Sunday, May 28, 2017

2017 Stanley Cup Finals Preview


16 teams entered the 2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs, and just 2 remain with the Eastern Conference Champion (and defending Stanley Cup) Pittsburgh Penguins vs. the Western Conference Champion Nashville Predators. Here's a look at how the two teams got here:

Playoff Matchups to Date:

Eastern Conference:
#1 Washington Capitals defeat WC #2 Toronto Maple Leafs (4-2)
#2 Pittsburgh Penguins defeat #3 Columbus Blue Jackets (4-1)
WC #1 New York Rangers defeat #1 Montreal Canadiens (4-2)
#2 Ottawa Senators defeat #3 Boston Bruins (4-2)


#2 Pittsburgh Penguins defeat #1 Washington Capitals (4-3)
#2 Ottawa Senators defeat WC #1 New York Rangers (4-2)


#2 Pittsburgh Penguins defeat #2 Ottawa Senators (4-3)

Western Conference:
WC #2 Nashville Predators defeat #1 Chicago Blackhawks (4-0)
#3 St. Louis Blues defeat #2 Minnesota Wild (4-1)
#1 Anaheim Ducks defeat WC #1 Calgary Flames (4-0)
#2 Edmonton Oilers defeat #3 San Jose Sharks (4-2)


#1 Anaheim Ducks defeat #2 Edmonton Oilers (4-3)
WC #2 Nashville Predators defeat #3 St. Louis Blues (4-2)


WC #2 Nashville Predators defeat #1 Anaheim Ducks (4-2)

Image result for stanley cup finals

#2 Pittsburgh Penguins vs. WC #2 Nashville Predators

Season Series: Season series tied 1-1-0

Saturday October 22, 2016: Nashville Predators 
5, Pittsburgh Penguins 1
January 31, 2017: Pittsburgh Penguins 4, Nashville Predators 2

Players to Watch:

Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Matt Murray, Phil Kessel, Conor Sheary, Scott Wilson

Nashville: PK Subban, Filip Forsberg, Pekka Rinne, Roman Josi, Ryan Ellis, James Neal

X-Factor:

Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby

Nashville: Pekka Rinne

Playoff Leaders:

Goals: Jake Guentzel (PIT) - 9, Filip Forsberg (NSH) - 8
Assists: Evgeni Malkin (PIT) - 17, Ryan Johansen (NSH) - 10
Points: Evgeni Malkin (PIT) - 24, Filip Forsberg (NSH) - 15
Wins: Pekka Rinne (NSH) - 12, Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT) - 9
Goals Against Average: Matt Murray (PIT) - 1.35, Pekka Rinne (NSH) - 1.70
Save Percentage: Matt Murray (PIT) - .946%, Pekka Rinne (NSH) - .941%
OT Goals: Jake Guentzel/Chris Kunitz (PIT) - 1, Kevin Fiala/James Neal (NSH)

Prediction: This series has the hype to be one of the best Stanley Cup Finals in recent years, with the high-powered offense of the Penguins going up against the Predators stifling defense. While it seems this series is extremely close and has the potential to go either way, I think the Penguins are going to become the first team since the Red Wings (1997/1997) to win back-to-back Stanley Cups.

(PENGUINS IN 7)



Enjoy the Stanley Cup Finals!


Joel Forman

Thursday, May 11, 2017

2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs Preview - Conference Finals


And then there were 4! After an exciting second round the Stanley Cup Playoffs is down to just 4 teams, with the Pittsburgh Penguins facing the Ottawa Senators in the Eastern Conference Finals and the Anaheim Ducks squaring off with the Nashville Predators in the Western Conference Finals. Here's a look at the Conference Finals and who I think will be competing for Lord Stanley in 2017:

Playoff Matchups to Date:

Eastern Conference:
#1 Washington Capitals defeat WC #2 Toronto Maple Leafs (4-2)
#2 Pittsburgh Penguins defeat #3 Columbus Blue Jackets (4-1)
WC #1 New York Rangers defeat #1 Montreal Canadiens (4-2)
#2 Ottawa Senators defeat #3 Boston Bruins (4-2)


#2 Pittsburgh Penguins defeat #1 Washington Capitals (4-3)
#2 Ottawa Senators defeat WC #1 New York Rangers (4-2)

Western Conference:
WC #2 Nashville Predators defeat #1 Chicago Blackhawks (4-0)
#3 St. Louis Blues defeat #2 Minnesota Wild (4-1)
#1 Anaheim Ducks defeat WC #1 Calgary Flames (4-0)
#2 Edmonton Oilers defeat #3 San Jose Sharks (4-2)


#1 Anaheim Ducks defeat #2 Edmonton Oilers (4-3)
WC #2 Nashville Predators defeat #3 St. Louis Blues (4-2)

Image result for prince of wales trophy
Prince of Wales Trophy awarded to the Eastern Conference Champion

#2 Pittsburgh Penguins vs. #2 Ottawa Senators

Season Series: Ottawa won the season series 2-1-0

December 5, 2016: Pittsburgh Penguins 8, Ottawa Senators 5
January 12, 2017: Ottawa Senators 4, Pittsburgh Penguins 1
March 23, 2017: Ottawa Senators 2, Pittsburgh Penguins 1 (SO)

Players to Watch:

Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Marc-Andre Fleury, Phil Kessel, Jake Guentzel, Justin Schultz

Ottawa: Erik Karlsson, Craig Anderson, Mike Hoffman, Mark Stone, Jean-Gabriel Pageau, Bobby Ryan

X-Factor:

Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby

Ottawa: Erik Karlsson

Playoff Leaders:

Goals: Jake Guentzel (PIT) - 9, Jean-Gabriel Pageau (OTT) - 7
Assists: Evgeni Malkin (PIT) - 13, Erik Karlsson (OTT) - 11
Points: Evgeni Malkin (PIT) - 18, Erik Karlsson (OTT) - 13
Wins: Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT) - 8, Craig Anderson (OTT) - 8
Goals Against Average: Craig Anderson (OTT) - 2.49, Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT) - 2.55
Save Percentage: Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT) - .927%, Craig Anderson (OTT) - .914%
OT Goals: Jake Guentzel (PIT) - 1, Dion Phaneuf/Bobby Ryan/Clarke MacArthur/Jean-Gabriel Pageau/Kyle Turris (OTT)

Prediction: The Senators have been the biggest surprise in the NHL playoffs so far, don't think many people (including myself) gave them a chance to get this far. With that being said, the way the defending champs are playing right now it's hard to see them losing. The Penguins will set out to be the 1st back-to-back Champions since Detroit in 1997/98.

