2022 NHL Mock Draft
This is our mock version for the first round of the 2022 NHL Draft, which will be held in Montreal on July 7th. The first 20 picks will be split into multiple parts. The first part being which players our model would prefer to select at each pick. The explanation of our model can be found here. The next part will be our draft analyst Matt Higgs’ analysis on what he believes will happen at each selection. The final part will be the summary of the prediction, and it will include projected NHL role, as well as NHL comparable players for the prospects. The final twelve selections will simply include the mock pick, and the NHL comparable for the player.
*Note: The NHL comparable players provided are simply a stylistic comparison of each prospect, not necessarily who we believe each player will eventually become in the NHL.
1. Montreal Canadiens
The Model
With the first pick, Montreal is most likely debating between picking either Canadian center Shane Wright, or the big Slovak winger, Juraj Slafkovsky. At the top of the draft, our model really likes Wright, Slovakian defensemen Simon Nemec, and Austrian forward Marco Kasper, as the top tier guys. Although Nemec is a consensus top 5 pick, Kasper is more of a consensus top 10-15 pick among most rankings and mock drafts. Our model really liked him due to his production in the SHL this past season, the top league in Sweden, and followed it up with an impressive playoffs as well. However, Kasper is already almost close to a finished product, and there are questions about his offensive upside, which validate the reasons for most rankings having him outside the top 5. Our model really likes Nemec for the same reasons as Kasper, as he was very impressive in the top Slovakian league this season, with an outstanding playoffs as well, as he averaged almost a point per game as a teenage defenseman in the postseason. However, Nemec is not seen as a realistic option at pick number one for Montreal, which leaves Wright and Slafkovsky. While Wright was the consensus number one for the past few years in this draft class, he had a very underwhelming season this year, leaving the door open for debate at the top. Slafkovsky, on the other hand, shot up the draft boards this year thanks to some very impressive showings in international tournaments, including the Olympics in Beijing where he led the tournament in goals and won tournament MVP, as well as the Men’s World Championships in Finland. As a result, the gap is razor thin between the two players for who should be picked first. Our model was not very high on Slafkovsky, mainly due to his underwhelming production in Liiga this past season.
Matt’s Analysis
My personal preference at number one would be USNTDP center Logan Cooley. When compared to Wright, Cooley is the far more dynamic player with many more tools, which leads me to believe he has a much better chance to be a top line, 70-80 point center. I view Wright as more of a very good, second line, 50-60 point center. When comparing Cooley to Slafkovsky, it is razor thin, but I slightly lean towards Cooley due to positional value. However, it doesn’t seem like Cooley is in the conversation for Montreal at number one, leaving it between Wright and Slafkovsky. With the draft being in Montreal, and Shane Wright being the big name and the canadian kid, It feels like there would be a lot more pressure on upper management to get it right if they opted for Slafkovsky over Wright. Montreal goes with the two-way center to give them a one-two punch down the middle with Wright and Nick Suzuki.
Prediction
The Pick: Shane Wright, Center, Kingston Frontenacs (OHL)
Projection: Two-way, second-line center
NHL Comparables: Mika Zibanejad, Patrice Bergeron, Mark Schiefele
The Model
With Wright off the board, our model really likes Simon Nemec and Marco Kasper as the best options for New Jersey. They, along with Shane Wright, were the three players in the model’s top tier. However, according to most rankings and mock drafts, it would be a massive reach to take Kasper in the top 5. Nemec is interesting, as he has been projected to go and ranked around 4th overall, which makes him a slight possibility for New Jersey here at pick two. However, they took a defensemen with a top 5 pick last year in Luke Hughes. Nemec is also seen as more of an offensive defenseman, which is exactly what Luke Hughes is, so Nemec wouldn’t exactly be filling an organizational need here. Unless they surprised us on draft day, it doesn’t seem as if Nemec would be the pick here for New Jersey.
Matt’s Analysis
Death, taxes, and New Jersey moving up in the draft lottery. The Devils, who were originally slotted to pick fifth, win another lottery and jump up to second overall. While I believe Cooley is the best player available, I believe Slafkovsky fits a bigger need for New Jersey. The Devils are probably looking to add a bit more size, and they already have a solid duo down the middle with Jack Hughes and Nico Hischier (as well as Dawson Mercer). On top of that, Cooley is an undersized, dynamic, playmaking center, which is what they already have with Hughes (and Hischier, to an extent). Slafkovsky gives them the big, powerful, goal-scoring winger that they need, and would fit in beautifully playing next to Jack Hughes for the next decade plus.
Prediction
The Pick: Juraj Slafkovsky, Left Wing, TPS (Liiga)
Projection: Top six, goal scoring winger
NHL Comparables: Mikko Rantanen, Rick Nash
3. Arizona Coyotes
The Model
Nemec and Kasper still remain as the top players available according to the model. While it is realistically still far too early for Kasper, I definitely expect Nemec to be in play here for Arizona.
Matt’s Analysis
It feels as if there’s somewhat of a consensus top three in this draft with Wright, Slafkovsky, and Logan Cooley. I believe Arizona would select whichever one of the three fell to them at this pick. In this case, it’s Logan Cooley. I also believe that if Slafkovsky was also an option here, they would still select Cooley, as he fits a greater organizational need for them. They have some good talent at wing with Clayton Keller, Nick Schmaltz, and Dylan Guenther on the way, but they do not have any top-end, dynamic, playmaking centers to play with those guys, and Cooley certainly fits the bill. He is an electric playmaker and fits exactly what the Coyotes are lacking down the middle. Although he’s a bit undersized at 5’10, he more than makes up for it with his speed, vision, hands, competitiveness, and overall explosive playmaking ability. He has arguably the highest ceiling of any player in this class, with legit potential to be a superstar down the road with time and proper development. I believe the best overall talent available in this draft falls in Arizona’s lap at pick number three. He will be heading over to play at the University of Minnesota next season, but should be ready to step into the NHL next spring after his college season ends.
Prediction
The Pick: Logan Cooley, Center, USNTDP
Projection: Top line, playmaking center
NHL Comparables: Brayden Point, Mitch Marner
The Model
Two of the three top tier players in our model are still available for Seattle at the fourth pick. Although Nemec and Kasper are in the same tier at the top, our model still has Nemec as a higher probability to be a full-time NHL player, making Nemec the preferred pick here. If you start looking at players in our next tier, the only players who would be realistic options here for Seattle in that tier are Logan Cooley and Swedish goal scoring winger Jonathan Lekkerimaki. Cooley is obviously not available, and it’d probably be a reach here for Lekkerimaki.
