Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Dobber's Projections 2014-15

I did this last year and it was a lot of fun. 

In short, I took our draft day rosters and compared them to Dobber's projected point totals - not because Dobber is infallible (he is not - see my 4th overall pick of Nik Kulemin in 2012), but because his draft guide happens to come in spreadsheet. 

Last Year
First, a review of last year's results.  Many projections were very accurate - a couple were way off, though it is important to consider how many trades/injuries/etc. occur throughout the year. I've bolded each of the projections that were within 2 spots.




Actual


Projected


+/-
G-Phil's Flyers
1
1
0
Milan Micahleks
2
3
+1
Fylanders
3
9
+6
Mackhawks
4
10
+6
Powder Rangers
5
7
+2
Winter Claassics
6
6
0
Teeyotes
7 12 +5
Joshfrey Krupuls
8
8
0
Moilers 9 2 -7
Dicklas Lidstroms
10 5 -5
Los Samjawors Kings 11 15 +4
Patrik Stefans
12
13
+1
Schizzarks 13 4 -9
WBS Parkers
14
14
0
Vanrooser Canicks
15
16
+1
Quebec Rordiques 16 11 -5

Upcoming Year
This year, like last year, I took the top 9/4/1 projected points from each position and came up with the following projection.

 Like last year the results are interesting, with a few surprises:



1
  G-Phil's Flyers
832
2
  Joshfrey Krupuls
816
3
  Dicklas Lidstroms
810
4
  Magnus Faajarvis
795
5
  Milan Micahleks
786
6
  Los Amjawors Kings
786
7
  Mackhawks
782
8
  Moilers
779
9
  Winter Claassics
766
10
  Powder Rangers
760
11
  Schizzarks
760
12
  Patrik Stefans
755
13
  WBS Parkers
723
14
  Vanrooser Canicks
720
15
  Teeyotes
707
16
  Quebec Rordiques
695

The Flyers are the favourites to repeat. Hilariously, the Patrik Stefans are the favourites to end up in 12th place again.

Of note, the tumble of the Teeyotes. They have an underwhelming group of defencemen, lead by Jason Garrison with a projected 37 points, and a forward group that gets pretty sparse after the top few. Noted family friend Alex Killorn is projected to make the Teeyotes roster - that is not a credit to his talent (sorry pal). 


In another unexpectedly low result - the Powder Rangers! Two years removed from a 2nd place finish, and 1 year removed from a season-ruining injury to Stamkos, surely the Rangers would be back in the playoffs? Not with Ryan Miller they won't. The team features a projected above-average defence and offense group, but with a measley 58 points in the net, the Rangers may be in trouble.

On the sunnier side, the Joshfrey Krupuls and Dicklas Lidstroms look poised to challenge for top spot - they boast the #1 and #2 best projected offenses in the league, roughly average defences and average to above-average goaltending.

Anyone else notice the Los Amjawors Kings creeping up the standings each year?


General observations:
Top 4 Total Defence Points
League Average: 166.75 points
Best: G-Phil's Flyers at 199. Second, Claassics at 186 (Subban and a bounce-back from Green). Third, the Magnus Faajarvis at 181.
Worst: Teeyotes with 132. Rordiques, Parkers and sort of surprisingly, the Mackhawks all with 160 or fewer D points. 

Top 9 Total Offence Points
League Average: 520.628 points
Best: The Joshfrey Krupuls, with 574 points. The Dicklas Lidstroms and G-Phil's Flyers are a step behind at 558 and 556 respectively. Then another big jump to the Kings, Mackhawks and Moilers at 542, 541 and 540.
Worst: The Rordiques, with 458. The Vanrooser Canicks with 479 bridge the gap to the Teeyotes, at 495. 

Goaltending
The best projected goaltender belongs to the Milan Micahleks with 95 projected points. They need it - they are, according to this projection, literally the most average team in the KL. Their 520 forward points and 171 defensive points are just about the closest the the league average as you can get. 

This projects a grim year in net for the the WBS Parkers, who might expect 67 points - but at least that is better than the Powder Ranger's Ryan Miller's 58, the lowest projected total of all goaltenders. 

Saturday, October 4, 2014

2014 Awards!

In keeping with traditions established by the NHL, the Professional Keeper League Writers Association have voted  in secretive, opaque and entirely unaccountable fashion to determine the winners of this year's awards.

Congratulations to all winners.


