Obscure Fact

Calgary Flames defenceman Robyn Regehr is the highest-scoring Brazilian-born NHL player of all-time. His brother Richie is the highest-scoring Indonesian-born player.

Twitter!

Entries in Phil Kessel (4)

Saturday
23Jan2010

The Phil Kessel Effect: His impact on the Maple Leafs and his overall numbers

It's now been over half a season since Phil Kessel became a Toronto Maple Leaf. The Kessel trade has been the subject of much scrutiny, originally it was because it was widely considered that Brian Burke overpaid (sending the Leafs' 2010 and 2011 1st-round picks and 2010 2nd-round pick to Boston) for him. But now, even after recovering from a horrid October, the Maple Leafs are bottom feeders. As of Saturday morning, the Leafs are sitting 28th in the NHL with 44 points, 5 below 27th-ranked Columbus and 6 above 29th-ranked Edmonton. That puts Toronto in the dreaded lottery pick position, giving them a chance for the first-overall pick in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. Or, rather, it puts Boston in a lottery position.

Burke made the trade because Kessel was a known quantity who could make an immediate impact on a relatively weak team, while still young enough to have a great upside for years to come. This is actually solid reasoning, or at least it would be if your team gave up a tenth-overall pick and not a third, especially in a draft where the top three prospects are likely going to be very, very good.

Of course, the Maple Leafs' record is skewed after the horrific month of October. During this month the team was without Kessel, who was recovering from an injury (he returned for the first game of November). Their record in October? 1-7-4, or effectively 1-11. Going into Saturday's game against the Florida Panthers, Toronto sits at 17-25-10. Basically, with Kessel in the lineup the Maple Leafs are 16-18-6, a serious improvement, but still not good enough to get them anywhere near a playoff spot (in fact, being two games below .500 would still have them in 14th; Carolina's really been that bad).

Kessel's main job is to be a goal scorer. He's a sniper who takes a ton of shots. At first there was worry that Kessel's production would decline without a bona fide playmaker like Marc Savard, but Kessel scored 8 goals in his first 13 games and put most of those thoughts to rest. But now that he's 40 games into the season, how is Kessel's production comparing to the rest of the NHL?

In 2008-09, Phil Kessel's 0.51 goals per game (GPG) was tied for 9th amongst players who had played 17 games or more (Marian Gaborik's 13 goals in 17 games was used as the minimum benchmark). That means Kessel was good for 42 goals when his GPG is prorated over 82 games, while averaging 3.5 shots a game. That's very respectable. In 2009-10? Using the same minimum requirement of 17 games played, Kessel is again tied, only this time for 35th.

Yes, 35th.

Kessel's 15 goals in 40 games is good for 0.38 GPG, which is lower than (in order of highest GPG rate): Alex Ovechkin, Ilya Kovalchuk, Patrick Marleau, Sidney Crosby, Marian Gaborik, Dany Heatley, Teemu Selanne, Steven Stamkos, Alexander Semin, Michael Cammalleri, Marian Hossa, Alexandre Burrows, Tomas Fleischmann, Rick Nash, Joffrey Lupul, Zach Parise, Bobby Ryan, David Jones, James Neal, Henrik Sedin, Brian Gionta, Ryan Malone, Dustin Penner, Nicklas Backstrom, Jarome Iginla, Daniel Sedin, Mike Richards, Patrick Kane, Loui Eriksson, Danny Briere, Ryan Smyth, Patric Hornqvist, Jeff Carter, and Benoit Pouliot.

Benoit Pouliot? He's scoring 0.39 GPG, a number that includes his 2 goals in 14 games with Minnesota. Since being traded to Montreal he has 9 in 14 games played, or 0.64 GPG. Prorated, that's 52 goals. Then there's Guillaume Latendresse, who is averaging 0.31 GPG. But like Pouliot, Latendresse's numbers are skewed by the 2 goals in 23 games he scored with Montreal. After being swapped for Pouliot, Latendresse has scored 13 goals in 26 games with Minnesota, a steady 0.50 GPG.

His centreman is Kyle Brodziak.

Kessel is also an expensive player. Of the top 53 players in GPG, Kessel's cap hit of $5,400,000 works out to roughly $173,000 per goal, good for 44th amongst that group. Now, it could be worse: Jarome Iginla, Anze Kopitar, Evgeni Malkin, and Eric Staal are all in that top 53 and they all cost over $200,000 per goal. There's also players like Pouliot, Moulson, Fleischmann, and Hornqvist (the last pick in the 2005 Entry Draft), all of whom are under $22,000 a goal. One of the hottest scorers in the NHL right now, Alex Burrows, costs roughly $53,000 at his current pace - more than three times cheaper than Kessel.