Matt’s Analysis
After taking center Matty Beniers with their second overall pick last year, Seattle grabs a cornerstone defensemen in Simon Nemec. This pick seems like it will realistically come down to Nemec and Czech defenseman David Jiricek, so it’s all about who Seattle prefers, as they are both much different types of players. Nemec is 6’0, and is viewed as more of a modern type of defenseman. He’s a smooth skater, smart, and can move the puck very efficiently. Jiricek is 6’3, and is more of a physical “shutdown” type of defensemen, with limited offensive ability. I believe Nemec fits better with how Seattle wants to build their team, and I believe he is the better overall prospect as well. Nemec may not become a true number one defenseman, but he’s got a great shot at being a top pair D in Seattle for a long time.
Prediction
The Pick: Simon Nemec, Defenseman, Nitra (SVK)
Projection: Number 2/3, two-way defenseman
NHL Comparables: Devon Toews, MacKenzie Weegar

5. Philadelphia Flyers
The Model
With Nemec gone, the only player remaining in the top tier of our model is Kasper. Unless the Flyers are 100% sold on his offensive upside, it would be a reach to take Kasper here. The top remaining player in our model’s next tier is Lekkerimaki. Our model was pretty high on Lekkerimaki due to him lighting up the top Swedish junior league, as well as having pretty good production in the SHL this season, and because of the fact that he is only a couple months away from not being draft eligible until next year’s draft. There are some players in the draft class who are almost a full year older than Lekkerimaki. Another year of development could do wonders for a player like him. However, it still feels a tad early here for Lekkerimaki.
Matt’s Analysis
As mentioned before of there being a light consensus on a top 3 in this year’s draft, it also seems like there is a consensus top six, with those six players being the four already chosen in this mock, as well as Jiricek and USNTDP product Cutter Gauthier. I believe this pick comes down to those two. I’m sure Philadelphia will love Jiricek’s hard-hitting, physical style of play, but they do already have a defenseman in the mold of Jiricek in Rasmus Ristolainen. They are both big, physical, have heavy shots, and limited offense, so Jiricek wouldn’t be giving the Flyers something they don’t have. I also believe the Flyers simply need more talent and skill up front, and Gauthier fits the bill. Gauthier is a 6’2, highly competitive forward, who is an outstanding skater, and already has an NHL caliber shot. He is arguably the best goalscorer in the draft. On top of that, many teams believe he will play center at the NHL level, which only bumps up his value.
Prediction
The Pick: Cutter Gauthier, Center/Left Wing, USNTDP
Projection: Top 6, goal-scoring power forward
NHL Comparables: J.T Miller, Pierre-Luc Dubois
The Model
The two players that are realistic options here for Columbus that our model has in its top two tiers are still Kasper and Lekkerimaki. However, it still feels a tad bit high for each player, although this is probably the last pick where neither are very good possibilities to get taken. If you look at the model’s next tier, one player that starts to become a candidate to get taken in this range is Winnipeg Ice forward Matt Savoie. Our model liked him due to his high level production in the WHL, but didn’t have him in one of the top tiers due to his height at 5’9.
Matt’s Analysis
As mentioned before, this draft class seems like it has a consensus top six at the moment, so I believe Columbus will simply select whichever of those six players falls to them. In this case, it’s the hulking Czech defenseman Jiricek. After selecting two forwards in the top 12 of last year’s draft with Kent Johnson (5th overall) and Cole Sillinger (12th), Columbus gets their defensmen in Jiricek at pick number 6. Jiricek is a right-shot, bruising defender with size and a heavy shot, although there are some offensive limitations. He’s one of the safest picks in this year’s class. He shouldn’t need very long before stepping into the Blue Jackets lineup.
Prediction
The Pick: David Jiricek, Defenseman, Plzen (CZE)
Projection: Number 2/3, two-way defenseman
NHL Comparables: Alex Pietrangelo, Moritz Seider
The Model
Now is the range where guys like Kasper, Lekkerimaki, and Savoie start to go off the board. All three are great options here for Ottawa. Another one of the model’s tier 2 players who are a possibility here for the Senators is USNTDP center Frank Nazar. Our model liked him due to putting up elite numbers with Team USA U17 and U18 in both the USHL and the USDP the past couple seasons, as he averaged well over a point a game in each league each season. However, there are varying opinions on him throughout the scouting world, with some believing he should challenge to go in the top 10, and some believing he should be a last first round pick.
Matt’s Analysis
This is where the draft really starts to open up. It seems like this pick is where the next tier of players start. That next tier includes Kasper, Lekkerimaki, Savoie, and Finnish forward Joakim Kemell, as well as Nazar, Savoie’s Winnipeg teammate Conor Geekie, and Canadian defenseman Kevin Korchinski, although it’s unlikely that those three would go this early at pick 7. At this point it’s pure guesswork to try to predict who starts to go at each pick, but I’m fairly confident that Ottawa is picking between those first four players mentioned, with Lekkerimaki probably the least likely of the four to go. Kasper has a good amount of sandpaper in his game, which is what Ottawa already has in many of its players and prospects, including Brady Tkachuk, Ridley Greig, and last year’s 10th overall pick, Tyler Boucher. As a result, I think they go with either Kemell or Savoie, and my guess is they take Savoie. Savoie is an explosive skater with great hands, an NHL caliber shot, and isn’t afraid to get to the dirty areas. It’s unclear among scouts on if he’ll play center or a wing in the NHL, but the betting odds would probably be at wing, due to his size at 5’9. Although, his junior coach does believe he’ll be a center at the next level. Also, don’t be surprised if Ottawa trades out of this pick, as they may be wanting to accelerate the rebuild process.
Prediction
The Pick: Matt Savoie, Center/Right Wing, Winnipeg (WHL)
Projection: Top 6, point producing forward
NHL Comparables: Mat Barzal, Kevin Fiala
8. Detroit Red Wings
The Model
At this point, the model is probably screaming for someone to take Kasper, and I think it finally gets its wish here.
Matt’s Analysis
Just like Ottawa in the pick before, it would be a major shock if Detroit’s pick wasn’t one of those players previously listed in the next tier after the top six. However, Steve Yzerman has shown he isn’t afraid to go off the board, so never say never. Of those players, I believe the most likely candidates for Detroit here are Kasper and Frank Nazar. Nazar is very similar to Detroit’s own Dylan Larkin, both very speedy and skilled centers from the USNTDP, and both playing their college hockey at Michigan. A big difference is that Larkin is 6’1, while Nazar is only 5’10, making it a bigger obstacle for him to become a top six center in the NHL. The vastly different opinions on Nazar in the scouting world also indicate that it’s probably unlikely he goes as high as 8th overall. Marco Kasper really feels like the pick for Detroit here. He fills a need here as a potential second-line center to slot in behind Larkin, although he is very versatile and can play any forward position. There are also obvious connections with Detroit and taking high draft picks out of the SHL. Although there are questions about Kasper’s offensive upside, he’s one of the best all-around prospects in this draft, combined with very high character and a great work ethic. There’s a slight chance he may even be able to step into the NHL as soon as this coming season. Detroit takes the Austrian pivot at pick 8.