Calder: 
The best fantasy player drafted for the first time in the Keeper League.
This year's winner is a tie between the Los Amjawors Kings and the Wilkes-Benham/Scranton Parkers. They drafted Ben Bishop and Nathan Mackinnon respectively. Ben Bishop's 91 points made him one of the most productive goaltenders in the entire Keeper League, while Nathan Mackinnon breached 60 points as a rookie.

HM: The G-Phil's Flyers picked Andrej Sekera, who led all previously undrafted defencemen with 44 points, good for 15th in defensive scoring in the NHL. Also, I guess we give credit, by default, to the Los Amjawors Kings for picking Johnathan Drouin, who despite not getting a single point is a damn fine hockey player. 
Doug Wilson:  
Awarded to the most active GM.
In a SHOCKING development, the most active team was the Patrik Stefans, with 10 entries in the trade ledger.

 
HM:The Fylanders, obviously and unsurprisingly.



Ken Holland:  
Best draft pick.
Like most years, this award is one that generated significant debate amongst the members of the PKLWA. Ultimately, Mark Giordano (7th round, Mackhawks) narrowly edged Evgeni Kuznetzov (9th round, Dicklas Lidstroms) for the award. Kuznetzov is very probably going to be a hell of a hockey player, but it is hard to argue with getting a top 10 defenceman in the late rounds.

HMs: Many, but Mats Zuccarello was taken 143rd overall by the Moilers, producing a stunning 59 points. Gustav Nyquist was taken by the Schizzarks 108th overall with 48 points. The G-Phil's Flyers probably won the Krusell Cup on the strength of 97th overall selection Andrej Sekera's 44 points.
 
Rick DiPietro
Worst draft pick.
Gudbranson and it ain't even close. The Los Amjawors King's picked him 35th overall and got 9 points out of that asshole. At the time no one thought it was a that bad of a pick, but one of the advantages to reviewing this in hindsight is exactly that - hindsight. For the record, Ryan McDonagh was available (taken 4 spots later) and had 43 points. 

HMs: None. I mean, Marty Erat was really pretty bad, but not Gudbranson bad.


George McPhee:  
Best Free Agent signing.
Sometimes in life there are beautiful moments of synchronicity, and I present to you a wonderfully complementary pair of awards. 

Tied for the best free agent signing: The Milan Micahleks dropping Matt Frattin for Charlie Coyle, and the Mackhawks dropping Pascal Dupuis for Wayne Simmonds. Both GMs improved their teams with the careful and judicious use of their precious free agent add/drop slots...


Glen Sather:  
Worst free agent signing.
... unlike the Quebec Rordiques and the Matthawks, who respectively dropped Charlie Coyle for Chris Higgins, and Wayne Simmonds for fucking Tommy Wingels. The only reason the George McPhee winners were able to acquire the players they did was because of these decisions.

Mike Milbury:  
Biggest fleecing.
Surprisingly, there was actually not a clear-cut winner this year. After a great deal of debate (which is a credit to the league), the best the PKLWA could come up with is a trade which saw the Moilers send Kris Letang, Alex Edler, Max Domi and a 2014 7th round pick to the Patrik Stefans for Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Marc Arcobello, and Dmitri Orlov. The trade is really more a credit to the Patrik Stefans than it is an indictment of the Moilers, who had no way of knowing that Letang was going to bounce right back from a frigging stroke.


Dave Nonis:  
The most useless transaction.

This is a new award category, given to the GMs who generated the most useless, irrelevant transaction over the course of the season. 
On December 15, 2013, the Los Samjawors Kings sent Ryan Malone + 2014 5th round draft pick to the Quebec Rordiques for Chris Higgins. Two non-keeper players trading spaces on two non-playoff teams. If the trade never happened, both teams would have ended up in the exact same place. Entering trades takes several minutes, and this is one chunk of time the administration team will never get back.
HM: Free agent add/drop of Marc Staal for Kris Russell. Really, Teeyotes?

GM of the Year
In spite of the above, the 2013-14 GM of the year is the Teeyotes on the strength of a sound draft, and a couple shrewd moves that will serve the team well for years to come. They saw value in Ben Bishop, who, as noted above, was one of the best goaltenders in the league, giving up Evgeni Nabokov (and Brent Seabrook for Tyler Myers). As well, they managed to swap aging Henrik Zetterberg for Paul Stastny, who who looks to feature on their scoring roster for the next decade. Sometimes it isn't the quantity of moves, but the quality that earns this award. Congratulations Teeyotes!