(PENGUINS IN 6)


Image result for clarence s campbell bowl
Clarence S. Campbell Bowl awarded to the Western Conference Champion

#1 Anaheim Ducks vs. WC #2 Nashville Predators

Season Series: Anaheim won the season series 2-1-0

October 26, 2016: Anaheim Ducks 6, Nashville Predators 1
November 12, 2016: Nashville Predators 5, Anaheim Ducks 0
March 7 2017: Anaheim Ducks 4, Nashville Predators 3 (SO)

Players to Watch:

Anaheim: Ryan Getzlaf, Rickard Rakell, Ryan Kesler, Corey Perry, John Gibson, Jakob Silfverberg

Nashville: Pekka Rinne, PK Subban, Filip Forsberg, Ryan Johansen, Ryan Ellis, Roman Josi

X-Factor:

Anaheim: Ryan Getzlaf

Nashville: Pekka Rinne

Playoff Leaders:

Goals: Ryan Getzlaf (ANA) - 8, Ryan Ellis/Roman Josi (NSH) - 4
Assists: Ryan Getzlaf/Corey Perry  (ANA) - 7, Ryan Johansen (NSH) - 7
Points: Ryan Getzlaf (ANA) - 15, Ryan Ellis/Ryan Johansen (NSH) - 9
Wins: Pekka Rinne (NSH) - 8, John Gibson (ANA) - 7
Goals Against Average: Pekka Rinne (NSH) - 1.37, John Gibson (ANA) - 2.80
Save Percentage: Pekka Rinne (NSH) - .951%, John Gibson (ANA) - .908%
OT Goals: Corey Perry - 2, Jakob Silfvergberg - 1 (ANA), Kevin Fiala - 1 (NSH)

Prediction: This has the making of a fantastic Western Conference Finals, the Ducks haven't been to the Stanley Cup since 2007 and the Predators have never been before. While I think this series could go either way, I like the way Ryan Getzlaf and the Ducks are playing right now and have them just edging out the Predators and advancing to the Stanley Cup Final.

(DUCKS IN 7)




This would have the 2017 Stanley Cup Finals as:

#1 Anaheim Ducks (Western Conference Champion) vs. #2 Pittsburgh Penguins (Eastern Conference Champion)


Conn Smythe Trophy Watch:
1. Erik Karlsson - 2 goals/13 points
2. Marc-Andre Fleury - 8 wins/1 shutout/2.55 GAA/927 Save %/3 Assists
3. Pekka Rinne - 8 wins/2 shutouts/1.37 GAA/951 Save % 
4. Ryan Getzlaf - 8 goals/15 points
5. Evgeni Malkin - 5 goals/18 points
6. Jakob Silfverberg - 7 goals/11 points/OT Goal
7. Sidney Crosby - 4 goals/14 points
8. Craig Anderson - 8 wins/1 shutout/2.49 GAA/914 Save %/1 Assist
9. Jake Guentzel - 9 goals/14 points/OT Goal
10. Ryan Ellis - 4 goals/9 points 

Joel Forman

Thursday, May 4, 2017

Stanley Cup Playoff Notes - The Dominance of Ryan Getzlaf


With the 2nd round of the Stanley Cup Plays well underway, there's been several big storylines across the NHL making headlines. We all know about Sidney Crosby's concussion (http://formanfaceoffnhl.blogspot.ca/2017/05/my-two-cents-on-sidney-crosby-injury.html), the rise of the Predators and the return of relevant hockey in Edmonton, but if you're looking for the guy playing the best hockey in the NHL right now look no further than Ducks Captain Ryan Getzlaf. For those that know me, I've been a massive Ryan Getzlaf fan since he got to the NHL, in fact I consider him my favourite non-Avalanche player. Fresh off his monstrous 4-point game last night in Edmonton, this post will take a look at Getzlaf's 2016/17 season including a dominant 2nd-half resurgence.

Career Stats:



2016/17 Season:

After winning Gold with Team Canada at the World Cup of Hockey in September (3rd gold since 2010, Olympics 2010/2014), Getzlaf came into the season ready to prove people wrong after another year of playoff failure. Four straight years the Ducks lost on home ice in game 7 in the playoffs, which inevitably lead to the firing of Bruce Boudreau and re-hiring of Randy Carlyle last summer. It's been well noted Getzlaf's close relationship with Carlyle and many felt that he had a big role in Randy returning to Anaheim, the place both won the Stanley Cup back in 2007.

While many people questioned the firing of Boudreau, Getzlaf was ready to prove people wrong and he started the season on a roll with 8 points in his first 6 games and 10 points in his first 12 games. The Ducks however were finding it hard to string together wins and scoring was a big issue, with Getzlaf scoring just 5 goals over his first 35 games (29 points over that stretch). While he's never been much of a goal-scorer, Getzlaf faced a lot of scrutiny over the first half of the season (http://www.cbc.ca/sports/hockey/nhl/getzlaf) and many people felt he was past his prime.

As soon as the calendar switched to 2017, something changed in both Getzlaf and the Ducks game and the player that people were starting to write off began to show flashes of brilliance again. He started January on a 5-game point streak, with 2 goals and 9 points in 10 games in the month. Things really took off for Getzlaf following the NHL Trade Deadline, and a big part of that was the Ducks acquiring Patrick Eaves from the Stars.

Eaves was paired with Getzlaf and Rickard Rakell upon arriving in Anaheim and the line has been one of the best in the NHL since, with Getzlaf driving the production. Post trade-deadline Getzlaf had 4 goals and 27 points over his final 18 games, leading the Ducks to their 5th-straight Pacific Divsion title. After just 5 goals and 29 points over his first 35 games, Getzlaf finished the season with 15 goals and 74 points in 73 games.

Image result for ryan getzlaf 2017

2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs:

Getzlaf has always been a playoff performer in his 11-year NHL career, with 99 points in 104 career playoff games coming in. The Ducks demolished the Flames in 4-games in round one, with Getzlaf scoring in 3 of 4 games and putting up 5 points in the series. The Flames seemed to have no match for Getzlaf at center, but perhaps what was so impressive was the shot-first mentality the regularly pass-first Getzlaf showed in the series.

He has shown no signs of slowing down in the 2nd round, with the Ducks currently tied 2-2 against the Oilers in a back-and-forth thrilling series. In 4 games in the series, Getzlaf has 4 goals and 8 points, bringing his playoff total to 7 goals/13 points in 8 games. He sits 2nd in the playoffs in goals (Silfverberg/Guentzel 8) and points (Malkin 16), including notching 5 multi-point games and goals in 6 of 8 games.

