Sunday, December 18, 2011

Zajac to the Powder Rangers

December 18, 2011

The Preydators averted a bidding war on Travis Zajac by quickly dealing him to the Powder Rangers for injured Ville Leino and Christian "On pace for 38 without the Sedins" Ehrhoff. The Preydators also threw in defenceman Alex "Blue chip 21 year-old 4th overall pick in 2008 on an up-and-coming team" Pietrangelo.

Analysis:
Read between the lines.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Witless Protection, Part I

You let that guy go? What were you thinking?

Before you read this post, take off your corrective lenses - hindsight is 20/20. Now let’s take a look back at the top five - wait, six - players that should have been kept back in September when we submitted our protected rosters, but instead were cut like Ryan Murphy from the World Junior roster (huge mistake).

To be fair, most of these guys are putting up unprecedented career numbers, and you would have been mercilessly mocked for keeping them. Now you’re getting mercilessly mocked for dropping them, as if you didn’t feel bad enough already for missing out on the points. 

6. Joffrey Lupul - Teeyotes
Lupul had flashes of brilliance in 07-08 with 46 points in 56 games for the Flyers, but he appeared to be trending in the opposite direction. With 34 points this year he has already surpassed the level many projected for him, and sits 3rd overall in scoring. I don’t want to belabour the point because everyone knows it, but still, 3rd overall in scoring! AT let this home team gem slip through the cracks, opting instead for the promise of Patrice Bergeron, who currently has the same amount of points as Marc-Andre Bergeron. To be fair, nobody saw this coming, not even Fy who waited until the 101st pick to select Lupul.

5. Brian Campbell - Moilers
Second among defencemen with 24 points in 31 games, Campbell has been reborn in Florida. But you can’t fault the Moilers for keeping John Carlson and Kris Letang, tenth and first in points per game among defencemen. You could argue she should have him over forward Bryan Little, but even he has 20 points in 30 games. The Dicklas Lidstroms took Campbell in the first round.

4. Dmitry Kulikov - Joshfrey Krupuls
With 20 points in 30 games, Kulikov is good for 7th among defencemen. I’m actually going to pull a quote from JK here, from back in September: “Kulikov may, and I say that strongly, have some upside to his 26 points last year, but it is completely an unknown at this point -- and it is still a long way to go to get into the 38+ that either Pitkanen or Wideman can be expected to grab.” Kulikov is tied with Wideman and beating Pitkanen. Most importantly, the 21 year-old former first round draft pick looks to be a franchise cornerstone for the Patrik Stefans, who somehow stole him in the 7th round, 72nd overall.

 3. Stephen Weiss - Joshfrey Krupuls
Stephen Weiss has 31 points in 31 games. Another Joshfrey Krupuls reject, Weiss was jettisoned after a disappointing 49-point performance last year. However, he had 60 and 61 in the two years prior, and everyone in the world except JK knew Florida was going to be awesome this year and a line of middling players would turn into stars. Regardless, Weiss probably should have been kept over Jordan Staal, who has never cracked 50 points (30 in 42 last year was good, but there were unusual circumstances in Pittsburgh last year with Crosby and Malkin also missing most of the season). The Preydators selected Weiss in the 3rd round this year.

2. Jason Pominville - Teeyotes
Jason Pominville sits just behind Joffrey Lupul with 32 points in 30 games. How good could the Teeyotes be right now?! This is worse than Lupul because it was more foreseeable: the Dicklas Lidstroms eagerly snatched Pominville up in the first round, 7th overall. Pominville is just three years removed from an 80 point season, although his point totals have been shrinking since and I don’t think he will maintain this pace. Still, come on AT.

1. Johan Franzen - Patrik Stefans
The Mule is right on a point per game pace through 29 games. Granted, Franzen has never been a point per game player before, but his last two seasons saw him score 55 and 59 points, so he was a safe bet to at least repeat those numbers. The Mackhawks smartly selected him in the first round this year. What makes SW's choice, in my opinion, the worst, is not Johan the Barbarian’s greatness so much as it is the terribleness of the player SW thought would be better than Franzen: Ville Leino. That is not a typo. Leino has ten points this season. Time to recalibrate the projection machine.