HMs: The Winter Claassics. On the trade front it was a quiet year, but a series of clever draft selections and moves have moved the Claassics firmly out of the basement and into the top half of the league. 

Perpetual GM of the Year winner/runner-up, the Fylanders have the best overall record in the league and can always be counted on to be active throughout the year, making good moves that improve their team.

The Mackhawks also deserve recognition for a money finish and two consecutive playoff pool wins.

2013 Draft success

Hey all,

Out of curiousity (read: vanity) I wanted to see how successful our 2013 drafts were, and I had an inkling mine was pretty good. I can't say I wasn't happy to find the results, though it's only cold consolation for having come 8th in the league last year.

Points from the 2013 draft in 2013-2014

1. Krupuls 443
2. Teeyotes 388
3. Claassics 384
4. Flyers 370
5. Mackhawks 367
6. Fylanders 362
7. Stefans 352
8. Micahleks 344
9. Moilers 323
10. Lidstroms 318
11. Rangers 307
12. Parkers 306
13. Rordiques 305
14. Kings 279
15. Canicks 238
16. Schizzarks 221

Now, of course, GMs have different strategies and draft needs from year to year, and a total-points-from-draftees score will be lowered considerably if you stash a hot prospect like, say, Jonathan Drouin (Samjawors Kings) who nabs you a big fat donut in his "first year" in the NHL.

I can't say that I'm surprised the Schizzarks (with their penchant for drafting obscure prospects and highly rating players based on their potential inclusion on "all-name" teams) came in last. :)

If you weren't drafting a potential starting goalie with one of your early round picks then your draft points would obviously be lower as goalies have higher average point totals. Also, if you traded away early round picks and drafted later you might have lower points. Though we do know that the points per round average after the first round is fairly consistent. Lots of value still left in that 7th round apparently. Again, this is likely due to hot prospects going in early rounds who don't produce high points right away while staid and true veterans able to consistently post 35+ points are going in later rounds.

In the end, you only need 9 forwards, 4 D, and a goalie to rank in this league, so it's worth taking some lottery tickets on young unknowns from the Baltic nether regions. But finding some 45 point scorers and a solid 4th D-man is also essential, as the Flyers proved out in their run to the championship last year (Andrej Sekera, seriously?).

Best of luck as we roll up on another great year,
Lord Krusell

Thursday, March 27, 2014

The Best Draft Picks of 2013

One of the things I enjoy most about fantasy hockey is looking back at the draft to find the best and worst picks. Randomness or luck plays a huge role in the outcome, and sometimes objectively good decisions lead to bad outcomes, and vice versa. Moreover, different GMs will have different objectives, so picks can't always be compared straight across. Nonetheless, a great pick, even in hindsight, is still a great pick. Here I present my list of the top ten twelve draft picks of 2013, and a few runner ups. I based this list on the following criteria:

1. Production this year (especially if drafting team made the playoffs).
2. Keepability - Likelihood of being a life-long keeper and productive player going forward (includes "hype" bonus).
3. The steal factor - how many times did everyone pass on the guy.

This was actually more difficult than I thought, especially the final ordering. Without further ado, the list, counting down from 12 to one:

12. Nathan MacKinnon, WBS Parkers. Round 1, 1st overall.
In hindsight, MacKinnon seems like the only real choice for first overall. But at the time, I know I was thinking Drouin might have a better year, and there was talk of Kadri as well. And Matt felt it should have been Adam Henrique. Rome deserves credit for making the right choice and not thinking he's smarter than Roy/Sakic.  

11. Jaden Schwartz, Los Amjawors Kings. Round 4, 51st overall. 
Schwartz has 52 points and is third on the Blues in shots. The 21 year-old has already established himself as Sam's best player not named Crosby or Niemi, and should be a solid complimentary piece for years to come.

10. Tyler Johnson, Teeyotes. Round 9, 135th overall. 
With 47 points, Johnson is third in rookie scoring, making this a great pick. But Tampa Bay has another rookie, Ondrej Palat, who is second in rookie scoring. Making this a terrible pick. 

9. Torey Krug, Patrik Stefans. Round 4, 63rd overall.
With 37 points, 5'9" Bruin Torey Krug stands head-and-shoulders above all other rookie blueliners. 

8. Andrej Sekera, G-Phil's Flyers. Round 6, 97th overall.
Sekera's 44 points came out of absolutely nowhere, unless you ask Greg. The Slovak is 9th among defencemen in scoring, but somehow probably not a keeper on Greg's team (over Karlsson, Kronwall and Shattenkirk, all in the top 15... wow.) 