Prediction
The Pick: Marco Kasper, Center, Rӧgle (SHL)
Projection: Two-way, second line center
NHL Comparables: Sam Bennet, Joel Eriksson-Ek
l
9. Buffalo Sabres
The Model
With all three players in the top tier of the model all off the board, the remaining picks will be from players placed in the remaining tiers. Tier 2 players Lekkerimaki and Nazar still remain here for Buffalo at 9, so the model would definitely favor one of those two here. Some remaining tier 2 players from the model include USNTDP players Isaac Howard and Lane Hutson, who ranked highly due to their high levels of point production for the past couple seasons, but they are probably not realistic options for the Sabres this early.
Matt’s Analysis
Just like Detroit and Ottawa, it would be a major surprise if the Sabres selection wasn’t from that group of six to seven players after the consensus top six. Since Savoie and Kasper are both gone in this mock, that leaves Lekkerimaki, Kemell, Nazar, Geekie, and Korchinski. In regards to Korchinski, I firmly believe that the Sabres won’t be taking a defenseman here, mainly due to the fact that the best available defensemen at this range are left-hand shots. The Sabres young cornerstone defenders right now are former first overall picks Rasmus Dahlin and Owen Power, as well as Mattias Samuelsson. All of them are left-handed, making it tough to use a top ten selection on another left-shot defenseman. Even after Korchinski, the next two best available defensemen are Denton Mateychuk and Pavel Mintyukov, and both are left-handed (and both would be a reach here at 9). As a result, I can confidently cross off Korchinski here. 6’3 center Conor Geekie is a potential option here, but Buffalo also has the 16th pick in this draft, and there’s a decent chance he could slide there, so I’d be very surprised if Buffalo used its first pick on Geekie. That leaves Lekkerimaki, Kemell, and Nazar. You could easily make an argument for all 3 of these players, so it’s tough to pinpoint which direction they’ll go. I’ll cross off Nazar just because he has the greatest chance of these 3, by far, to slide to 16, and it’s usually BPA at the top of the draft. In addition, Lekkerimaki and Kemell firmly project as top 6 forwards in the NHL, while there are questions on if Nazar will become a 2nd line center, or nothing more than a 3rd line center. That leaves Lekkerimaki and Kemell. They are both very similar players, as they are both undersized, skilled, right-handed, European, goal-scoring wingers with lethal shots. It’s tough to find many differences between the two, other than Lekkerimakki is an inch taller at 5’10 ½, while Kemell has a bigger edge to his game. It realistically comes down to who they personally prefer, as it is extremely close between the two in most rankings out there. It is tough to ignore a bit of a Swedish connection for the Sabres, as they’ve had their fair share of taking players from Sweden in recent years, including last year when they took Isak Rosen with a top 15 pick. They also have multiple Swedes on the current roster, including one of their franchise players in Dahlin, as well as Victor Olofsson and Rasmus Asplund. When watching Lekkerimaki, he looks almost identical to Jack Quinn, who the Sabres used a top 10 pick on a couple years ago. However, Kemell was leading the entire Finnish professional league in scoring early on this season before suffering a shoulder injury, but never maintained that scoring rate once he came back later on. The first half of the year, Kemell was seen as a top 5 pick, and potentially even top 3. If he stayed healthy all year, who knows where he might be going in this draft. It’s razor thin between the two in every ranking and mock draft out there, but I’ll say they go with Lekkerimaki because of the Sabres’ Swedish connection.
Prediction
The Pick: Jonathan Lekkerimaki, Right Wing, Djurgardens (SWE)
Projection: Top 6, goal scoring winger
NHL comparable: Jordan Eberle
10. Anaheim Ducks
The Model
With Lekkerimaki gone, the model’s only remaining tier-2 player who is a realistic choice here for Anaheim is Nazar. However, I believe the Ducks will be leaning towards taking a defensemen here. The only two d-men in the second tier from the model are USNTDP product Lane Hutson, and North Bay Batallion’s Ty Nelson. They are both undersized, offensive defenseman who the model liked because of their ability to put up points wherever they want, so it would recommend one of them as the pick here. However, neither of them are considered to go anywhere near the top 10 in this class. If you look at the defensemen in the model’s next tier, it includes Korchinski, as well as USNTDP’s Seamus Casey, and Moose Jaw Warrior Denton Mateychuk. Casey isn’t a realistic option here at 10. Mateychuk may have an outside chance, but it’s highly unlikely. Korchinski, on the other hand, is one of the frontrunners.
Matt’s Analysis
I strongly believe that Anaheim will be taking a d-man here at 10. After the recent trade of Hampus Lindholm, they are pretty thin at the position. They also used their 3rd overall pick last year on a forward in Mason McTavish. The two defensemen who are strong possibilities here for the Ducks are Korchinski and Saginaw Spirit’s Pavel Mintyukov. They are both big, mobile defensemen with offensive upside. Korchinski shot up the rankings this season, thanks in large part to an impressive showing in the Seattle Thunderbirds’ deep run in the WHL playoffs recently. I believe the greatest separator here is Mintyukov’s passport, as Russians are expected to slide a bit this year as a result of some pretty obvious real-world circumstances. Due to the considerable risk and questions surrounding taking a Russian player, I don’t expect any team to use a top 10 pick on one. On top of that, I also believe Korchinski is the better overall prospect with a higher ceiling.
Prediction
The Pick: Kevin Korchinski, Defensemen, Seattle Thunderbirds (WHL)
Projection: Top 4, offensive defensemen
NHL Comparable: Shea Theodore
11. San Jose Sharks
The Model
Similar to Anaheim, the only realistic option for San Jose in tier 2 of the model is Nazar. If you look at the next tier, a few names with outside chances to be selected here include Mateychuk, Finnish forward Brad Lambert, and Swedish forward Liam Ohgren. It’s certainly possible Lambert goes in this range of picks, but it still feels a tad bit early for him. The same goes for Mateychuk and Ohgren, as they’re more likely to go in the 15-20 range. The model’s pick here would be Nazar, and he is certainly a possibility.