While he's not standing up well against his peers across the league, Kessel's true value is his impact on his own team, most important being their overall record. Here's how the Kessel factor plays out:

October (pre-Kessel): 1-7-4 (.250)
With Kessel in the lineup: 16-18-6 (.475)
When Kessel records a goal: 6-5-1 (.542)
When Kessel records an assist: 6-5-1 (.542)
When Kessel records a point: 10-10-2 (.500)

On a bad team, these are pretty good numbers. When looking at the Leafs season, the most accurate representation of the team's success comes when you throw October out the window. That month was a complete wash, and the Leafs have been a much improved team since then.

Of note are two other Maple Leafs players: Niklas Hagman and Alexei Ponikarovsky. Both of these players average 0.35 GPG, 0.03 lower than Kessel. Some team record breakdowns for games in which these players score over the season, in the disastrous month of October, and since November (when Kessel joined the team):

Hagman (season): 6-7-1 (.464)
Hagman (October): 1-3-0 (.250)
Hagman (since November): 5-4-1 (.550)

Ponikarovsky (season): 6-6-3 (.500)
Ponikarovsky (October): 0-2-2 (.250)
Ponikarovsky (since November): 6-4-1 (.591)

Based on this relatively small sample size, the Leafs are a .542 team when Kessel scores a goal, while in that same span a Hagman goal makes the Leafs a .550 team and a Ponikarovsky goal makes the Leafs a .591 team.

You can't really quantify a team's success based purely on one or two players. Kessel's made the Leafs a better team, for sure, but he's not at fault for Toskala's goaltending or the team's penalty kill, both of which have been very negative influences. That being said, look at a player like Steven Stamkos. While Stamkos was picked in 2008, hypothetically, the Kessel trade could send Boston a fist-overall pick that could be a player like Stamkos. Stamkos had a 0.29 GPG average in his rookie season. This year? Stamkos is in that 9th spot at 0.52 GPG. A year ago Kessel was obviously the better player. This year you'd probably rather have Stamkos.

Any trade is a risk. I'm sure when Montreal and Minnesota swapped Latendresse for Pouliot they probably weren't expecting either of them to turn into 40-goal scorers. Kessel has undoubtedly made the Maple Leafs better, but the immediate boost he has given Toronto has not compensated for other flaws in the Maple Leafs' game. As a result, it looks more and more likely that Boston is going to get a player in this year's draft who in a few years will turn out to be a better player than Kessel. Or the Bruins may be able to turn that pick into Ilya Kovalchuk as part of a package (speculating).

Add to this the first-round pick the Leafs gave up in next year's draft as well and things may look very, very ugly in hindsight a few years down the road.

Remember that trade that Mike Milbury made in 2001 for Alexei Yashin? That trade gave the Islanders immediate help up front in exchange for (arguably) Ottawa's best player. To get Yashin, Milbury gave up two unknown quantities: an awkward, unproven defensive prospect in Zdeno Chara, and a second-overall draft pick that became Jason Spezza. The Yashin for Chara and Spezza trade is considered one of the worst trades of the last decade (though not Milbury's worst). It's far, far, far too early to say that the Kessel trade is, or will be, as bad as the Yashin trade. Kessel may eventually turn into a 60-goal scorer. But right now he's not. He's a player who dropped from a 0.51 GPG average to 0.39 and cost several draft picks that, while not yet actual players, could potentially be very important pieces in Boston's future.

Incidentally, Yashin's GPG in his final season in Ottawa was 0.49. In his first season with the Islanders it dropped to 0.41, before falling to 0.32 in his next two seasons.

Bonus food for thought: Lee Stempniak

Stempniak isn't a huge goal scorer. He has scored in 13 goals this season, and the Leafs record in those games breaks down like this:

Stempniak (season): 7-3-3 (.654)
Stempniak (October): 1-1-2 (.375)
Stempniak (since November): 6-2-1 (.722)

Stempniak for team MVP?

---

All statistics were compiled after the end of games on Friday, January 22, 2010. A PDF of Toronto's records in games where Kessel has registered points can be found here, while a PDF of statistics for the top goals per game scorers (including cap hits, dollars per goal, and prorated goal totals) can be found here.

