I wouldn't expect Paigin to keep up his pace from last year..
Honestly those were record breaking numbers for someone his age. I predict alot of s% went into those figures. His NHLe was 44 (!!!!) as 20 year old in the KHL. Thats one of highest NHLe for any 2015 draftee in their draft +1, sans Marner and Strome (and Eichel/McDavid)
If he produces around 25 points in 60 games on a uber defensive Ak Bars while playing 1st or 2nd pairing minutes that would be huge
He shot at 10.2% last year (10.6% with Sochi). Which does seem pretty high compared to other top scoring D.
OA goaltender Matthew Mancina was just traded to Mississauga from Peterborough, so it's Dylan Wells crease this year with the Petes. It should be an interesting year for him. They were a pretty competitive team last season.
OA goaltender Matthew Mancina was just traded to Mississauga from Peterborough, so it's Dylan Wells crease this year with the Petes. It should be an interesting year for him. They were a pretty competitive team last season.
C Aapeli Rasanen (EDM 6th/2016)
Rasanen continued his strong run of international competitions by standing out as one of Finland’s top forwards. And while it would be fair to point out the Finns’ notable U20 no-shows (Sebastian Aho, Patrik Laine, Jesse Puljujarvi, Janne Kuokkanen, etc.), Rasanen’s two-way skill set as a center almost makes him a unique, if not necessary add to the National Team. The Finns struggled to score in Hodonin, but Rasanen potted two of their four goals. He killed penalties, took defensive zone draws and centered one of the two power play units. We noticed the ice became figuratively smaller as these tournaments progressed, so the speed and skill traditionally inherent in European hockey is seemingly replaced by checking and clogging. But the one constant for Rasanen is that he ends up not only adapting to the nature of a given game, but finds a way to stand out as well. He’s a cerebral player who makes clean plays but used keen vision to locate open linemates for quality chances on several occasions. Rasanen’s hand-eye coordination is outstanding, and he’s lightning-quick at taking a turnover and turning it into a scoring chance in a split second.
LHD Markus Niemelainen (EDM 3rd/2016)
Niemelainen had a strong tournament playing alongside Salo, leading Finland’s second pairing and taking a role on both the power play and penalty kill. He’s a big kid with a massive wingspan, so defending in one-on-one situations has never been a problem. What we noticed almost immediately was an improvement in reading plays and taking calculated risks. The Niemelainen of last year was way too restless in the slot, and his wandering cost him. This wasn’t the case at the Four Nations, where he seemed to communicate well with Salo (and supporting forwards), and released from his slot duties with decisiveness and success. Sure, he still wanders as far as the opposing point. But we didn’t catch him puck gazing or keeping his back turned, and his first-step quickness looks like it improved. Niemelainen showcased his love for shooting the puck, and on occasion took it up-ice with confidence but minus any sort of creativity.
Rasanen and Niemelainensscouting report from 4 nations tourney
http://www.thedraftanalyst.com/2017-nhl-draft/u20-four-nations/
Good read. Rasanen is going to be a steal IMO, this time next year people are going to be questioning how he went in the 6th. Niemalainen has the chance to make people think the same too. I look forward to tracking these two in particular this year and watching them at the u20s.
Ak Bars Kazan's early season troubles continued with a 6-5 SO win over SKA. You would not normally call a win troubling, but the club was up 4-1 at one point before Datsyuk and Kovalchuk took over in the third period to tie things up. Ak Bars needed the shootout to finally win it.
However, Paigin did not dress. He went to St. Petersburg but ultimately sat out again as the 9th D.
You'd think a struggling team would want a catalyst like Paigin actually playing games, but it seems as though the coaching staff has different ideas. It's a shame he has a year left on his contract; I'd hate to see him stagnate over there when he could be in the AHL on the top pairing.
Ak Bars did this too last season. Coach is pretty notorious for being tough with young players. And is an extremely defensive minded coach. Itd be nice to see Paigin succeed in that enviroment, but given the fact same thing happen last season (not dressing, playing as 7th D) and then succeeded in a big way in Sochi, I would be all for him moving
He was injured, some guy on lowetide posted he was wearing a full face mask for the game today. Played pretty well according to him - got an assist.
I think he's been wearing one since an injury last season, he mentioned having to wear it to start this season too. He might have been injured, but the mask probably has nothing to do with it.
Here's him in Sochi last year:
Yakimov scored a goal in his first game. Neftekhimik lost to SKA 5-1.
Pronman ranked teams prospect pools. I expected with departure of McDavid Oilers would plummet from 1. But shockingly he has them at 8. 1 above Flames actually
ABC posted the list, so ill post it here: http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/ranking-nhl-team-prospect-pipeline/story?id=41724093
Leafs
Coyotes
Jets
Blue Jackets
Hurricanes
Flyers
Islanders
Oilers
Flames
Preds
Sabres
When it comes to Slepyshev, all I ask is that McLellan gives him a chance during camp, give him an honest shot at making the team even if it's just in the bottom 6. If they do and he still fails to impress, fair enough...he got his chance and failed to capitalize.
I don't have a lot of optimism though, for whatever reason this franchise is allergic to success when it comes to young Russian players, whether it's drafting them or developing them.