Matt’s Analysis
I believe the Sharks are leaning towards taking a defensemen with this pick, as they don’t have much coming through the pipeline on defence behind Ryan Merkley. They also have their fair share of forwards they’ve drafted, including last year’s top 10 pick William Eklund, and 2020 first rounder Ozzy Weisblatt. The top defensemen available here would be Pavel Mintyukov. However, I believe the value here with Kemell sliding this far would be too good to pass up on. They’ve clearly shown that they value smallish possession forwards through recent drafts, so Kemell would make sense here, giving them another offensive weapon to add to their prospect pool.
Prediction
The Pick: Joakim Kemell, Right Wing, JYP (Liiga)
Projection: Top 6, goal scoring winger
NHL Comparable: Viktor Arvidsson
12.Columbus Blue Jackets
The Model
With San Jose taking Kemell, the same players remain as the model’s best options for Columbus. The most likely option of those players is still Nazar, although I could see them taking a swing on Lambert, who is one of the biggest X-factors in this draft.
Matt’s Analysis
Since Columbus used their first pick in this mock on a defensemen, I believe they lean toward taking a forward if this scenario were to play out. They could take a bit of a risk and select Russian forward Danila Yurov, who is easily a top 10 talent in this draft, but will probably slide a bit due to obvious reasons. However, I believe they hold off and go with the 6’3 center Conor Geekie. Geekie’s skating is cause for concern, but he has a high hockey IQ and great playmaking ability. When you combine that with his 6’3 frame, he’s definitely got the tools to be a difference maker at the next level
Prediction
The Pick: Conor Geekie, Center, Winnipeg Ice (WHL)
Projection: Middle-six center
NHL Comparables: Ryan Getzlaf, Brock Nelson
13. New York Islanders
The Model
With the Sharks selecting Geekie, the same players remain as the model’s picks here for the Islanders, with the two most likely still being Nazar or Lambert. Lambert is an interesting one, as his uncle is newly hired Islanders head coach Lane Lambert, so there’s a possible connection there.
Matt’s Analysis
The Islanders prospect pool is pretty much a wasteland, so they can go any direction here. They’re also a candidate to trade out of this pick. I say they go with Czech forward Jiri Kulich here. Many would say this is a bit of a reach here for Kulich, but he has been shooting up the draft boards all season, especially after an outstanding showing at the U18’s, where he led the tournament in goals and won tournament MVP. It also feels like he fits the Islanders and Lou Lamoriello’s preferred style of play with his competitive, two-way game.
Prediction
The Pick: Jiri Kulich, LW/C, Karlovy (CZE)
Projection: Middle six, two-way forward
NHL Comparables: Jake Guentzel, Yanni Gourde
14. Winnipeg Jets
The Model
The same players remain as for who the model who take here for Winnipeg. There are also a couple players in the model’s 4th tier who start to become considerations in this range of the draft, Swedish forward Noah Ostlund, and USNTDP forward Jimmy Snuggerud. Both are very possible picks here for Winnipeg. Nazar, though, would be the model’s top selection, and I believe he finally goes here
Matt’s Analysis
Although Nazar still being available here is seen as a slide according to the model, this is about the range he is expected to go. With questions surrounding the futures of Pierre-Luc Dubois and Blake Wheeler in Winnipeg, the Jets take the speedy American center in Nazar.
Prediction
The Pick: Frank Nazar, Center, USNTDP
Projection: Middle six, offensive center
NHL Comparables: Brayden Point, Alex Kerfoot
15. Vancouver Canucks
The Model
With Nazar off the board, that leaves only four players remaining in the model’s second tier. The only one who is a realistic option here for Vancouver is 5’9 USNTDP forward Isaac Howard. He may be in consideration here for the Canucks, but it feels a tad bit early for him. Tiers 3 and 4 players Mateychuk, Ohgren, Lambert, Ostlund, and Snuggerud are all very realistic options here as well. There is also an outside chance that Tier 3 players and USNTDP products Rutger McGroarty and Ryan Chesley would be considered here, but that would feel like a bit of a reach with a top 15 pick.
Matt’s Analysis
Vancouver is probably hoping for a center here, but they’d probably be reaching if they took one with this pick based on how this mock has played out so far. However, I would not be surprised if they did end up taking Swedish center Noah Ostlund with this pick. The two best players available here for Vancouver in terms of pure talent are probably two Russians, Danila Yurov and Pavel Mintyukov. Although the circumstances are a bit more extreme this year, Vancouver has shown a willingness to take Russian players high in the draft when they selected Vasili Podkolzin with a top 10 pick in 2019. They also just recently signed Russian free agent Andrei Kuzmenko. I think they pull the trigger on Yurov, who isn’t necessarily a need here for Vancouver, but could wind up being a steal this late in the draft.
Prediction
The Pick: Danila Yurov, Right Wing, Magnitogorsk (KHL)
Projection: Top 6, scoring winger
NHL Comparables: Ondrej Palat, Marian Hossa
16. Buffalo Sabres
The Model
The Sabres’ best choice here according to the model would be Isaac Howard. Despite his size at 5’9, he has shown an ability to produce everywhere he’s been the past few seasons. He is definitely a possibility here for Buffalo. Tiers 3 and 4 players Mateychuk, Ohgren, Lambert, Ostlund, and Snuggerud will definitely be considerations here for Buffalo as well. It is still a bit early for the other three available tier 2 players to be taken this early, which includes Hutson, Nelson, and Slovak forward Filip Mesar.
Matt’s Analysis
With Buffalo selecting Lekkerimaki with their first pick in this mock, they probably wouldn’t be leaning towards taking another scoring winger in this scenario, especially when they already have Jack Quinn and JJ Peterka on the way (However, I do think Yurov is the pick here if he’s available on draft day). The ideal pick would be a center or a defensemen. Defense would probably be the priority, as they don’t have any top prospects on the way from Rochester or anywhere else after Owen Power. They have a pretty good D prospect in Ryan Johnson, but there’s a very good possibility that he signs somewhere else next summer once the Sabres don’t own his rights anymore. In the Sabres’ last two drafts under Kevyn Adams, they have selected a total of three defensemen out of 12 picks, so they might be looking to take one or two with their three picks in the first round. The best defensemen available here is Mintyukov. After that, there’s Mateychuk and 6’4 Owen Pickering from Swift Current. All three are left-handed shots, which isn’t necessarily ideal for Buffalo, given they already have Dahlin, Power, and Samuelsson. They could go with right-handed Ryan Chesley from the USNTDP, but here would be a bit early for him, and there’s a legitimate chance he’ll be available with the Sabres third pick in the first round at 28th overall. If they look to take a center here, the best available is Noah Ostlund, who I could definitely see as the pick here, and would be my personal pick if the draft played out this way. He was easily one of the best players at the U18’s, and his stock has shot up over the second half of the year. Although he projects more as a winger in the NHL, I also think the Sabres would heavily consider taking a swing on Brad Lambert here. For years, he was viewed as a top 5 pick in this draft, but took a major dip this season. There’s been little progress in his game year over year, and he did not produce much at all this season in Liiga, even after switching teams midseason. He comes with some major red flags, including playing way too much on the perimeter and taking nights off, but he’s probably the best skater in this draft and always seems to stand out when playing against his own age group. He’s got all the tools, making him a big X-factor in this draft. However, I’d be scared off in taking him with this pick. If I had to guess, I think this pick would come down to Ostlund and Mintyukov (in this specific scenario). I say they lean towards Mintyukov, due to defense probably being the greater need in their pipeline, as well as Mintyukov simply being the much better value and higher rated prospect. He’s a very smooth skater, and fits right in with the high pace team the Sabres are trying to build. He’s not great in his own zone, and is a little wild with his pinches, which is something he’ll need to work on, but he’s an exciting defenseman and has the ability to tilt the ice.
