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Maybe playing alongside Jussi Jokinen on the first line instills some professionalism into his work.
Those Yak's can actually accomplish something positive and provide you with a lot of fertilizer as a by product.
You could be right about Puljujarvi when it comes to the general point, but I would argue that most teams in Liiga would match up against KHL teams without being that much of an underdog. Jokerit transitioned quite easily from Liiga to the KHL some years ago and were successful right away. Right now Karpat is one of the best teams in Liiga, they had most points in the regular season last year.What would a great year in Finland look like and how would that impress any NHL GM enough to offer anything close to a first round pick for him? We’re not even talking about the KHL here, which hasn’t really proven to mean anything as far as NHL standards goes, we’re talking about a lower caliber league than that. I don’t see how Puljijarvi going back to Finland helps him in any way. He has trouble playing a North American game and for him to learn how to play one, he needs to be in North America. Right now the only team over here interested in him is the Oilers. If his goal is to play in the NHL then any year spent over there is a wasted year in his career.
My prediction is if he doesn’t come back here then he’s never going to be a full time NHL player.
Jokerit transitioned quite easily from Liiga to the KHL some years ago and were successful right away.
Him playing in Finland isn't going to do a lot. He needs to be in the KHL.If he does choose to stay in Finland, getting big minutes and playing on the powerplay, it should be really great for him. But he's going to have to show that he's a superstar in that league. If not this decision is going to backfire in a big way for him.
If no trade can be made by the start of next season I wonder if the year away from the NHL will humble him and give the Oilers another go. I say this because Jesse's value to the Oilers is greatest if he plays here. Face it, he's got next to no trade value.
That is very possible.When Jokerit made that transition, they got funded 13 million per year from the new Russian owners. They used to have about 4 million player budget in Liiga, so that Russian money affects quite a bit to successfulness of the transition.
However I agree that Liiga is a good underrated hockey league and if Pulju manages to get 40 points or more his NHL value goes up. I just don't think he will be scoring leaders in Liiga.
He played almost two full seasons against adults before being drafted.he couldnt handle the very little pressure he had to deal with here. now he has to try prove he is nhl material, again. but this time against adults, instead of kids the same age or younger and smaller. and he has to be the best on that team and league. his nhl career is over imo.
He played almost two full seasons against adults before being drafted.
I wonder if Pulju's would do?