs: None.




George McPhee:  
Best Free Agent signing.
Jiri Tlusty may be the most added/dropped player in the league, but in 2012, the Patrik Stefans dumped Craig Smith for him, earning 18 points in the process. 

HMs:  Milan Micahleks' Jonathan Blum for Paul Martin (a difference of 13 points).


Glen Sather:  
Worst free agent signing.
There was no one even close - the Vanrooser Canicks used their first FA add/drop to dump Toffoli for Kovalev. Then they used their last FA add/drop to dump Kovalev and add Toffoli. 
HM: Hard not to mention the Powder Rangers, who picked up Damien Brunner (26 points) and dropped Lars Eller (30 points). As noted by the Powder Rangers GM, if he had have dropped Latendresse instead of Eller, he would have won last year. Oops.


Mike Milbury:  
Biggest fleecing.
On February 6, 2013, the Fylanders sent Nikita Nikitin and a 6th round draft pick to the Columbus Blue Jaworskis for Dion Phaneuf and a 9th round pick. Phaneuf, a one-time 60 point defenceman, coming off a 44 point season and scoring at a similar pace at the time, in exchange for Nikita "healthy scratch" Nikitin. The return - a 3 round bump at the draft - is statistically negligible.Welcome to the big leagues, rookie. 


GM of the Year
 
The G-Phil's Flyers. As noted above, Bobrovsky, Boyes, Conacher, Eakin, Brouwer were all late-round steals that produced all season-long. There was no panic moves after a season-ending injury to Karlsson and slow starts with Malkin and Ovechkin, thought the vultures were indeed circling. Though this team probably had the best protected roster to start the season, a combination of very good drafting and patience won the Flyers their first championship. 


HMs: The Powder Rangers exceeded expectations and continued to improve (8th-5th-2nd). Keepers coming into this season included five forwards that we probably all considered borderline keepers (of those guys, Kunitz has proven himself a fantasy powerhouse and Fleischmann and Ryder also made the top six). His Holtby gamble paid off. Wrote an impassioned concession speech.


The Moilers - Showed steady improvement - 10th to 6th to 3rd. Actually made one trade this year, Luongo for Crawford, but otherwise steadfastly sticks by her men. 


The Fylanders continue to get excellent value in trades, and are consistently a threat. The Fylanders GM takes the opposite approach to the league than the Moilers, in that their team rarely looks anything like the team that starts the season.