With his spectacular 4-point performance, Getzlaf passed Ducks legend Teemu Selanne for the most playoff goals (36) in franchise history. His 112 points are also a Ducks playoff record, and he's matched his single-playoff high with 7 goals. Perhaps the most impressive thing about the 31-year old Getlzaf is the minutes he is logging, leading all current forwards with 23:06 per-game including leading all skaters in that Ducks/Oilers game last night with 25:56 icetime (2 goals, 2 assists, 4 points, +4, 3 shots, 2 hits, 1 block)


If you haven't seen much of the Ducks/Oilers series, I highly recommended tuning in to the remainder of the series which is basically a best two-of-three at this point tied 2-2. The momentum swings in this series have been thrilling to watch, and it's been the best series of the 2nd round so far. Connor McDavid is worth watching this series by himself, but it's been the play of Ryan Getzlaf that's been turning heads. While there are many suitable (early) candidates for the Conn Smythe Trophy, the way Getzlaf is playing he leading the pack currently. Here are my current Conn Smythe Trophy favourites:


Early Conn Smyth Trophy Favourites:

1. Ryan Getzlaf - 7 goals/13 points
2. Pekka Rinne - 7 wins/2 shutouts/1.33 GAA/.953 Save %/2 assists
3. Marc-Andre Fleury - 7 wins/2.39 GAA/.935 Save %
4. Evgeni Malkin - 4 goals/16 points
5. Erik Karlsson - 1 goal/8 points
6. Henrik Lundqvist - 5 wins/1 shutout/2.04 GAA/.935 Save %
7. Jake Allen - 5 wins/2.05 GAA/.936 Save %
8. Jake Guentzel - 8 goals/12 points/OT Goal
9. Cam Talbot - 6 wins/2 shutouts/2.62 GAA/.916 Save %
10. Jakob Silfverberg - 8 goals/9 points/OT Goal

Honourable Mention: Ryan Ellis - 4 goals/9 points


The Ducks Captain has come a long way since winning the Stanley Cup as a rookie in 2007, 10 years later he's playing some of the best hockey of his career. On last night's broadcast Craig Simpson called Getzlaf very "Mark Messier-like," in his willingness to lay everything on the line come playoff time. I highly suggest you watch #15 if you haven't had the chance, he seems unstoppable every time he takes the ice!

Image result for ryan getzlaf draft

Joel Forman

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

My Two Cents on the Sidney Crosby Injury

Pittsburgh Penguins' Sidney Crosby takes a hit from Washington Capitals' Matt Niskanen during Game 3 on Monday. Crosby left the game and did not return.


After a thrilling opening few weeks of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, the hockey world took a dark turn last night in the Washington/Pittsburgh series with the injury of Sidney Crosby. From Penguins to Capitals to general hockey fans, the hockey world is fuming right now and it's become the biggest story of the playoffs. If you have been living under a rock for the past 24 hours and somehow haven't seen it, here is the injury:


After taking a good amount of time to study the video, I've broken this down into three sections that have a big impact on this play and the resulting concussion for Sidney Crosby:


1) Sid's Concussion History

Before I talk about the hit itself, I think it's important to talk about the result of the hit first with Crosby getting his 2nd concussion of the season. It's been well-documented over the years the struggles Sidney Crosby has had with concussions, suffering at least 4 since he entered the league 12 years ago. Crosby had two concussions in 2011: hits from Dave Steckel and Victor Hedman 4 days apart in January (hard to know if he was concussed both times) causing him to miss the last 41 games of the season. Crosby returned in November of 2011, but played just 8 games before he suffered a second concussion from a David Krejci hit. He would return in March but play only 16 more games in 2012, totalling 101 missed games in two-year span.

The hockey world was crushed without Crosby, by far the best player on the planet, as he sat on the sidelines for what seemed like eternity. Since those original concussions, Crosby has returned to top form and been the elite player that everyone expects. He suffered a 3rd concussion in training camp and missed the preseason + 6 games to start the year, but was able to again return to top form leading the NHL with 44 goals this season. Here's a look at the two concussion's Sid suffered earlier in his career:




2) Ovechkin slash/slew-foot

Lost in all this mess is the fact that Alex Ovechkin played a huge role in the Sidney Crosby injury. If you look at the slow-motion replay (https://twitter.com/JeffVeillette/status) Ovechkin initially slashes Crosby on the elbow and his stick ramps up and hits Crosby a second time in the back of the head. Finally, you can see Ovie take out the back of Crosby's left skate with his own foot, causing Sid to lose his balance into the Niskanen hit.

In my opinion, Ovechkin is much more viscous with the slash/slew-foot than Niskanen was, and likely Niskanen getting 5-and a game distracted everyone from Ovechkin on the play. Had Ovechkin not taken Crosby out the Niskanen hit likely doesn't happen, and I think the Deparmtent of Player Safety missed out by only reviewing Niskanen's actions and not Ovechkin's as well.


3) Niskanen hit

The Niskanen hit is the toughest part of the play to judge, the Penguins think it was deliberate by Niskanen and the Capitals think it was just a hockey play. I'm in the middle of that spectrum: while the hit might have been the blow that concussed Sid, I don't think he intended to injure Sid on the play. Yes Niskanen does get him in the head, but it's as Crosby is falling and tough to make it seem deliberate as Pens writer Rob Rossi put it (https://ca.sports.yahoo.com/news/pittsburgh-columnist-wants-ovechkin-banned).

As someone who has suffered 3 concussions in my own hockey career, I'm not a fan of any head shots all together and thus regardless if it was intentional or not Niskanen still gets Crosby illegally. Niskanen got a 5-minute major and game misconduct for the play, but will not face any suspension for the hit, and I think the justification that it was unintentional helped that decision. Niskanen used to be Crosby's teammate so I doubt he would try to hurt him intentionally, but it was certainly an unfortunate play for both players.


My Takeaways:

1. It's a real shame that Crosby has another concussion, the fact of the matter is 4 in 12 years is far too many for the best player on the planet. The NHL needs to do a better job of protecting its stars and Crosby is the poster child for that. In my opinion, the NHL needs to take a serious look at banning head shots all together.

2. I'm okay with the Department of Player Safety deciding not to suspend Niskanen, but I think they made the mistake of not reviewing Ovechkin's role in the injury. Had Ovechkin not slashed him/taken his foot out the Niskanen hit likely doesn't happen, and in my opinion Ovie deserved a 1-2 game suspension.