7. Kyle Okposo, Joshfrey Krupuls. Round 1, seventh overall.
A shamed-then-revered pick, Okposo has finally become a legitimate fantasy player. 69 points is tops among all drafted skaters. What prevents this pick from being ranked higher is that at seventh overall, there was really only one guy picked ahead of Okposo that shouldn't have been (that guy being Chris Stewart). 

6. Ryan Johansen, Joshfrey Krupuls. Round 4, 55th overall. 
54 points in 72 games, after 12 in 42 last year. The 21-year-old 225 lb centre is the present and future of Columbus. Hype bonus: high.

5. Alexander Steen, Dicklas Lidstroms. Round 2, 25th overall. 
Steen has 31 goals and 57 points in 61 games, the 2nd-highest point-per-game pace of all drafted skaters. This is the year Steen finally transitioned from non-keeper to permanent fixture.

4. Ben Bishop, Los Amjawors Kings. Round 9, 133rd overall.
The eighth goalie off the board (after Karri Ramo?!), Bishop was drafted as Antti Niemi's backup before being traded to the Teeyotes, filling a massive hole in Teehan's roster and carrying him into the playoffs. Today Bishop has 85 points to Niemi's 86, the top two goalies in our format. Only reason he's not higher is he's a goalie, and the best goalie drafted will pretty much always outscore the best skater drafted.

3. Gustav Nyquist, Schizzarks. Seventh round, 108th overall. 
Nyquist gets 1000 hype bonus points after scoring 20 goals over his last 24 games. He loses points because a) his shooting percentage is an unsustainable 19.2%; b) his opportunity was due to major injuries to Red Wings regulars; and c) he's a Red Wing not named Datsyuk or Zetterberg, so I'm still not 100% sure he won't start next season in the AHL. 

2. Ryan McDonagh, Joshfrey Krupuls. Round 3, 39th overall. McDonagh has shown real offensive upside this season, currently sitting fifth among blueliners with 14 goals and 11th with 43 points. The 24-year-old was the 10th defenceman off the board and quickly established himself as the Krupuls' badly-needed #1 keeper dman.

1. Mark Giordano, Mackhawks. Round 7, 107th overall. 
Giordano's 43 points in 55 games, prorated, is second only to Erik Karlsson. That's pretty much what everyone thought heading into the year, right? The big three: Karlsson, Letang, Giordano? The Mackhawks' best defenceman, Giordano, along with other savvy veteran picks like Alfredsson, Doan, Nielsen, Zidlicky and MacArthur, have the Mackhawks headed for a surprising top-four finish.


Honourable Mentions
  • Tomas Hertl, WBS Parkers. Round 6, 90th overall. 25 points in 35 games.
  • Sean Monahan, Fylanders. Round 4, 49th overall. 19 goals as a rookie.
  • Mats Zuccarello, Moilers. 143rd overall. 50 in 69.
  • Semyon Varlamov, Quebec Rordiques - 134th overall, right after Ben Bishop (above). 76 points.
  • Jonas Hiller, Winter Claassics. 82nd overall. 75 points.
  • Tyson Barrie, Joshfrey Krupuls. 71st overall. 32 points for 2nd-year dman.
  • All savvy veteran picks of the Mackhawks (see above). 

Did I miss anybody? Anybody ranked too high or too low? Is Mark Giordano for real?

For anyone keeping track, J-Kru had three picks in the top seven. Pretty good draft. 

Monday, March 24, 2014

KL Week in Review: Week 26

Here's how things sit on the home stretch, with about a dozen games remaining:



There are some interesting races shaping up:

The Money Shot Race
  • Obviously, the top 3 remain interesting (to the top 3 anyways). The Flyers have had a big week and clawed back into 1st place, but this is a weird league and shit happens. A late season surge by any one of these teams could mean a new champion
The Charity Case Race
  • The Mackhawks have had the best week in the entire KL and have consolidated their hold on 4th place. Nothing is safe, however, and the Teeyotes/Classsics are still within striking distance. I would still love to hear from any of MattMack, Teehan or Claassen with respect to their chosen charities so I can figure out who to root for. 
  • Side note: No team in the KL has as many points as the Mackhawks in March. Probably a long shot but they cannot be discounted to actually end up in the top 3. 
The Playoff Bubble Race
  • The Krupuls and Rangers (against all odds, having lost Stamkos for the season) are probably good bets to make the playoffs, but 23 points is far from a safe lead in this league, even this late in the season. The Los Amjawors Kings' 27 points last week is probably a disappointing result as a Moiler-esque 38 points would have put them within 12 points. 
  • The Moilers aforementioned 38 point week is an excellent result and could position them to make things interesting down the stretch.
The Toronto Maple Leafs of the 2000s Race
  • The Lidstroms and Patrik Stefans probably had higher hopes for this year. Instead they are probably going to end up competing for the worst possible finish - just out of reach of the playoffs but not a comparatively poor draft position.
With the 1st Overall Pick in the 2014 Draft, the _______ Are Pleased to Select.... Race
  •  Let's be reality here, this is probably the Rordique's to lose - and a perfect position for a new GM taking over a struggling franchise to find themselves in. This will be a chance for our newest GM to show us what he's really made of. 
  • That leaves the WBS Parkers, the Schizzarks and the Vanrooser Canicks all competing for the silver medal - the 2nd overall pick. With a mere 8 points separating 3 teams (14 if you want to include the Stefans in this group) the race for second worst team in the KL might actually end up being the most interesting one to watch.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Connor McDavid and the Draft Lottery


Draft lotteries are intended to discourage teams from tanking. While there is literature out there suggesting lotteries fail to achieve this objective, I'm less interested in discouraging tanking (we have no "on-ice product" to worry about, so once a GM decides their season is over (for the Patrik Stefans, never), they can do whatever they want), and more interested in adding an event that would only increase the excitement level of the KL.

Earlier this season we had a thread going about instituting a draft lottery (see email thread titled "Keeper League 2013-13 - Draft day!"). There was a lot of support for the idea, and then we started talking about odds and whether we should mimic the NHL's system, and then suddenly the season was upon us and the discourse fizzled. Also Romany said he didn't want it implemented for 2014 as he considered himself likely to finish last (Rory may have something to say about that). 

With Connor McDavid being draft eligible in 2015 and the Milan Micahleks, for one, already hearing fans encouraging the team to #FadeForMcDavid or #BeAwfulForEichel, it is important that we settle this matter before the 2014-15 season begins. (I mean, we could just impose it immediately (by majority vote), but we don't like to ruffle feathers - after all, we have so much at stake.) 

In the early days of the NHL draft, one team would win and move up, to a maximum of four places. The current CBA was amended to allow all non-playoff teams a shot at selecting first overall, weighted according to regular season finish. Today, the NHL is considering using a lottery to determine the top three, or even the top five selections. They are also considering a rolling five-year formula for ranking the non-playoff teams. 

There are many ways to structure a draft, with or without a lottery. For example, I'm starting to love this NBA wheel idea discussed in this Grantland article.

If we decide to implement a lottery, it could happen live at the start of the draft (meaning all the non-playoff teams get to salivate over the first round pick leading up to the draft), or ahead of time to allow more certainty in planning. The NHL, at present, randomly draws numbered balls to determine the order well in advance. 

NHL Probabilities
1st: 25%
2nd: 18.8%
3rd: 14.2%
4th: 10.7%
5th: 8.1%
6th: 6.2%
7th: 4.7%
8th: 3.6%
9th: 2.7%
10th: 2.1%
11th: 1.5%
12th: 1.1%
13th: 0.8%
14th: 0.5%

Proposed KL Probabilities
1st: 32% (note: 1st is the 16th-place regular season finisher)
2nd: 22%
3rd: 15%
4th: 11%
5th: 8%
6th: 6%
7th: 4%
8th: 2%

This is just to give an idea of what the odds might look like. When I asked Stefan to crunch the numbers to give us odds perfectly analogous to the NHL, I didn't like the result (39% chance of the first pick not moving). But the specifics could be hammered out, say, this summer by a committee of interested GMs who would make a recommendation to the Commissioner. 

Ultimately a draft lottery (or other draft changes) is another thing I'd like to see the next Commissioner consider over the summer (I've been keeping a list), and implement for the 2015 draft, before the 2014-15 season begins. 

Speaking of the next Commissioner, I imagine Greg will be making a formal announcement about voting soon. 

All ideas expressed herein are solely the author's and do not represent the views of the Commissioner, the Deputy Commissioner, or the Keeper League (tm).

Positional points update

It was early November when #PS1 gave us a graphic showing each team's points from forwards, defencemen and goaltenders. Here is the updated graph, as of games played March 17, 2014.