---

Bonus update: On Saturday, January 23, 2010 the Toronto Maple Leafs lost 2-0 to the Florida Panthers, giving the Maple Leafs a 17-26-10 record overall and a 16-19-6 record in the 41 games with Kessel in the lineup. After registering no goals in the game, Kessel now has 15 goals in 41 games for a 0.37 GPG average.

Sunday
06Dec2009

Sunday Shots: Montreal retires another number. Seriously.

Fun week. We had the double dose of Keith Ballard, first swinging his stick in rage at his own goaltender's head, taking Tomas Vokoun out for a few days, and then barreling into his backup goaltender from the previous season in Craig Anderson, taking the Colorado goalie out. Anderson is day-to-day with a sore neck.

We also had Dany Heatley facing the Ottawa Seantors for the first time since the infamous trade. There was a story published the day of the game featuring a nice little quote from Murray Heatley, Dany's father:

"You never get an unbiased opinion in a small community like Ottawa. The writers there know who feeds them, and if you don't, they don't let you in the building. It's sad in a way, because the fans don't understand what's really going on."

The quote was published in an article in the San Francisco Chronicle. The article was written by a Chronicle staff writer - not someone in Ottawa. Would've been a perfect time to tell the fans what really happened, wouldn't it Mr. Heatley?

Moving on...

Did you know? After retiring the number 3 on Friday night, Montreal has only two single-digit jersey numbers left unretired? Only the numbers 6 and 8 can be worn by Canadiens players. There are only eight numbers 20 and below available (6, 8, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, 20), and only 20 numbers left 35 and below. A typical NHL roster has 23 players.

Fun with stats: In the 6 periods Alexander Ovechkin has been suspended, Washington has scored 14 goals, an average of 2.33 per period.

Kesselmania: Phil Kessel made his return to Boston for the first time since being traded to the Maple Leafs on Saturday. Kessel was held scoreless and was a -3 on the night, being on the ice for the first three goals against. However, it was former Maple Leafs prospect Tuukka Rask who stole the show. Rask had an assist and made 31 saves in a 7-2 Bruins win.

Toronto traded Rask to Boston for Andrew Raycroft on June 24, 2006, the same day they drafted Jiri Tlusty 13th overall. Tlusty was traded to Carolina this week for prospect Philippe Paradis. The John Ferguson Jr. era slowly fades away.

Timely scoring: Going into Saturday's game against Carolina, Vancouver Canucks forward Jannik Hansen had 5 points in 9 games, with every point but the first one coming in the 3rd period, including a goal on November 29 in a 4-2 loss to San Jose that came with 7 seconds left. Hansen snapped his mini-streak with a goal in the 1st period against the Hurricanes.

Political correctness: When did overtimes begin being referred to as "sudden victory"? What happened to "sudden death"?

Trade NHL 10 made: The AI in NHL 10 had Dallas acquire C Chris Minard from Edmonton for a 2nd, 3rd, and 4th round pick.

The breakdown: Edmonton gets a bunch of draft picks. Dallas gets a 28-year old marginal NHLer (though pretty decent AHLer). Verdict? Edmonton wins. By a lot. This isn't even close.

More NHL 10: The third-jersey unlock code finally came out, and EA Sports' graphic designers missed the weird black mesh under the armpits of Colorado's new blue thirds. It looks far better.

Hockeybull made-up rumour of the week: On November 15, I made up the following rumour:

"Montreal will send Kyle Chipchura to Los Angeles for Sean O'Donnell to fill their defensive holes, but will be forced to take Alexander Frolov in the deal."

This past Wednesday, Montreal sent Chipchura to Anaheim for a 2011 4th-round pick. Now, Anaheim isn't Los Angeles, but Montreal did ship him out - and to California. That's a 50% accuracy rate at least. Not bad for a rumour that was cobbled together by picking teams out of a hat and staring at rosters for 30 seconds.

This week's made-up rumour: Pittsburgh trades a 5th-round pick to Buffalo for defenceman Nathan Paetsch.

Sunday
15Nov2009

Sunday Shots: Kessel's dibs, Colorado's 3rds, Hockeybull

Phil Kessel can score goals. This is what he was brought in to Toronto to do. Last weekend against Detroit, Kessel scored his first goal as a Maple Leaf. Kessel's a good player, and he's going to score a lot, but his first one? Little bit of thievery there, tapping in a Jason Blake shot that was about to enter the net anyways. The hockey logic here is sound: you see a puck about to go in the net, you make damn sure it goes in that net. Still, bit of a jerk move. I think I got shoved hard when I did the same thing in street hockey when I was 7.