Prediction
The Pick: Pavel Mintyukov, Defensemen, Saginaw Spirit (OHL)
Projection: Top 4, offensive defensemen
NHL Comparables: Jakob Chychrun, Brandon Montour
The Model
With the Sabres taking Mintyukov, the same players remain as the top choices for the model here for the Predators. It’s still a bit early for tier 2 players Hutson, Nelson, and Mesar here, but this is the range where Howard will be coming off the board. He’s definitely a possibility here for Nashville.
Matt’s Analysis
The Preds will probably be looking for a defenseman here, as there is a definite need for them in their pipeline. The best available options include Mateychuk, Pickering, Chesley, and 6’5 Swiss Lian Bichsel. I’ll say they go with Owen Pickering, who is a 6’4 defenseman who can really skate and has offensive upside. If he pans out, he could end up being a steal.
Prediction
The Pick: Owen Pickering, Defenseman, Swift Current (WHL)
Projection: Top 4, offensive defenseman
NHL Comparable: Travis Sanheim

18. Dallas Stars
The Model
Four of the seven tier 2 players from the model are still on the board here for Dallas, with Howard being the most likely of the four to go in this range. I think Dallas probably leans towards taking a defender with this pick, and the two defenders from the second tier are Nelson and Hutson, however it’d be very unlikely if either of them went this early. The available defensemen in model’s third tier include Chesley and Mateychuk, who are both very strong possibilities here for Dallas
Matt’s Analysis
With Dallas taking forwards in the first round of the draft the past few years, it has left their organizational depth on the blue line quite thin. If they do go with a defensemen, the pick would probably be either Chesley, Mateychuk, or Bichsel. I’ll say they go with the USNTDP product in Chesley, who is seen as one of the more safer prospects in this draft. He won’t wow you with his play, and doesn’t have much offensive upside, but he should be a steady presence on a team’s blue line for a long time.
Prediction
The Pick: Ryan Chesley, Defenseman, USNTDP
Projection: Second pair, defensive defenseman
NHL Comparable: Brandon Carlo
The Model
With Dallas taking Chesley, who was on the model’s third tier, the same players remain as the best available options here for Minnesota. This could definitely be where Howard goes off the board.
Matt’s Analysis
Minnesota now has this pick as a result of the Kevin Fiala trade with Los Angeles. With the Wild also getting a top D prospect in Brock Faber as part of the deal, I would be surprised if they don’t take a forward here. They could take a swing on Lambert, but I’m somewhat expecting him to slide a bit on draft day. I’ll say they go with Swedish center Noah Ostlund. Minnesota clearly values skating when evaluating prospects, and Ostlund is one of the best skaters in the draft. He has been shooting up draft boards all season, and has the potential to go even higher than this pick.
Prediction
The Pick: Noah Ostlund, Center, Djurgardens (SWE)
Projection: Middle six, playmaking center
NHL Comparable: Nico Hischier
20. Washington Capitals
The Model
With Minnesota taking Ostlund, who was on the model’s fourth tier, the same players remain as the model’s best options here for Washington. The most likely player would still be Howard. Some potential options in the model’s third tier include Mateychuk, Lambert, Ohgren, and USNTDP’s Rutger McGroarty.
Matt’s Analysis
We’re around the point in the draft where it becomes nearly impossible to predict each pick. Once you get to the second half of the first round, things really start to open up, and there’s legitimately 10-15 possible players for each pick. At 20th overall, I’ll say the Caps go with 6’3 center Nathan Gaucher, who has been picking up steam as a potential top 20 selection. Gaucher projects as a third line, two-way center, with the possibility of being a second line center depending on how much offense he ends up bringing.
Prediction
The Pick: Nathan Gaucher, Center, Quebec (QMJHL)
Projection: Middle six, two-way center
NHL Comparables: Nicolas Roy, Adam Lowry
The Pick: Isaac Howard
NHL Comparable: Jeff Skinner
22. Anaheim Ducks
The Pick: Rutger McGroarty
NHL Comparable: James Van Riemsdyk
23. St. Louis Blues
The Pick: Lian Bichsel
NHL Comparable: K’Andre Miller
The Pick: Jimmy Snuggerud
NHL Comparable: Filip Forsberg

25. Toronto Maple Leafs
The Pick: Liam Ohgren
NHL Comparable: Brock Boeser
26. Montreal Canadiens
The Pick: Ivan Miroshnichenko
NHL Comparable: Gabriel Landeskog
27. Arizona Coyotes
The Pick: Jagger Firkus
NHL Comparable: TJ Oshie
28. Buffalo Sabres
The Pick: Sam Rinzel
NHL Comparable: Evan Bouchard
29. Edmonton Oilers
The Pick: Brad Lambert
NHL Comparable: Jesse Puljujarvi
The Pick: Denton Mateychuk
NHL Comparable: Shayne Gostisbehere
The Pick: Reid Schaefer
NHL Comparable: Alex Killorn
32. Arizona Coyotes
The Pick: Owen Beck
NHL Comparable: Jean-Gabriel Pageau
Grading Buffalo Sabres’ GM Jason Botterill: Part 2, Signings
The Buffalo Sabres recently fired General Manager Jason Botterill. The decision to do so has come as a shock after they previously announced he would be retained. I personally haven’t thought that he has done a great job but I also don’t know if going through another regime change, especially given all of the uncertainty in the world right now would be the best course of action for the organization. In this article series, I am going to go through every single move he has made since taking over the organization and grade them. I am going to break the series into four parts: NHL trades, NHL signings, the draft, and minor league management, and overall organizational management. I will provide an individual grade for every move, a grade for each segment, and finally an overall grade.