Honourable mention: Kris Versteeg - Preydators
Versteeg is another Florida Panther that continues to shock. With 33 points in 30 games, he is one of about 20 players above a point per game pace this year. The Preydators let Versteeg go, pretending not to know how awesome he was, even fake shit-talking him. Then LP drafted him with the 121st pick. This may be the smartest move in the history of the KL. Hence, Versteeg does not make the list.

Any glaring omissions?

Next post: The top five players that should have been chucked but weren’t, other than Ville Leino and Joni Pitkanen. This is where it gets mean.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Another Trade

November 20, 2011

This morning, the Milan Micahleks traded Gabriel Landeskog, Cam Fowler and a 2012 3rd round pick to the Winter Claassics for Patrick Marleau and Kyle Quincey.

Analysis: According to the Milan Michalek's GM, "this trade was a difficult decision for our organization, but we knew we had to give value to get value." He denied allegations that the Fowler trade was intended as a wake-up call for teammate Ryan Getzlaf. Coming over in Landeskog's slot is Marleau, "a keeper without hesitation." Marleau went in the 3rd round of the inaugural KL draft last year. He's been over a point-per-game in three of his last five seasons, and he's the model of reliability, missing, on average, just two games a year over his 13-year career. At 32, he still has a few good seasons left on a top team. Quincey is not a keeper on this roster but he's having a great season and should fill the 4th d-man slot nicely.

The Winter Claassics get younger, faster, and sexier. The jury is still out on whether 2nd overall pick Landeskog is "elite" enough to be a superstar. Fowler is either experiencing a sophomore slump or it looks like he is because his whole team is in a protracted slump. But both players have lots of upside: Landeskog is 4th in the league in shots, for example. We will re-examine this trade in a few years and there will be a clear winner - and that winner will likely be Claassen.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Breaking: Blockbuster Trade

Our first in-season trade just transpired. It took nearly a week of protracted negotiations, some name-calling and some blackmailing with compromising photos, but finally the GMs of the Powder Rangers and Patrik Stefans reached a blockbuster deal.

To the Powder Rangers: Niemi, Leino, Gudbranson, the Patrik Stefans' 3rd rounder in 2012
To the Patrik Stefans: Mason, Couture, Ekman-Larsson, the Rangers' 6th rounder in 2012


Analysis:

The fifth place Powder Rangers are led by two top-ten (I’ll admit it now) franchise players in Kopitar and Stamkos, but plagued but underwhelming early performances from a number of should-be scoring roster forwards (Okposo, Grabner, Cole and Havlat all sit below eight points). So newly acquired disappointment Ville Leino should fit right in. Gudbranson, despite Wittman’s attempt to sell his fantasy potential, is a slot filler in this trade and Regehr is well aware of that. This is a bit of a gamble as the P-Rangers are only carrying five defencemen this year – a serious injury to the top four would spell trouble. The real driver for this trade was the P-Rangers’ issues in the crease – Hiller is not cutting it as a starter and Mason isn’t playing well enough to be a fantasy backup keeper, never mind an NHL starter. Niemi shores up the P-Rangers’ goaltending for the foreseeable future. However, as he slots into Mason’s roster spot, his impact will not be felt until he overtakes Hiller as the scoring goalie – eight points to make up.

The 12th place (but only 12 points behind fifth) Patrik Stefans have handed the starting goaltender duties to a young Corey Crawford. He’s played well enough to earn it, but Wittman acknowledges the serious risk he is now exposed to should an injury occur. When you think about it though, very few teams in the KL have two legitimate goaltenders that keep pace with each other for the whole season such that one could replace the other if injured. It’s a risk we all take and one history has shown we are prepared to deal with when it arises. Mason provides some diamond-in-the-rough potential, but probably less than the Stefans gave up in Leino. Ekman-Larsson solidifies a strong core of young and old on defence (Kulikov, Wisniewski, Gonchar, Pronger). He’s potentially ripe enough to keep next year (or at least have trade value) and provides injury insurance this year. Couture will start two points back of the scoring roster in Leino’s spot and should be contributing within a week or two. Long-term, we all know Couture is good, but the jury is still out on whether he’s actually good or just or Setoguchi-good. Or worse, Cheechoo-good.