3. What has really pissed me off about this entire situation is the amount of Crosby-haters out there justifying this as a clean hockey play or happy that he's hurt. Crosby has always been one of the most hated players since getting to the NHL, but he has come along ways since his "Crosby Crybaby" days and doesn't deserve the same treatment he got earlier in his career. It's one thing to defend the Niskanen hit, I completely understand that point of view from fans that he was falling and it wasn't intentional. But there are far too many people calling it a clean hit solely for the fact that they don't like Crosby and nothing else. You see people on Twitter/Facebook calling it "karma" for his slash on Methot/O'Reilly earlier in the season, even though the events are completely unrelated. Yes those were bad plays by Sid, but fans seem to imply he gets away with everything and nothing happens to him even though Sid takes more slashes, hacks and wacks then any player in the NHL. Hate a player or team all you want, but you should never wish an injury on any player in the league and most certainly shouldn't celebrate it either. The fact of the matter is this:

THE NHL IS A BETTER PLACE WHEN SIDNEY CROSBY IS ON THE ICE


Joel Forman

Monday, April 24, 2017

2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs Preview - Conference Semifinals


1st Round Scores:

Eastern Conference:
#1 Washington Capitals defeat WC #2 Toronto Maple Leafs (4-2)
#2 Pittsburgh Penguins defeat #3 Columbus Blue Jackets (4-1)
WC #1 New York Rangers defeat #1 Montreal Canadiens (4-2)
#2 Ottawa Senators defeat #3 Boston Bruins (4-2)

Western Conference:
WC #2 Nashville Predators defeat #1 Chicago Blackhawks (4-0)
#3 St. Louis Blues defeat #2 Minnesota Wild (4-1)
#1 Anaheim Ducks defeat WC #1 Calgary Flames (4-0)
#2 Edmonton Oilers defeat #3 San Jose Sharks (4-2)

Here's a look at the 4 Conference Semifinal match-ups:

Image result for eastern conference nhl logo

#1 Washington Capitals vs. #2 Pittsburgh Penguins

Season Series: Washington won the season series 2-0-2

October 13, 2016: Pittsburgh Penguins 3. Washington Capitals 2 (SO)
November 16. 2016: Washington Capitals 7, Pittsburgh Penguins 1 
January 11, 2017: Washington Capitals 5, Pittsburgh Penguins 2
January 16, 2017: Pittsburgh Penguins 8, Washington Capitals 7 (OT)

Players to Watch:

Washington: Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom, TJ Oshie, Justin Williams, Braden Holtby, Kevin Shattenkirk

Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Phil Kessel, Jake Guentzel, Bryan Rust, Justin Schultz

X-Factor:

Washington: Alex Ovechkin 

Pittsburgh: Sidney Crosby

Playoff Leaders:

Goals: Jake Guentzel (PIT) - 5, Alex Ovechkin/Justin Williams/TJ Oshie (WAS) - 3
Assists: Evgeni Malkin (PIT) - 9, Nicklas Backstrom (WAS) - 4
Points: Evgeni Malkin (PIT) - 11, TJ Oshie (WAS) - 7
Wins: Braden Holtby (WAS) - 4, Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT) - 4
Goals Against Average: Braden Holtby (WAS) - 2.36, Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT) - 2.52
Save Percentage: 
Marc-Andre Fleury (PIT) - .933%, Braden Holtby (WAS) - .925%
OT Goals: Tom Wilson/Justin Williams/Marcus Johansson (WAS) - 1, Jake Guentzel (PIT) - 1

Prediction: A rematch of last year's 2nd round series, this is without a doubt the series to watch in the 2nd round (Crosby vs. Ovie never disappoints). While many people are dubbing this as the Capitals year, I'm sticking with the defending Champion Penguins in this series.


(PENGUINS IN 6)


#2 Ottawa Senators vs. WC #1 New York Rangers

Season Series: Ottawa won the season series 2-1-0

November 27, 2016: Ottawa Senators 2, New York Rangers 0
December 27, 2016: New York Rangers 4, Ottawa Senators 3
April 8, 2017: Ottawa Senators 3, New York Rangers 1

Players to Watch:

Ottawa: Erik Karlsson, Craig Anderson, Mike Hoffman, Mark Stone, Bobby Ryan, Derick Brassard

New York: Henrik Lundqvist, Mats Zuccarello, Derek Stepan, Mika Zibanejad, Ryan McDonagh, Rick Nash

X-Factor:

Ottawa: Erik Karlsson

New York: Henrik Lundqvist

Playoff Leaders:

Goals: Bobby Ryan (OTT) - 4, Mats Zuccarello (NYR) - 3
Assists: Derick Brassard (OTT) - 6, Mika Zibanejad (NYR) - 3
Points: Derick Brassard (OTT) - 8, Mika Zibanejad (NYR) - 4
Wins: Craig Anderson (OTT) - 4, Henrik Lundqvist (NYR) - 4
Goals Against Average: Henrik Lundqvist (NYR) - 1.70, Craig Anderson (OTT) - 1.94
Save Percentage: Henrik Lundqvist (NYR) - .947%, Craig Anderson (OTT) - .921%
OT Goals: Dion Phaneuf/Bobby Ryan/Clarke MacArthur (OTT) - 1, Mika Zibanejad (NYR) - 1

Prediction: This series has the potential to go either way, two teams that are thriving based on the play of their goaltenders. I think the series goes 7 games, with the Rangers just squeaking by the Senators to the conference finals

(RANGERS IN 7)


#3 St. Louis Blues vs WC #2 Nashville Predators

Season Series: Nashville won the season series 3-2-0

November 10, 2016: Nashville Predators 3, St. Louis Blues 1
November 19. 2016: St. Louis Blues 3, Nashville Predators 1
December 13, 2016: Nashville Predators 6, St. Louis Blues 3
December 30, 2016: Nashville Predators 4, St. Louis Blues 0 
April 2, 2017: St. Louis Blues 4, Nashville Predators 1

Players to Watch:

St. Louis: Vladimir Tarasenko, Jake Allen, Jaden Schwartz, Alex Pietrangelo, Colton Parayko, Alex Steen

Nashville: Pekka Rinne, Filip Forsberg, Ryan Johansen, Viktor Arvidsson, Roman Josi, PK Subban

X-Factor:

St. Louis: Jake Allen

Nashville: Pekka Rinne

Playoff Leaders:

Goals: Joel Edmundson/Jaden Schwartz/Alex Steen (STL) - 2, Viktor Arvidsson/Roman Josi/Colton Sissons/Kevin Fiala/Filip Forsberg (NSH) - 2
Assists: Ryan Johansen (NSH) - 5, Patrik Berglund/Jaden Schwartz (STL) - 3
Points: Ryan Johansen (NSH) - 6, Jaden Schwartz (STL) - 5
Wins: Jake Allen (STL) - 4, Pekka Rinne (NSH) - 4
Goals Against Average: Pekka Rinne (NSH) 0.70, Jake Allen (STL) - 1.47
Save Percentage: Pekka Rinne (NSH) - .976%, Jake Allen (STL) - .956%
OT Goals: Joel Edmundson/Magnus Pajaarvi (STL) - 1, Kevin Fiala (NSH) - 1

Prediction: Both the Blues and Wild come into this series having upset a higher seed, and we have the best two goaltenders in round 1 facing off in this series in Pekka Rinne and Jake Allen. While I think either team can win the series, I like the Predators momentum after downing the Blackhawks and have them advancing to their 1st conference finals in franchise history.