Before I begin grading, I should set my rubric and the guidelines on how I will arrive at the grade for every move. A good general manager needs to do two things well. First, they need to make good decisions. Second, they need to have good results. In my opinion, when grading a general manager, more weight should be placed on the decision-making process as it needs to be sound to lead to positive results. That said, there are some results that can be predicted and it is a decision maker’s job to do so. As I work through my grading, I will do my best to be objective. I will consider everything from advanced metrics to the current situation of the team. Ultimately though, these will be my opinions that I will try to back with reason.
The second part of the series will look at the signings he made during his tenure. I have discussed the signings in chronological order from oldest to most recent.
Victor Antipin, 1 year $925,000 AAV
In the first month and a half on the job, Botterill added three new defensemen, Nathan Beaulieu and Marco Scandella via trade, and Victor Antipin via free agency from the KHL. Antipin did not work out in Buffalo. A lot of the blame for that could fall on Phil Housely and the rest of the coaching staff. Botterill probably didn’t help the matter either but this grade is mainly based on the thought process and decision-making in signing Antipin. Antipin was a young defenseman who had been excelling in the KHL. He was another puck mover that the Sabres lacked. It seems like a lot of the leg work had been done by Botterill’s predecessor, Tim Murray, but much like the expansion draft trade, Botterill still had to execute and complete the signing.
The idea of Antipin was tremendous. His signing had virtually no risk and a significant reward if things worked out. The signing of Antipin was Botterill’s best shot at finding a young, cheap, immediate impact puck-moving defenseman that could have slotted into the top four sooner than later. Antipin never got a fair shake in Buffalo but that doesn’t mean the signing was bad though it does prevent me from giving this signing an “A.”
Grade: B+
Linus Ullmark, 2 years, $750,000 AAV
This was a great signing for Botterill. It was pretty obvious that Ullmark would be in the NHL full-time during this contract and whether that was as a starter or backup, a $750,000 AAV would be a tremendous value. Ullmark had shown in the AHL that he was capable and was projecting well. This was a low-risk, high-reward signing for Botterill and one that was frankly a no-brainer. Any contract for Ullmark at or under a $1M AAV would have been acceptable.
Grade: A
Taylor Fedun, 2 years, $650,000 AAV
Fedun had previously proven to be an extremely valuable depth player for the organization and at times probably should’ve been one of the Sabres’ regular defensemen. There would definitely have been some demand for him had he hit the open market so being able to sign him to a deal worth the minimum (even if it guaranteed him more money in the AHL), was a nice get for Botterill. Ironically, things went south for Fedun in the organization soon after signing this contract. However, I think Botterill gets credit for getting the deal done as it seemed like a smart idea at the time of signing.
Grade: A-
Chad Johnson, 1 year, $2,500,000 AAV
The Sabres had been plagued by poor goaltending since the great purge in 2014-2015, where superb goaltending almost derailed the team’s run to the bottom. Since then, they struggled in net and Johnson was one of the issues from his first run with the team. Ironically, it was the goaltender in between Johnson’s stints, Andres Nilsson, who was probably the most consistent of the goalies. Addressing the backup goalie position was a necessity. I would have preferred seeing them keep Nilsson as he ended up signing a deal for the same AAV with Vancouver (though it was two years). However, the market that summer was fairly thin with other options so Botterill did well to get one of the better free-agent options. Of course, there are other routes he could have went to address the situation but I don’t think he did too poorly either. I generally don’t mind one-year contracts as they have little risk and the NHL salary cap system is use it or lose it so you might as well use it. Ultimately, Johnson turned out to be one of many of the problems the team had in route to another last-place finish so Botterill was fortunate to be able to walk away from him after only one season.
Grade: B
Benoit Pouliot, 1 year, $1,150,000 AAV
One of the Sabres’ weaknesses, when Botterill took over, was a major lack of depth. They had some good top-end skill players in Eichel, O’Reilly, Kane, Okposo, and Reinhart but things really fell off after that with an aged Brian Gionta and Matt Moulson being the only other forwards to produce more than 30 points (in all situations) on the season. Pouliot had shown flashes of scoring ability in the past as well as an ability to make his team better when he was on the ice.
However, he was coming off a brutal season in Edmonton so he was able to be signed to a relatively cheap contract. The problem with the signing is it seemed more likely than not that his recent season was the start of a trend opposed to an abnormality because of his age. Signing Pouliot was a risk worth taking, however, Botterill should have anticipated he wouldn’t be much more than a third-line forward due to his aging curve. He had been trending downward the past few seasons and some research and the use of analytics would have indicated that would continue to be the case.
I like Botterill’s idea of signing Pouliot in an effort to provide more depth scoring, especially considering it was a low-risk deal. However, the results should have been more anticipated.
Grade: B
Jacob Josefson, 1 year, $700,000
Another signing aimed at improving organizational depth though there was nothing in his previous performances to suggest that he would add much. Realistically, Josefson should’ve strictly been a player for the Rochester Americans but he somehow played 39 games in Buffalo while missing a good amount of games with injuries. The Sabres were significantly worse with him on the ice. Overall, it was a low-risk move that seemed more aimed at improving organizational depth but circumstances changed that.
Grade: C-
Matt Tennyson
Basically, the same that was said for Josefson applies here. Phil Housley seemed to have some sort of favoritism toward Tennyson that had no statistical evidence to support. Had he strictly been an AHL player, this wouldn’t have been such an issue. Botterill could’ve pushed the issue as well by demoting Tennyson.
Grade: C-
Johan Larsson, 2 years, $1,475,000 AAV
Larsson has been an adequate fourth line player and good penalty killer for the Sabres over the years but shouldn’t be counted on to be much more than that. This should also be reflected in his pay. Although not horrible, Larsson was a restricted free agent (RFA) who had little negotiating leverage when Botterill signed him to this contract. The AAV on his contract shouldn’t have come in over $1M. I don’t think retaining Larsson was a major issue (and still don’t) but at the time, Botterill overpaid and needed to play more hardball in the negotiations.
Grade: C-
Robin Lehner, 1 year, $4M AAV
Tim Murray dealt Botterill a losing hand with Lehner and the overall goaltending situation. Botterill really had no other options than to retain Lehner and the way Lehner’s previous contract was structured forced Botterill into a contract with an AAV of at least $3,125,000 so Botterill bumped him further. Lehner was not bad prior to signing this contract but he also hadn’t shown enough to warrant this high of a salary, which would further increase in the team decided to retain him in any subsequent season. Botterill was stuck between a rock and a hard place with the goaltending situation. His options were to roll with Chad Johnson and one of Lehner or Ullmark. At the time, Lehner was the clear choice.