Recognizing a slight imbalance, the GMs agreed to swap 3rd and 6th round draft picks next year. That makes things pretty close in my mind. But it’s more fun if we pick a winner and loser. I have to give less value to any draft picks Regehr acquires because this year he took Chris Kunitz in the first round – so I’m declaring Stefan the winner, but by decision, not knockout. 


Unrelated news - a summary of free agent acquisitions to date:

date             team                     drop             add
10/17/2011 Dicklas Lidstroms D Girardi  MA Bergeron
10/23/2011 Schizzarks M Sheifele  M Michalek
10/23/2011 Patrik Stefans J Caron  M Read
10/26/2011 Joshfrey Krupuls M Zibanejad  J Lindstrom
10/28/2011 Powder Rangers A Stewart  C Higgins
10/29/2011 Moilers A McDonald  M Hanzal
10/31/2011 Winter Claassics J Leopold  K Quincey
11/2/2011 Milan Micahleks J Hudler  D Desharnais
11/7/2011 GPhil's Flyers S Elliot  C Potter 


Sunday, November 6, 2011

The Perfect Night and Other Musings

The Perfect Night

It's too early in our league's history to tell, but the Teeyotes' 22-point performance last night may go down in history with Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point game or any of the all-too-common perfect games in baseball. In one night of incredible fantasy hockey, the Teeyotes earned more points than the Moilers, St. Jewish Blues and Winter Claassics did all week. The Bruins' 7-0 rout of the Leafs played a big role, as Teeyotes Thomas, Lucic and Bergeron combined for 11 points.

Schizz asked if this might be a record. I could only scan the previous blog posts, which went up Sundays and thus show the "points last night" from all the Saturdays last year. Saturdays almost always have the most games scheduled, so while it's possible but unlikely that someone would have earned more points on a different day, we can safely assume that 22 points is a new record. The previous best was 20 points from the Mackhawks last November; there were also a couple of 17 point nights. Of course, those scores a from a different era - one where shutout wins were worth 7.

Fy also had a pretty big week.

At This Time Last Year

  • 51 points separated 1st from 15th, compared to 59 at present. 
  • The Krupuls, Schizzarks and Teeyotes, who finished 1st, 2nd and 3rd, respectively, were in 11th, 10th and 14th. 
  • G-Phil had just written a post, noting, "this has been a weird year with obscenely hot starts from okay players, and no production at all from previously consistent stars." 

Other Musings


On that note (this being a "weird year"), I thought it was worth sharing some excerpts from a sort-of impromptu fantasy hockey support group of five people that are GMs in the KL and members of a few other fantasy hockey leagues / gambling websites. I've left the names out, but you can probably figure it out. Warning, NSFW language:
I'm disgusted by how the first month of the season has played out.  

The Avs, Oil, Panthers, Stars, Coyotes, Leafs, Wild -- ranked 30th, 28th, 27th, 26th, 25th, 23rd, and 21st respectively by one of my power ranking sources pre-season -- have combined to go 50-22-10 to start the season.  That's the record of a potential President's Cup winning team.  The Sens have a better winning percentage than the Canucks.  Boston is the second worst team in hockey.  It's all absurd.