Orange = goalies; red = defence; blue = forwards


Note the Y-axis begins at 300, to allow us to zoom in on the real differences between rosters.

A few observations:

1. Even if they didn't have a goalie, G-Phil's Flyers would make the playoffs.

2. 400 points from forwards seems to be the cut-off: if you're not getting that baseline, you're not making the playoffs. By the end of the season, it will probably be 450, with the best teams surpassing 500.

3. I don't think this adds or takes away much from Stefan's more in-depth analysis from November. He mentioned that there are many ways to skin a cat. The Fylanders and Milan Micahleks are built the same way: elite forwards, elite goaltending, mediocre defence. G-Phil's Flyers have vastly superior defence, but mediocre forwards and goaltending. If a team could have elite forwards and elite defence, I think that team would be untouchable, regardless of their goaltending situation. On the other hand, the Mackhawks are right there with the Fylanders' and Micahleks' forwards and defence, but Jonathan Quick's off year is keeping them out of the upper echelon.

4. The Schizzarks' and Patrik Stefans' forwards have been awful this year (for various reasons but particularly injuries) - bad enough to drag down perfectly good defences. Both GMs feel strongly that next year will be different.

5. Because we only score four defencemen, a great player can hide an otherwise rotten core. Case in point: the Schizzarks' Keith Yandle has 40% of their defence points.



Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Consolidated Trade Post

Trade deadline day started with a whimper and ended with a bang. 

A summary of trades, with my quickie thoughts. I encourage all GMs to chime in on these trades, especially those involved. Love hearing motives.

Trade: The Dicklas Lidstroms send Boone Jenner and Patrick Wiercioch to the Schizzarks for Jay Bouwmeester and David Booth.
Quickie Analysis: Schizzarks have an embarrassment of riches on D, and J-Bo could walk for nothing this summer. The get a promising forward in exchange that will be kept as a prospect this summer.
Trade: The G-Phil's Flyers send a 2014 4th round draft pick to the Patrik Stefans for a 2014 6th round draft pick (previously the Flyers) and a FA add/drop.

Pickup: The G-Phil's Flyers drop Pekka Rinne for Darcy Kuemper. The G-Phil's Flyers drop Jaroslav Halak for Pekka Rinne.

Pickup: The Dicklas Lidstroms drop Kari Ramo for Jaroslav Halak.
Quickie Analysis: The Flyers needed an upgrade in goal with Halak languishing in Buffalo. The cheapest option ended up being putting Rinne back on the scoring roster, who even on one leg will get more wins than Halak. The Patrick Stefans got a modest pick upgrade for the remaining FA add/drop, and the Lidstroms scooped an upgrade on Ramo as, I guess, free, modest trade bait for this summer.
Commissioners post-Halak trade edit: OMG FML. 
Trade: The Patrick Stefans send Torey Krug and David Clarkson to the Vanrooser Canicks for Jake Muzzin and Marcus Johansson.
Quickie Analysis: Really Krug for Johansson. Interesting to see two GMs essentially put different keeper values on an offensively gifted defenceman, but the Stefans have not been shy about the value they put on using up keeper slots for d-men (hint: not much).
Trade: The Dicklas Lidstroms send Jakob Voracek and a 2014 7th round draft pick to the Vanrooser Canicks for Kyle Turris and a 2014 4th round draft pick.
Quickie Analysis: Voracek is consistent, earning between 46 and 50 points in each of his last 3 of this last 4 seasons. Last season, however, he was a PPG player. He is on pace for 58 points this year, which is up on his average, down on his previous year.  Turris on the other hand is a 20ish point player in the midst of a breakout season. Only time will tell how this plays out.
Trade: The Fylanders send Carl Soderberg and their 2014 4th round draft pick to the Patrik Stefans for Nathan Horton and their 2014 7th round draft pick.
Quickie Analysis: Not much to say here - this is simply a bet by the Fylanders that Horton will score more points in the final 20 games than Soderberg.  The Stefans, on the other hand, need consistency, not dudes who keep missing a ton of time.
Trade: The Vanrooser Canicks send Alex Goligoski to the Quebec Rordiques for David Rundblad and a 2014 3rd round draftpick.
Quickie Analysis: First Krug, then Rundblad - the Canicks' plan to get young D with upside in place for the future is pretty clear (or if they don't see the upside on Rundblad, then its a free 3rd round pick). The Rordiques, on the other hand, get much-needed veteran defensive help that will help them in coming years.