Grade: B-
Evan Rodrigues, 2 years, $650,000 AAV
At the time, Rodrigues had shown some signs that he could be an effective NHL player but also hadn’t shown enough to have complete confidence in him either. Botterill did well to get him signed to a two-year contract that paid him the minimum both years. His most effective season was easily his second year of the contract when he was arguably one of the team’s best forwards during the 2018-2019 season. He generated tremendous surplus value for the team. Frankly, there is nothing to find fault in for this contract. The worst case is Rodrigues was a depth player for the organization, shuttling between Rochester and Buffalo. Even if that had occurred, he was getting paid the minimum to do so.
Grade: A
Nathan Beaulieu, 2 years, $2,400,000 AAV
Botterill upped the price of this contract by simply trading for Beaulieu, who was arbitration-eligible. It is pretty hard to argue in an arbitration case that a player isn’t valuable when you just traded an asset to acquire him. I don’t think this contract was great but it wasn’t terrible either. I further discussed Beaulieu in the first part (the trades) of this series so I will not rehash it here. Had Beaulieu slotted onto the second pair, this would have been a fantastic contract. However, as a third-pair or worse defenseman, the value isn’t great.
Grade: C
Zemgus Girgensons, 2 years, $1,600,000 AAV
Much like Johan Larsson, Girgensons has been a perfectly fine role player for the Sabres in his time with the team. He doesn’t make the team a whole lot better or worse when on the ice and is a fine penalty killer. He will never live up to his draft status but he will probably carve out a nice career in the NHL as a role player, whether that be in Buffalo or elsewhere. However, having a single role player take up $1.6M of cap space is not great cap management. It is even worse when you consider Botterill earlier in the offseason signed Larsson for $1.475M so he committed over $3M to two players who projected to be at best third line players and more realistically fourth liners. Girgensons has shown a little more than Larsson so it makes sense that he would be paid a little more. The problem with both is that it sets the floor for their next contract.
Grade: C-
Jack Eichel, 8 years, $10,000,000 AAV
Jack Eichel will arguably be the best player to ever wear a Sabres’ jersey. He was going to get paid at some point and it seemed like a contract around this was a foregone conclusion. In most cases, it makes more sense to sign a player to a long-term contract after their entry-level contract (ELC) EXPIRES. The keyword being expires. Eichel signed this contract before the final year of his ELC. Connor McDavid had set the bar for young superstars. Unless Eichel literally carried the Sabres to a Stanley Cup, I don’t think he was getting paid much more than the $10M AAV regardless of when he signed the contract. However, had he had a down year, the Sabres might have been able to save some money on his contract. It was unlikely to happen but there really was no reason to rush on this contract. No team was going to extend Eichel an offer sheet that the team wasn’t going to match. Retrospectively, this contract has proven to be better as more and more young players sign new contracts off their ELCs for more and more money.
Grade: B
Casey Nelson, 2 years, $812,000 AAV
I will say I might personally overvalue Casey Nelson. I think he has been a quality depth defenseman in the Sabres’ organization and provided a stabilizing presence when playing along some of the team’s young, puck-moving defensemen, namely Brendan Guhle and Rasmus Dahlin. However, he has never put up eye-popping numbers either so his contract was never going to be that high either. I think overall this was a solid deal for Botterill.
Grade: A-
Lawrence Pilut, 2 years, $925,000 AAV
I have generally avoided entry-level contracts but since Pilut was more of a free agent, I want to include him here. Pilut was chosen to be the Swedish Elite League Defenseman of the year (ahead of Rasmus Dahlin) so he clearly had the ability to play at the top level. The knock-on him was his size and the question of whether his game could translate. His stats indicated it likely would. This was a great move by Botterill to bring him into the organization. There was no risk in bringing Pilut into the organization and potential for a high reward. I will later address the management of Pilut in another part of the series so this grade will strictly be based on his signing.
Grade: A
Carter Hutton, 3 years, $2,750,000 AAV
Let me remind you that I am grading Botterill more on the decision-making process than the results. Going into the 2018 offseason, it was abundantly clear the Sabres needed to improve their goaltending situation. Ullmark appeared ready to be a full-time NHL goalie but being thrust into the full-time starter role didn’t seem like the best decision. The options on the market at the time were former Sabre, Jaro Halak, Petr Mrazek, Anton Khudobin, Jonathan Bernier, Cam Ward, and Hutton. If I had been in charge, I would have been targeting one of Halak, Mrazek, Khudobin, or Hutton. Mrazek signed for a little less than the other three but ultimately the contract for Hutton seemed to make sense. The only question is whether Botterill got his top choice. If so, we can question a little bit why he favored Hutton over the others. Ultimately, many analysts liked the signing at the time as many thought he could fetch another million-plus per year. Even though the results haven’t been ideal, Botterill gets high marks for this signing.
Grade: A-
Scott Wilson, 2 years, $1,050,000 AAV
Scott Wilson had proven to be a useful depth player for the organization but also hadn’t shown anything to indicate he was more than a bottom line player. If Wilson is in the minors, his salary doesn’t impact the Sabres’ cap situation. However, if the team does choose to recall him, they are paying a fourth-line player $300,000 more than the league minimum. When you consider Wilson along with his signings of Girgensons and Larsson in the previous offseason, he has likely cost himself over $1M in cap space by overpaying fourth line players. The good news is Wilson has been a quality player in his role bouncing between the NHL and AHL and has provided what the team has expected from him.
Grade: C+
Sam Reinhart, 2 years, $3,650,000 AAV
If we simply look at this contract as relative value, Botterill does fantastic here as Reinhart would clearly provide more value than $3,650,000 per season. The problem is signing Reinhart to a bridge contract was a HORRIBLE decision. I have written and research extensively on why bridge contracts for good players are bad ideas. Reinhart had put up good box score metrics but his real value was in the metrics that measure how he drove play. In Ryan O’Reilly’s last season with Buffalo, the only time the team was better during 5v5 play with O’Reilly on the ice was when Reinhart was one of his wingers! The easiest way for a GM to create future value for his team is to take advantage of a player putting up lower box score statistics while being a strong possession driver. In most negotiations, the contract value will be depressed if a player’s traditional stats are not as strong.