And don't get me started on individual players.  I guess we see it every year, with the Kessels and sorts who set out to more than triple their pre-season projections.  But even so, we're not just a week in right now, but about 15% of the way through the season, and some players who got out to hot starts have stayed on form.  While we all know about Kessel, who the fuck saw Lupul and Michalek on pace for 100?  Sure, that's not actually ever going to happen and I say neither breaks 60, but they're both already more than halfway to where I had them finishing originally.  And at the other end of the spectrum, while Pominville and Vanek are surging, Derek Roy has 4 points in 11 games, Ville Leino has 2 (FML - fuck my leino).  And that's not just a sobering sabering phenomenon.  Henrik needs to be Betterberg than 4 points, Eric's Stalled on 5, and Matt's Douching it up with 6.  On the blue-line, Marc-Andre Bergeron is on pace for more points than either Sedin, and even Buttfuck-Who-Corey-Potter has 8 points [Micah: I would have went with Corey Potter and the Deathly Hall-Nuge-Eberle Powerplay He Piggybacks On].  Also, who is Jason Garrison and what the fuck is he doing playing 25 mins per night in Florida and quarterbacking their PP?  Sure, regression to the mean will exert its force sooner or later, but you can't help but shake your head with some of this stuff from October.

I said I wouldn't do this, but I have to air my grievances about my shit luck with some players. I've already alluded to the horrid start of one Ville Leino, and I know you guys would say you're not all that surprised by the sluggishness of Iginla and Heatley, but I'm understandably disappointed that NOT ONE of my gambles are panning out.  Loktionov, Butler, Zuccarello, Caron, and Gudbranson... there's a good reason you still haven't heard of them, and won't until at least next season.  At least I flipped one for Matt Read who is due for another 4 point night, right?  And at the back, though my top 4 are in the overall top 20 for PPG for defensemen, off course Chris Pronger's dream start was too good to be true (I'm sure he's texting Bryan Berard on their brail-equipped Androids) and Wisnieski's anticipated start was truly just a dream.  
And a reply:
Thesis: Nikolai Khabibulin is #1 on the TSN NHL player rankings right now.  Enough said.

But not really enough said, because my fantasy hockey existence right now is much like a linesmen trying to hold Cal Clutterbuck back - I worked hard, put my time in, and got punched in the face anyway, twice.

Keepers: I think my D are probably exactly where everyone would have expected, my forwards are starting to finally show some life, but my goalie situation right now is embarassing with Optimus Reim injured by Decepticons and Carey Price looking like a young Roberto Luongo in October.  I'm fairly convinced the ship will right itself some, but I don't like being in the basement.

What the H?: I'm with you on this year.  I like the leafs and the oilers, but if you would have told me they were the two top teams in the NHL even 12 games into the season, I would have taken a dump on your living room carpet.

Individuals: Have I mentioned how ugly Phil Kessel is yet today? And i'm pretty sure Erik Karlsson hangs out behind KFC's banging everyone's sisters.  Eric Staal is a shocking -12 in addition to his abysmal play.  Derek Roy seems to not even be able to get a shot on net most nights (and playing on a line with Drew Stafford who is starting to look like he was a flash in the bed pan). Anaheim should sign Selanne to a 10 year contract right now, kidnap his children if they have to - he is involved on every goal that team has put up this year.  Kris Versteeg is on pace for 80+ pts which I think we all saw coming frankly.  Oh and Luke Adam has more points than Steven Stamkos and Ovechkin if anyone was wondering, as does Brian Campbell.

A final thought: Toronto players are #1 and #3 in points right now.  Ottawa players 5th, 13th, and 17th.  This shit just ain't right I tells yeah, it ain't right.  Except for Josh Harding, aren't we all glad to see him turn his career around?
There you have it. It's been a strange year so far, but maybe every year seems like a strange year, at least in November. If everything was predictable, fantasy hockey (and regular hockey, for those who care) wouldn't be as captivating. Leafs fans start talking about making the playoffs and Kessel for the Hart. Then they lose 7-0 to the Bruins. Canucks fans panic after a mediocre start. Then they beat the Blackhawks 6-0 (prediction). 

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Wrinkly pucks

If you opened your players' lockers, would you find reading glasses, Depends and prescription Viagra? Or fake IDs, posters of Taylor Swift and... Mexican Viagra?