(PREDATORS IN 6)


#1 Anaheim Ducks vs. #2 Edmonton Oilers

Season Series: Edmonton won the season series 3-2-0

November 15, 2016: Anaheim Ducks 4, Edmonton Oilers 1
December 3, 2016: Edmonton Oilers 3, Anaheim Ducks 2 (OT)
January 25, 2017: Edmonton Oilers 4, Anaheim Ducks 0
March 22, 2017: Anaheim Ducks 4, Edmonton Oilers 3
April 1, 2017: Edmonton Oilers 3, Anaheim Ducks 2 (OT)

Players to Watch:

Anaheim: Ryan Getzlaf, Rickard Rakell, Ryan Kesler, Corey Perry, John Gibson, Jakob Silfverberg

Edmonton: Connor McDavid, Cam Talbot, Leon Draisaitl, Milan Lucic, Oscar Klefbom, Zack Kassian

X-Factor:

Anaheim: Ryan Getzlaf

Edmonton: Connor McDavid 

Playoff Leaders:

Goals: Ryan Getzlaf (ANA) - 3, Connor McDavid/Zack Kassian/Oscar Klefbom (EDM) - 2
Assists: Kevin Bieksa (ANA) - 4, Connor McDavid/Leon Draisaitl/Matt Benning/Andrej Sekera/Mark Letestu (EDM) - 2
Points: Ryan Getzlaf/Rickard Rakell/Shea Theodore (ANA) - 5, Connor McDavid (EDM) - 4
Wins: Cam Talbot (EDM) - 4, John Gibson (ANA) - 3
Goals Against Average: Cam Talbot (EDM) - 2.03, John Gibson (ANA) - 2.59
Save Percentage: Cam Talbot (EDM) - .927%, John Gibson (ANA) - .926%
OT Goals: Corey Perry (ANA) - 1, David Desharnais (EDM) - 1

Prediction: The Oilers proved they are for real after beating the Sharks in round 1, and they get another tough Californian opponent in the Ducks in round 2. While I think McDavid is capable of leading the Oilers to a series win, I think the Ducks overpower the young Oilers and move on the Conference Finals

(DUCKS IN 6)


This would have Pittsburgh, New York, Nashville and Anaheim advancing to the Conference Finals. The match ups would be as follows:

ECF: #2 Pittsburgh Penguins vs. WC #1 New York Rangers
WCF: #1 Anaheim Ducks vs. WC #2 Nashville Predators


Joel Forman

Thursday, April 20, 2017

The Forman Faceoff - 2016/2017 NHL Season Awards

With the 2016/17 NHL Regular season coming to an end, it's time to look at what players are in line for some new hardware this summer. For a frame of reference, here is my pre-season predictions for all the awards predicted below:

Hart Memorial Trophy - Sidney Crosby
Art Ross Trophy - Connor McDavid
Rocket Richard Trophy - Alexander Ovechkin
Vezina Trophy - Carey Price
James Norris Memorial Trophy - Brent Burns
Calder Memorial Trophy - Patrik Laine
Lady Byng Memorial Trophy - Anze Kopitar
Frank J. Selke Trophy - Jonathan Toews
Mark Messier Leadership Award - Sidney Crosby
NHL GM of the Year - David Poile
Jack Adams Trophy - Mike Sullivan
Eastern Conference Champions - Pittsburgh Penguins (over Tampa Bay Lightning)
Western Conference Champions - Chicago Blackhawks (over Los Angeles Kings)
Stanley Cup Champions - Pittsburgh Penguins
Conn Smythe Trophy - Sidney Crosby




Hart Trophy

Winner: Sidney Crosby (PIT)

 (75 GP: 44 Goals, 45 Assists, 89 Points, +17, 25 PP Points)

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I had a really hard time picking the Hart Trophy, and let me start off by saying the season that Connor McDavid had this year was special and made this a really difficult choice. With that being said, there hasn't been a more dominant player in hockey the past year than Sidney Crosby. After winning his second Stanley Cup and World Cup last year, Crosby finished this season 1st in goals (44) and 2nd in points (89) despite playing 7 less games than McDavid. He scored 40+ goals for the 2nd time in his career en route to his 2nd Rocket Richard Trophy. What's been most impressive about Crosby is his consistent production with the carousel of linemates he's had this this season, whether it was Chris Kunitz, Patric Hornqvist, Carl Hagelin, Bryan Rust, or more recently Conor Sheary and Jake Guentzel, the line produces. There's no question that McDavid has several Hart Trophies in his near future, but my vote goes to #87 this year.

Runner Ups:

Connor McDavid (EDM) - 82 GP: 30 Goals,  70 Assists, 100 Points, +27, 27 PP Points

Despite my choice of Crosby for the Hart Trophy, I wouldn't be shocked in Connor McDavid takes home the award as many people are expecting him to. After all, the 19-year old became just the 3rd teenager in NHL history (Sidney Crosby + Wayne Gretzky) to win the Art Ross Trophy with 100 points in 82 games. He reached 30 goals/100 points for the first time in his career, including a dazzling 14-game point streak to end the season in which he amassed 25 points. The Oilers Captain has completely changed the outlook in Edmonton in the two years he's been there, changing them from a team who couldn't seem win to sending them back to the playoffs for the first time in 11 years. There's no doubt that this year has been special for McDavid, and he's poised to be the best player in the NHL for years and years to come.

Patrick Kane (CHI) - 82 GP: 34 Goals, 55 Assists, 89 Points, +11, 23 PP Points

While Kaner didn't quite have the season he had last year (46 goals, 106 points), he was quietly consistent all year and deserves to be recognized. He finished 2nd in the NHL with 89 points, and top-10 in goals with 34 while leading the Blackhawks to first place in the Central Division and Western Conference. Many expected the Blackhawks to take a step back this season with a relatively young team, but Kane's consistency has kept them as the perennial contenders they are. While you could make a good case for a guy like Brad Marchand or Nikita Kucherov to be nominated for the Hart, my choice goes to Kane.

Honourable Mentions: Nikita Kucherov (TBL), Brad Marchand (BOS), Sergei Bobrovsky (CBJ), Brent Burns (SJS), Nicklas Backstrom (WAS)


Rocket Richard Trophy

Winner: Sidney Crosby (PIT) - 44 goals {OFFICIAL}

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In Range: 

Auston Matthews - 40 goals

Nikita Kucherov - 40 goals

Brad Marchand - 39 goals

Vladimir Tarasenko - 39 goals


Art Ross Trophy

Winner: Connor McDavid (EDM) - 100 points {OFFICIAL}

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In Range:

Sidney Crosby (PIT) - 89 Points

Patrick Kane (CHI) - 89 Points

Nicklas Backstrom (WAS) - 86 Points

Brad Marchand (BOS) - 85 Points

Nikita Kucherov (TBL) - 85 Points


Vezina Trophy

Winner: Sergei Bobrovsky (CLS) 

(63 GP: 41-17-5, .931 Save %, 2.06 Goals Against Average, 7 Shutouts)

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The biggest surprise of the NHL season has been the Columbus Blue Jackets, who went from 2nd worst in the NHL last year to 4th best. A massive part of the Blue Jackets rise has been the resurgence of goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky, the 2013 Vezina Trophy winner has been nothing short of spectacular this season for John Tortorella. He currently sits atop or near all of the goalie categories: 1st in goals against average (2.06), 1st in save percentage (.931%), 2nd in wins (41), and 3rd in shutouts (7). The Blue Jackets put up a franchise-best 108 points this year, 15 more than the next best season, and Bob starting 63 on 82 games was a big part of this. He's almost a lock to take home his 2nd Vezina Trophy of his young career.