But that's just nitpicking. The Leafs earned that win despite Kessel's "MINE!" approach on that play.

Does anyone else think Phil Kessel looks permanently winded?

Arena Annoyance: Watching Colorado and Vancouver right now, and "Warriors of Time" by Black Tide was just played for the third time tonight. If you've ever played NHL 09, this song probably makes twitch every time you hear it. And three times? Hire a new DJ.

A Trade NHL 10 Made: St. Louis Blues acquires Alexander Semin and Alexandre Giroux from Washington for Eric Brewer and Alexander Hellstrom

St. Louis gets a bona fide sniper and expert bongo player in Semin, and AHL star Alexandre Giroux, who I guess will help the farm team in Peoria. Good for him. Washington makes out with a Swedish defenceman with 30 PIMs in 8 games in the SEL after giving up on North America at the end of last season. The key to the deal is Eric Brewer, who I guess will help Washington on the backend. Or something. He'll probably be injured. This deal makes perfect sense. St. Louis gets an all-star forward and can finally name a new captain who actually dresses for games. Washington... yeah, I've got nothing.

Beating A Dead Horse: Remember when teams wore white at home? Part of the fun of going to a game was seeing the different colours of opposing teams' jerseys. Right now if you live in Boston, every game you go to has the Bruins in black and all 29 other teams in white. In the 90s the Bruins would be in white, and the road team would be in red, or blue, or orange, or black, or anything else that wasn't white. Right now, the only way you'll see different colours are if a team is wearing their third jerseys.

Great marketing plan, NHL. Selling third jerseys by boring fans with blandness.

Jersey Review: Speaking of third jerseys, Colorado wore their new uniforms on Saturday, their first ever foray into the world of the colour blue. Personally, I don't like them. The wordmark on the front is tacky. I know it was on their burgundy thirds from a few years ago, but that doesn't mean it was ever a good idea. The main logo on the shoulders also feels out of place.

The jerseys are meant to look like the vintage sweaters of old, with shoulder yolks and clean stripes on the arms. One problem: the black stripe ends up extending upward into the armpit, making a strange black swatch where you wouldn't expect one. Thanks Reebok. And what's with the AVALANCHE written on the collar?

Oh, and they lost the game 8-2. Please never wear these again.



Obscure player jersey found on the NHL online store: When customizing a jersey on the NHL's online store, you can pick from a list of active players' names and numbers for that team. While it's neat to see some of the lesser known names on the lists, sometimes you find some rather... obscure choices. Enter Josh Godfrey, #73 on the Washington Capitals. That's Josh Godfrey of the ECHL's South Carolina Stingrays, he of zero NHL games, and 14 AHL games played between 2008 and 2009. I'm not even sure that he owns this jersey.



Hockeybull Made-Up Rumour of the Week: Montreal will send Kyle Chipchura to Los Angeles for Sean O'Donnell to fill their defensive holes, but will be forced to take Alexander Frolov in the deal.

Schedule Fail: Vancouver won the first of a home-and-home series against Colorado on Saturday. One thing... Colorado plays in Calgary on Tuesday and Edmonton on Wednesday before they play in Vancouver on Friday. The Canucks have five days off between games. What was that about a compressed schedule? Thought so.

Final Thought: Henrik Sedin scored 3 goals against Colorado, his first career hattrick. I think he may have absorbed his injured brother and finally become a complete player.

Tuesday
03Nov2009

5 Things: Toronto-Tampa Bay (November 3, 2009)

There's only been two periods of play so far, but here are some thoughts on the Lightning-Maple Leafs game so far:

1. Phil Kessel has only one facial expression, and that's looking like he's permanently winded after being punched in the chest.

2. Antero Niittymaki is a better overall goalie than Mike Smith. There. I said it.

3. Vincent Lecavalier scored, and he can thank Mattias Ohlund for giftwrapping it for him with after slamming a rebound off Jonas Gustavsson.

4. Speaking of Ohlund, this is the best I've seen him play all season. Admittedly, I haven't watched all of the Lightning's games, but tonight Ohlund has been fantastic. That (legal) hit on Kessel was incredible.

5. Whoever did the outro for the second intermission declared that Lecavalier had the Canes' lone goal. I rewound that four times to make sure I heard it right. Well done, Sportsnet.