When selecting players in a keeper league, GMs have to make valuations of different factors: reliability, potential, risk, situation, etc. One of those factors is age, because all else being equal, a player one year younger is a player on your scoring roster one year longer.

The graph below shows the ages of each team's protected roster. The top of the orange bar is the oldest player, the bottom is the youngest, and the blue marker is the average. Keep in mind that averages can be skewed by outliers (see Selanne, Teemu or Lidstrom, Nick). The teams are arranged left to right from last year's winner to last place.


A couple of observations. First, the averages are closer than I expected, from the Preydator's 23.8 to the Krupul's 30.3. Leaving aside those two, everyone is between 25 and 30. Second, being "old" isn't necessarily bad - the three teams with the highest average age finished first, third and fourth (the fourth highest, the Roos Canicks, finished last, but not because they were old). Finally, it's clear from the chart that the Schizzarks are only interested in that brief 'prime' age range, retaining nobody over 30 - something the Moilers GM may want to keep in mind.

Of course, this doesn't take into account half of our rosters. The rebuilding Canicks got a lot younger through the draft, while the Preydators may have, against all logic, gotten older and more Czech.

I don't think there is too much to read into this - the best fantasy team is the one that scores the most points - but it's interesting to look at age as a potential indicator of current, pending or fading success.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

KL Season in Review: 2010-2011


Congratulations are definitely in order.  GM Josh Krusell drafted his Krugars and, like a mother sea turtle, took to the ocean and left them to fend for themselves. Beginning the season under 6 feet of sand, the Krugars, over the next 20 weeks, would kick, scratch, and bite their way to the surface and to the open sea. This epic climb was foreshadowed in the graph post I did in week ten, where the Krugars were featured in the "The Long Road to the Top" graph. When Josh returned from Australia with four weeks left in the regular season, he barely recognized his first place team.

What makes this victory, the first in Keeper League history, especially notable?

1. Josh made exactly zero trades and used none of his free agent pickups. 
2. Josh drafted 15th out of 15. Sure, the snake draft is supposed to even things out, but given a choice in a keeper league draft, would you want to pick last?
3. Josh decided to participate in the draft approximately half an hour before the draft started. He happened to be in Vancouver, hanging out with Powder, and that's what Powder was doing that afternoon. While some of us had prepared for days, Josh did his research between picks with a discarded copy of the Score Forecaster and Chatelaine's holiday decorating issue. Josh was picking Claude Giroux in the 6th round and Lubomir Visnovsky in the 8th while the rest of us were picking Sergei Gonchar in the 4th and Wojtek Wolski in the 5th.

Again, congratulations Josh. The Keeper League Championship is hereinafter and irrevocably dubbed the Krusell Cup. 

Less important in the long term, but I suspect more appreciated in the short term, Josh will shortly be receiving a cool $240.

Schizzarks: Hell of a debut fantasy hockey season for Shizzarks' rookie GM Schizz "Schizz" Schissel - this was one of several pools he won or came second in. Notably, this second place finish came without first round pick Zach Parise. Schizz earns $96 this year. 

Teeyotes: GM Teehan fought hard for this one and he earned it. He probably sacrificed the next four years to place third, but here's hoping that's not the case. Hey, no team with Tavares can be that bad. Oh wait.  Anyway, Teehan takes home $72.

Wittmen: At times holding what looked like an insurmountable lead (I have the February 13th email where, picking up Grabner as a free agent, Stefan says "I think I've got this in the bag") the Wittmen stumbled down the stretch, slipping to fourth place. The consolation prize: a $72 donation to the charity of Stefan's choice (to be announced).

Honourable mention to Dickie and the Dicklas Lidstroms, who put up .77 points per game, enough for a four-way tie with the top three teams.  They finished ninth largely because their scoring roster played the fewest games - 108 fewer than the Wittmen.

Hope everyone enjoyed the pool this year as much as I did. Thanks for your patience as we worked the kinks out.