Runner Ups:

Braden Holtby (WAS) - 63 GP: 42-13-6, .925 Save %, 2.07 Goals Against Average, 9 Shutouts

The reigning Vezina Trophy winner has been as good, if not better, than he was last season where he won an NHL-record 48 wins. For the 2nd year in a row the Capitals won the Presidents Trophy, with Holby winning the William M. Jennings Award for lowest goals allowed in the NHL. Many people like to write off Holtby because of how stacked the Capitals are on offense, but that doesn't hide the fact he sits near the top of all goalie categories: 2nd in goals against average (2.07), 4th in save percentage (.925%), 1st in wins (42), and 1st in shutouts (9). There's no question that Bobrovsky has had a fantastic year and will likely win the Vezina, but that won't stop the Caps goalie from being nomianted for a 2nd year in a row.

Devan Dubnyk (MIN) - 63 GP: 40-19-5, .923 Save %, 2.25 Goals Against Average, 5 Shutouts

Much like I spoke about Holtby up above, Dubnyk was one of the best goalies in the NHL last season and has been equally if not more impressive this year. The Wild have been one of the most consistent teams in the NHL this season under new Head Coach Bruce Boudreau, and Dubnyk has been a calming presence in net like he has done so well since he arrived in Minnesota. He sits near the top of every goalie category: 8th in goals against average (2.25), 7th in save percentage (.923%), 4th in wins (40) and 7th in shutouts (5). While he hasn't had as dominant a year as the two goalies above, he's had the type of year that deserves recognition.

Honourable Mentions: Cam Talbot (EDM), Tuukka Rask (BOS), Carey Price (MTL), Craig Anderson (OTT)


Norris Trophy

Winner: Brent Burns (SJS)

(82 GP: 29 Goals, 47 Assists, 76 Points, +19, 25 PP Points)

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What a season Sharks D Brent Burns had, posting a career-high 29 goals and 76 points in 82 games to finish top 10 in the NHL in scoring. After posting 60 and 75 points respectively the past two seasons, Burns lead all defenseman in goals (29), points (76) and shots (320), 3rd in assists (47), 2nd in PP goals (8) and 3rd in PP Points (25). Perhaps what was most impressive about Burns is he lead all NHL players in shots with 320, 7 more than Alexander Ovechkin who has lead the NHL in shots since 2011. On a high-powered Sharks team that went to the Stanley Cup Finals last year, Burns has been the go-to guy generating offense this year for Pete DeBoer's year. He was my pre-season Norris pick, and he remains my choice at the end of the year.

Runner Ups:

Erik Karlsson (OTT) - 77 GP: 17 Goals, 54 Assists, 71 Points, +10, 27 PP Points

While it's no question the special season that Brent Burns had, it's hard to overlook what Sens Captain Erik Karlsson has done this year. Karlsson finished 2nd amongst all defenseman in assists (54), points (71) and PP points (27) while playing 26:50 icetime a night (4th in the NHL). Many people felt he should have won the Norris last year after a career-high 82 points, while he's had another great offensive year it's been his defensive play turning heads (2nd in blocks with 201). Down the stretch he might have been the best player in the NHL, posting 9 goals and 32 points over his last 25 games. It's going to be a very difficult choice between Burns and Karlsson, but it would not shock me if the Sens Captain walked away with his 3rd Norris Trophy.

Victor Hedman (TBL) - 79 GP: 16 Goals, 56 Assists, 72 Points, +3, 33 PP Points

Completely overshadowed by Burns and Karlsson is the career season Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman is having. He finished the year with a career-high 16 goals and 72 points, which is 17 points more than his previous best. Hedman lead all defenseman in assists (56) and PP points (33), while finishing 2nd in points (72). Playing in Tampa Bay doesn't get Hedman the exposure he deserves, especially after the Lightning had a down year and missed the playoffs. In a two-horse race between Burns and Karlsson, Hedman is the logical 3rd guy to be nominated for the Vezina.

Honourable Mentions: Kevin Shattenkirk (WSH), Shea Weber (MTL), Duncan Keith (CHI)


Calder Trophy

Winner: Auston Matthews (TOR)

(82 GP: 40 Goals, 29 Assists, 69 Points, +2, 22 PP Points)

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Perhaps the most exciting trophy race to watch this season has been the Calder, with many people dubbing the 2016/17 rookie group as the best in NHL history. After such a strong group last year with McDavid/Panarin and company, #1 overall pick Auston Matthews has been the talk of the NHL this year after his 4-goal NHL debut. He lead all rookies in goals (40) and points (69), and his 40 goals were 2nd to Sidney Crosby in the entire NHL. What was most impressive about the 19-year old Matthews this season is all the records he broke; most goals by a Leafs rookie, most point by a Leafs rookie, and most goals any American-born rookie. Matthews did all of this while playing on a line with fellow rookies Zach Hyman and William Nylander/Connor Brown, a feat even more impressive considering how hard it is to adjust to center in the NHL. There are a lot of other rookies in this class who in any other year might win the Calder, but to me it's pretty clear that Auston Matthews is this year's winner.

Runner Ups:

Patrik Laine (WPG)
- 73 GP: 36 Goals, 28 Assists, 64 Points, +7, 14 PP Points

Before the season I chose Laine as my Calder pick, and he took the NHL by storm with 11 goals and 16 points in his first 15 games (including two hat tricks). Laine finished 2nd among all rookies in goals (36) and points (64) and would have likely finished higher had he not missed 8 games with a concussion. After such a dominant year in Finland/World Juniors last season, many people wondered how Laine's game would translate in North America, but he's proven that he will be one of the best goal scorers in the NHL for years and years to come. For most of the season he was right up with Matthews in the Calder race, it's going to be interesting to watch these two and how their careers pan out. He's my clear-cut runner-up to Matthews for the Calder.

Matt Murray (PIT) - 49 GP: 32-10-4, .923 Save %, 2.41 Goals Against Average, 4 Shutouts

Now picking a 3rd guy after Matthews and Laine was really tricky, it could be any of the 5 players that I listed below. The fact of the matter is many people either don't realize Murray is a rookie or don't think he should qualify after winning the Cup last year, but after Panarin won the Calder last year it put's Murray in that similar role. After taking the starting job in Pittsburgh from longtime goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury, Murray posted an impressive 32-10-4 record this season with a .932 save percentage and 2.41 goals against average. The Penguins finished 2nd in the NHL with 111 points and Murray was a big part of that, he's going to be a top 10 goal in the NHL for years and years to come. He is my 3rd choice for Calder nomination.

Honourable Mentions: Mitch Marner (TOR), Zach Werenski (CLS), William Nylander (TOR), Sebastian Aho (CAR), Matthew Tkachuk (CGY)


Lady Byng Trophy

Winner: Johnny Gaudreau (CGY)

4 PIMs

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In 72 games this season Gaudreau picked up just 2 minor penalties, while scoring 18 goals and 61 points in this process.

Runner Ups:

Oscar Klefbom (EDM) - 6 PIMs

Klefbom played all 82 games for the Oilers this season and picked up just 3 minor penalties, and offensively he had a career-high 12 goals and 38 points.

Vladimir Tarasenko (STL) - 12 PIMs

Tarasenko played all 82 games for the Blues this season and picked up just 6 minor penalties, and in the process he scored 39 goals and a career-high 75 points,

Honourable Mentions: Brandon Saad (CBJ), Aleksander Barkov (FLA), Mikael Granlund (MIN)

Selke Trophy

Winner: Ryan Kesler (ANA)

(82 GP: 22 Goals, 36 Assists, 58 Points, +8, 20 PP Points)

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Kesler has improved each year since arriving in Anaheim, finishing with 22 goals and 58 points for his highest point output since 2010/11, the last time he won the Selke Trophy. He played 21:18 average icetime per night, good for 3rd best among all forwards in the NHL. Kesler won a career-best 1029 total faceoffs this year (3rd in the NHL) while winning 57.4% of his faceoffs (6th in the NHL). Kesler has been a big part of the Ducks winning the Pacific Division for a 5th straight year, look for him to add some hardware to his trophy case this summer.

Runner Ups:

Mikko Koivu (MIN) - 80 GP: 18 Goals, 40 Assists, 58 Points, +27, 20 PP Points

With the arrival of Bruce Boudreau in Minnesota the Wild transformed from a good to a great team this year, and Captain Mikko Koivu was a big part of that. He scored 18 goals and 58 points while finishing a career-best +27, pacing the Ducks to 2nd in the Central Division. While playing 19:06 icetime a game this season (32nd among all forwards), Koivu won 938 total faceoffs (5th in the NHL) and 55.2% of his faceoffs (12th in the NHL). Koivu was already named as one of 3 finalists for the Selke Trophy, so it will be interesting to see if he wins the award this summer.

Patrice Bergeron (BOS) - 79 GP: 21 Goals, 32 Assists, 53 Points, +12, 17 PP Points

For the 6th time in his career Patrice Bergeron is a Selke Trophy finalist, the three-time winner (2012, 2014, 2015) can join Bob Gainey as the only 4-time winners if he takes the award this summer. Bergeron scored 21 goals and 52 points in 79 games this season while playing 19:25 icetime a game (21st among all forwards). He won an NHL-best 1089 total faceoffs and finished 3rd in the NHL winning 60.1% of his faceoffs. While many people think that Kesler/Koivu have a good chance at winning the Selke, Bergeron's past winning history plays in his favour and it would not surprise me if he won his 4th Selke Trophy.

Honourable Mentions: Jonathan Toews (CHI), Mikael Backlund (CGY), Mark Stone (OTT)


Mark Messier Leadership Award:

Winner: Sidney Crosby (PIT)

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After leading the Penguins to the Stanley Cup last season, his 2nd as Captain, Crosby paced the Pens to 111 points this year and good for 2nd best in the NHL. He also scored an NHL-best 44 goals and continues to pile on the points no matter who he plays with (see above)

Runner Ups:

Erik Karlsson (OTT)

Karlsson almost single-handily pushed the Senators into the playoffs this season, and his play at the defensive end has rounded into one of the NHL's best players. As Craig Anderson put it recently on Karlsson's leadership, "He’s starting to remind me a lot of Alfredsson, where guys are starting to kill themselves for him."

Mikko Koivu (MIN)

As I mentioned above about Koivu in the Selke Trophy, his leadership has blossomed under new Head Coach Bruce Boudreau. The Wild finished 2nd in the Central (and 5th in the NHL) with 106 points this season.


GM of the Year

Winner: Jeff Gorton (NYR)

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After a disappointing 5-game series loss to the Penguins in round 1 last year, the Rangers were in for a summer of changes as many people saw them as an old team in a transition period. Rangers GM Jeff Gorton made a series of moves last summer that have played out brilliantly; the Mika Zibanejad for Derick Brassard swap, luring college free agent Jimmy Vesey, signing Michael Grabner (27 goals) and Nick Holden (34 points) and bringing Pavel Buchnevich over from the KHL (20 points in 41 games). In a talented Metropolitan division the Rangers finished 4th with 102 points and the moves made by Gorton were a big part of that. He is my choice for GM of the year.

Runner Ups: 

Lou Lamiorello (TOR)

Hasn't been a better story in the NHL this season than the turnaround of the Toronto Maple Leafs, thanks in part to a trio of super rookies in Auston Matthews/Mitch Marner/William Nylander. While Lou didn't draft Marner/Nylander, and he was gifted Matthews with the #1 pick last year, there have been a number of others moves that have helped shaped the Leafs into a playoff team. It all started with the summer trade for Frederik Andersen, who was a huge part of the Leafs success this year winning 33 games. Lou brought Nikita Zaitsev over from Russia, who has been a calming presence on the Leafs blueline playing big minutes as their shutdown guy, while also adding tough guy Matt Martin who has been noted as a big locker room guy (especially with some of the Leafs rookies). Perhaps his biggest move came at the trade deadline, acquiring towering 6'6 center Brian Boyle from the Lightning for the playoff push. Lou deserves a ton of credit for the job he has done in his short tenure in Toronto.

Stan Bowman (CHI)

Many people had the Hawks pegged for a down year this season, a team in transition after losing in the 1st round to St. Louis last year. For years Bowman has had to deal with a tight salary cap with his core players making most of the money, and that always leaves changes in the bottom half of their lineup. While the stars remain on the roster, Bowman has done a great job bringing in a mix of youth and veterans to make the Hawks into Central Division Champions this year. A group of rookies in Nick Schmatlz, Tanner Kero, Ryan Hartman, Tyler Motte and Vince Hinnestroza have all made big contributions this season for the Blackhawks. Bowman added former Blackhawk Brian Campbell in the summer, and added another former Blackhawk defenseman Johnny Oduya at the trade deadline. Bowman doesn't get enough credit for keeping the Hawks in contention year after year with little money to work with, and he deserves the recognition this year.