Trades in the KL can resume after the playoffs. Expect to hear from me sometime this summer about the procedures moving forward for 2011-2012. If you are dropping out for some reason, let me know asap. We have a waiting list and those would-be GMs will want some time to make off-season evaluations, trades, etc.

--Commissioner Carmody

Sunday, April 3, 2011

KL Week in Review: Week 25


Injuries may play a pivotal role in determining the final standings over these last eight days of hockey. In an interview last week, GM Krusell of the Krugars observed that "with Ryan Miller not travelling with the Sabres, and Wideman and Nielsen now out of the season, I am all of a sudden super-vulnerable at the top." Pressed for details, he added, "OMG, you haven't heard of Dinosaur Jr?!"

The Schizzarks may have it even worse, missing four prominent forwards in Sharp, Nash, Williams and Hemsky.  Although pickuphockey projects them to finish second, that assumes that injured players play and earn points in the remaining games. I see them falling to fourth, maybe fifth if the Fylanders have a good week. The Fylanders, Wittmen and Teeyotes all have no current injuries to their scoring roster.

Prediction: Victoria Krugars christen the Krusell Cup.

1. Krugars
2. Wittmen
3. Teeyotes
4. Schizzarks
5. Fylanders

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Top Ten Greatest KL Draft Picks of 2010


It's late enough in the season that we can fairly reflect on our draft-day decisions. Here is my subjective ranking of the top ten draft-day steals. I took into account the fact that goalies were overvalued this year (my bad), so picks had to be compared within their positions (i.e., forwards to other forwards, etc.). I sometimes considered injuries and sometimes considered future potential, but not really. It's more art than science. 
Without further ado... 


10. Martin St. Louis, Victoria Krugars: 1st round, 15th overall
Second in scoring with 91 points - who thought he would outscore Stamkos?

9. Dustin Byfuglien, Teeyotes: 11th round, 156th overall (35th defenceman taken)
Fourth among defencemen in scoring, 52 points.

8. Kris Letang, Moilers: 12th round,169th overall (38th defenceman taken)
Sixth among d-men in scoring, 48 points - without Crosby and Malkin for half the year. More potential than Byfuglien. 

7. Alex Pietrangelo, Preydators: 17th round, 242nd overall (65th defenceman taken)
19th among defencemen in scoring, 41 points and just 21 years old.

6. Claude Giroux, Victoria Krugars: 6th round, 76th overall
Drafted after teammates Carter, Briere and Richards but leads the team with 71 points (12th overall). 

5. James Wisniewski, Fylanders: 15th round, 214th overall (53rd defenceman taken)
8th in defencemen scoring with 47 points.

4. Keith Yandle, Manitoba Roos: 8th round, 107th overall (17th defenceman taken)
Third among defencemen in scoring with 58 points. People used to make fun of Keith Yandle.

3. Lubomir Visnovsky, Victoria Krugars: 8th round, 106th overall (16th defenceman taken)
First among defencemen with 63 points - career best 67 from 05-06 is beatable.
2. Carey Price, Schizzarks: 16th round, 233rd overall (25th goaltender taken)
Yes, 25th goaltender taken. Second to only Henrik Lundqvist in KL points, thanks to eight shutouts.
1. Teemu Selanne, Winter Claassics: 17th round, 253rd overall.
10th in scoring with 75 points, 8th in points per game. Late-round gambles on aging superstars can pay off. If we could do the draft over again, he would go second round. Great pick, DC.
Honourable mention: Rafalski (Schizzarks, 8th round, 4th in d pts per game), Ryan Whitney (Fylanders, 8th round, 3rd in d pts per game), Burns (Claassics, 15th round, 43 pts), D. Sedin (Wittmen, 7th overall, leading scorer), Ribeiro (Dicklas, 7th round, 66 pts), Lundqvist (Dicklas, 8th goalie taken, first in KL points), Tanguay (P-Rangers, 13th round, 59 pts), Couture (P-Rangers, 15th round, 53 pts as rookie), T. Ruutu (Moilers, 18th round, 50 points), Vrbata (Roos, 299th/300, 46 points - but Micah picked for Roos because he had to leave early). 