Honourable Mentions: Jim Rutherford (PIT), Brian MacLellan (WAS), Chuck Fletcher (MIN)


Jack Adams Trophy

Winner: Mike Babcock (TOR) 

40-27-15, 95 Points, 4th in the Atlantic Division

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Mike Babcock has always been one of (if not the) best coaches in the NHL, but the job he has done to turn around the Maple Leafs in 2 short years is nothing short of remarkable. With an overload of youth injecting into the Leafs lineup this year, Babcock has changed them from a consistent lottery team to within 8 points of the division lead and most importantly a playoff team. It's also shocking to me that Babcock has never won the Jack Adams in his career, especially with all those dominant Red Wings teams of the mid 2000s, so fitting that this would be the year he finally get's the recognition he deserves.

Runner Ups:

Joel Quenneville (CHI) - 50-23-9, 109 Points, 1st in the Central Division/Western Conference

Quenneville is a 1-time Jack Adams winner, having won it years back in 1999/2000 while a member of the St. Louis Blues. Much like Babcock with all those dominant Red Wings teams, Quenneville has had the Blackhawks dynasty since he arrived in Chicago and has never won Jack Adams during that time. With a young team this year the Hawks stayed as perennial Stanley Cup contenders winning the Central Division/Western Conference with 109 points (3rd best in the NHL). Whether he wins the award over Babcock remains to be seen, but Quenneville deserves to be nominated.

Bruce Boudreau (MIN) - 49-25-8, 106 Points, 2nd in the Central Division

It's still kind of shocking to me that the Ducks fired Bruce Boudreau last summer, despite winning 4 straight Pacific Division titles it wasn't enough to overlook the 4 straight game 7 losses on home ice in the playoffs. The Wild happily pounced on Boudreau, and he took them from 87 points and a Wild Card team last season to 106 points and 2nd best in the Western Conference (5th in the NHL) this season. This 3rd spot could easily go to a guy like John Tortorella, but my choice is for Boudreau and the great job he has done in Minnesota.

Honourable Mentions: John Tortorella (CBJ), Mike Sullivan (PIT), Barry Trotz (WSH)



Masterson Trophy

Winner: Craig Anderson (OTT)

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Anderson was one of the best stories in hockey this year, taking time of to deal with his wife Nicholle's sudden cancer diagnosis, only to return and play inspired and fantastic hockey for the Senators this season. Despite several weeks away from the team, Anderson started 40 games this year winning 25 and putting up 5 shutouts. Had he played all season he would be in Vezina conversation, but he showed family matters more than hockey in caring for his wife this season and made the best of a difficult situation. With the NHL community rooting for Anderson all season, he is the obvious Masterson Trophy winner

Runner Ups:

Derek Ryan (CAR)

Ryan is one of the feel-good stories of the NHL season, making his NHL debut at age 30 after years of different hockey leagues. He went from the WHL, to Canadian University, to Austria, to Sweden before his journey to Carolina in the NHL where had 29 points in 67 games this season.

Marian Hossa (CHI)

Hossa has beena model of consistency since signing with the Blackhawks in 2009, and he hit career milestones this year with his 500th goal and 1300th NHL game played. Including playoff games he has played over 1500 games and has won 3 Stanley Cups.

Honourable Mentions: Andrew Cogliano (ANA), Zdeno Chara (BOS)


Here's a few unofficial awards that I have given out:

Comeback Player of the Year

Winner: Eric Staal (MIN)

(82 GP: 28 Goals, 37 Assists, 65 Points, +17, 16 PP Points)

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The longtime Hurricanes Captain had a down year last season, with just 13 goals and 39 points in 83 games for the Hurricanes/Rangers combined, both career-lows. He had just 6 points in 20 games with the Rangers and many people (including myself) were writing him off as a 32-year old free agent last summer. The Wild signed him to a 3-year $10.5 million deal, and he has responded with 28 goals and 65 points in 82 games this season, good for 2nd on the Wild in each category. He looks like a completely rejuvenated played under Boudreau and looks to have a second wind in his great career.

Runner Ups:

Alex Radulov (MTL) - 76 GP: 18 Goals, 36 Assists, 54 Points, +10, 16 PP Points

Radulov last played in the NHL in 2012, a short stint with the Predators in the playoffs before returning to the KHL until last summer. Radulov spent 2008-2011 and 2012-2016 in the KHL, and hasn't been heard of in the NHL since he was with the Predators earlier in his career. Flash forward to last summer, he became a highly sought after free agent after coming over from Russia and signed a 1-year $5.75 million deal with the Canadiens. Playing mostly on a line with Captain Max Pacioretty, Radulov scored 18 goals and 54 points in 76 games this season adding a much-needed scoring element to the Canadiens. After failing to succeed in the NHL in his 20s, Radulov finally seems to have found his game in his 30s.

Nazem Kadri (TOR) - 82 G: 32 Goals, 29 Assists, 61 Points, -7, 17 PP Points

Kadri didn't exactly have a bad year last season, 17 goals and 45 points, but on a really bad Leafs team he somehow lead them in scoring. Kadri had 44 points in 48 games during the lockout year in 2013, but hasn't been able to find his game until this season. He scored career-high 32 goals and 61 points this season while also playing the role of shutdown center against the best in the NHL. There's no question how big of an influence Mike Babcock has had on Kadri since arriving in Toronto, as he is developing into one of the best two-way centers in the NHL.


Breakout Player of the Year

Winner: Mikael Granlund (MIN)

(81 GP: 26 Goals, 43 Assists, 69 Points, +23, 20 PP Points)

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Granlund lead the Wild this season with 69 points in 81 games while scoring a career-high 26 goals, but even more impressive considering his career-high before this season was 13 goals 44 points. Under Bruce Boudreau it looks like Granlund has taken the next step in his career and has turned into one of the most dynamic players in the NHL at 25-years old.

Runner Ups:

David Pastrnak (BOS) - 75 GP: 34 Goals, 36 assists, 70 Points, +11, 24 PP Points

Playing on one of the best lines in the NHL with Patrice Bergeron (52 points) and Brad Marchand (85 points), Pastrnak scored a career-high 34 goals and 70 points in 75 games this season. The 20-year old Czech winger looks like he will be one of the best goal scorers in the NHL for years and years to come.

Viktor Arvidsson (NSH) - 80 GP: 31 Goals, 30 Assists, 61 Points, +16, 9 PP Points)

Arvidsson had just 8 goals and 16 points in 56 games last season, switching between the NHL and AHL at times. Flash forward to this season and Arvidsson was one of the best players on the Predators, scoring 31 goals and 61 points in 80 games this season. He has been a mainstay on the Predators top line with Ryan Johansen and Filip Forsberg and has a bright future ahead at 24-years old.

Honourable Mentions: Cam Atkinson (CBJ), Nikolaj Ehlers (WPG), Alexander Wennberg (CBJ)


Joel Forman