Any great picks I missed?
Other observations:
1. A lot of defencemen made the list, and I think that reflects my observation that there was more unpredicatability at defence this year than at forward. Forwards, with few exceptions, either did roughly what we expected, or disappointed. The top ten scoring forwards were all drafted in the first three rounds, with the exception of Teemu Selanne. The top ten scoring defencemen were drafted in the 8th, 5th, 8th, 11th, 5th, 4th, 12th, 15th, 6th, and 9th rounds, respectively. 

2. There were two distinct "waves" of goalie pickups. 14 goalies were taken in the first five rounds. Just one was taken in the next five rounds. Nine were taken in rounds 11 to 15, and just three were taken in the last five rounds. This aligns with what we observed during the draft: the majority of GMs took a solid goalie early, with a few choosing to wait... when some GMs started taking their second goalie around round 12, the rest panicked and added their second (or first and second) goalies. Price was the Schizzarks' second goalie pick, after Backstrom in the 13th round.

3. Worst pick candidate:
Nikita Filatov, P-Rangers, 9th round. 

Sunday, March 27, 2011

KL Week in Review: Week 24



The J-Krugars are absolutely running away with it with just two weeks and a day left (regular season ends with four games on April 10).

Krugars' goaltender Ryan Miller earned 16 points last week (three wins, two shutouts), more than the Wittmen's entire team. The Wittmen's poor performance allowed the Schizzarks to sneak into second. The Teeyotes hold down the final winning spot.

The Fylanders came out of nowhere to sneak into fifth place on a whopping 50 point week, including six from Zdeno Chara. The Fylanders have quietly had the best March, after the Krugars. Fourteen points out of fourth, they could certainly challenge for a winning spot.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

KL Week in Review: Week 23


A quick update as four GMs meet in New York to discuss changes to the KL. On the agenda are topics such as rule revisions (especially goalie shutout points) and concussions (especially whether Lia was suffering from one during the inaugural draft).

Incredible! A tie for first place! The Krugars have been unstoppable, earning more points than any other team in March. They are injury-free and Kari Lehtonen has 70 points (20 in March alone), meaning he could actually surpass Ryan Miller (75). Shane Doan paced the Krugars with seven points this week.

Here are the odds of winning the KL inaugural championship, courtesy of vegasinsider.com:

1. Victoria Krugars: 5/1 - "Hands-off" management style paying off.
2. Calgary Wittmen: 7/1 - Will Kesler and Sedin see less ice time now that the Canucks have clinched?
3. Schizzarks: 10/1 - Price is everything. Would trading Parise have put them over the top?
4. Powder Rangers: 16/1 - In-season rebuilding leads to surprising late push.
5. Teeyotes: 18/1 - Finishing outside of top-four would be disastrous, given draft picks traded away.
6. Manitoba Roos: 500/1 - Actually having a better month than five teams.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

KL Week in Review: Week 22


The Wittmen are a deep and healthy team. Yesterday I looked at the projected totals and the Schizzarks were favoured to win by two points. After last night's incredible 15 points without so much as a goalie win, the Wittmen are the favourites. Daniel Sedin is on pace for an NHL-best 104 points.

Although the Schizzarks and Krugars have better points-per-game (.78 and .77 respectively), the Wittmen have been incredibly lucky with injuries, with their scoring roster having played more games than any other team, and in some cases, almost a hundred more games.

Elsewhere in the league, the Powder Rangers won their battle with the Mackhawks for fifth place and have set their sights on fourth. The Teeyotes had a terrible week. Tim Thomas has not lived up to expectations post-trade (he has two more points than still-concussed Jonas Hiller would have had since the trade), and the defencemen combined for three points this week.

Finally, the Micaleks have successfully nose-dived to 12, where they hope to stay in order to get the fourth overall pick. As their GM once remarked, "if you're not top four, you want to be in Roos' spot."