At the time of signing, we at afpanalytics had predicted a long-term contract for Reinhart would be six years and carry an AAV between $5.5M and $6M. If the team had Reinhart locked in for that price, it would answer a lot of questions the team faces this coming offseason, where Reinhart will likely get a minimum of $8M per year. Botterill might have saved approximately $2M over two years but will now likely have to pay an extra $2M to $3M over the next four years. Remember when Botterill overpaid Larsson and Girgensons to a tune of at least $1M (combined)? That money could have been used instead to give Reinhart a long-term contract. Being generous with contracts for role players while playing hardball in negotiations for your top-line players is not going to be a long-term formula for success. Overall, the only reason this signing does not get a failing is that Botterill did well on the contract he did give.
Grade: D
Arttu Ruotsalainen, 3 years, $925,000 AAV
Much like what I have written for Lawerence Pilut and Victor Antipin, this signing comes with relatively low risk for a player who has shown he can produce against high-level competition. I think there is a little more uncertainty with Ruotsalainen than the others but I will never knock rolling the dice on younger players who have produced in Europe and can be signed for cheap contracts. If Ruotsalainen doesn’t pan out, the team isn’t out anything. If they find a hidden gem, it could be a big help in moving the team forward. I knock Botterill slightly for giving Ruotsalainen the ability to go back to Europe this year as he is a smaller player that will probably need to adjust to the smaller ice in North America.
Grade: A-
Jeff Skinner, 8 years, $9,000,000 AAV
Botterill had backed himself in between a rock and a hard place with this negotiation. By keeping Skinner and seeing him score 40 goals, Botterill had to retain Skinner. In order to do so, Botterill was going to have to pay and pay him enough to not test the free-agent market. We had predicted Skinner’s market value to be $8.5M per year on a seven-year contract. In order to deter Skinner from talking with other teams, Botterill was going to have to give him an offer he couldn’t refuse and the contract he signed was just that. Had Skinner left for nothing, it would have been a major hit to a team that is desperately seeking goal-scorers. On the flip side, it was apparent that Skinner was not going to continue to score 40 goals a season so his value to the team was never going to be as high as the contract.
Overall, Botterill left himself little choice with Skinner once he was on the roster past the trade deadline. The problem is Skinner’s contract is going to be one of the main reasons the team is not as comfortably under the cap as they should be. The team needs more scoring production out of Skinner than they got this season. They need him to be part of the solution and not further their problems. I don’t mind that Botterill chose to keep a good player who has shown he can produce. I do take issue with how they managed him this year but that doesn’t severely impact the grade too much as this is based mainly on the decision at the time of signing. Had Skinner scored 40 or more goals again this season, the narrative is completely different.
Grade: C+
John Gilmour, 1 year, $700,000 AAV
I have generally skipped AHL signings but Gilmour spent enough time in Buffalo to warrant discussion. Gilmour was signed as a depth defenseman for the organization and he filled that role well. He provided speed and puck-moving abilities from the blueline. If Botterill hadn’t created such a logjam of defensemen, Gilmour had shown enough, in a limited sample, to be a bottom-pair player and the team probably would’ve been better for it. The knock here is Botterill added another defenseman to an already packed position in the organization.
Grade: B+
Curtis Lazar, 1 year, $700,000
Much like Gilmour, Lazar was signed to provide depth to the organization. Unlike Gilmour, Lazar spent a significant amount of time in the NHL and was a fine depth player. When Lazar was on the ice during 5v5 play, the team was outshot in quantity a little more than when he was on the bench but the Sabres’ took better quality shots. Lazar was also used on the penalty kill. When he was first called-up, he provided better-shot suppression but ultimately finished the season getting shelled on the penalty kill. Realistically, Lazar should have been playing over Sobotka for the entire season as he was a better version of a similar player.
Lazar also brought some intangibles that the team lacks. Every shift Lazar was on the ice, he played like it could be his last. He was never the most talented player on the ice but provided an energy that not everyone else on the team always brought. Lazar will never be more than a depth player but can play in the NHL. As long as Botterill realizes that going forward, everything will be ok.
Grade: A-
Zemgus Girgensons, 1 year, $1,600,000 AAV
Botterill previously signed Girgensons to a contract that set his qualifying offer at this price so he had already backed himself into a corner. The alternative would have been to not tender the qualifying offer and let Girgensons become an UFA. There is a chance that Botterill would’ve been able to bring him back at a lower price but it also would have given Girgensons the opportunity to negotiate with other teams and potentially sign with one of them. At the time, I didn’t think the team losing Girgensons would have been detrimental but I don’t know if it would have been a positive development either. Ultimately, Girgensons, Larsson, and Kyle Okposo combined to form a formable line that struggled to score but consistently controlled play. Could have the results been similar if one of Girgensons or Larsson were replaced? Possibly. To be consistent, I will grade mostly on the decision-making process and I am not 100% confident that Botterill made the best decision at the time but did do well to keep Girgensons with the qualifying offer.
Grade: C+
Marcus Johansson, 2 years, $4,500,000 AAV
I liked this signing for Botterill a lot. Johansson was the type of secondary scoring player the team had been lacking. According to our contract predictions, Botterill slightly overpaid on AAV but gave a year less in term than we anticipated so the contract was pretty solid. The downside is this contract pushed the Sabres into salary cap danger. The other problem with this signing is Botterill basically forced Johansson into playing center, a position that he hadn’t played in years and was left comfortable with, especially against the strong competition he faced on the second-line. Botterill will be knocked more in a future part of the series than he will be here as this was overall a good signing. The failure to properly address the second-line center position takes a little away but not enough to make this a poor grade.
Grade: B+
Johan Larsson, 1 year, $1,550,000 AAV
It seemed logical that the team would move on from at least one of Sobotka, Girgensons, or Larsson as they frankly fill a very similar role. Going into the offseason, an argument to lose any of them could have easily been made. Sobotka was clearly the weakest of the three players but the other two were the easiest to move on from. It seemed the team was poised to lose Larsson to Europe but ultimately things got done with the Sabres. Of the three, Larsson is probably the most valuable player so I don’t fault Botterill for bringing him back, especially since he was able to pay him less than Girgensons. I do have a problem with him bringing all three back. Larsson ultimately had a quality season and the team is going to be in a similar situation with him and Girgensons this offseason as they were last year. Although both players are replaceable, the two departing would create additional holes. I like the signing of Larsson slightly better than Girgensons but a lot said under each applies to both.
Grade: B-
Evan Rodrigues, 1 year, $2,000,000
In our contract predictions we had Rodrigues’ value at ~$2.3M AAV on a two-year contract so value-wise, Botterill did well. During the 2018-2019 season, Rodrigues was one of the team’s most impactful forwards. I thought there was a chance that he could’ve solved the team’s second-line center woes in the short-term. Instead, entitlement took hold and he became a toxin in the Sabres’ locker room. Despite his strong underlying metrics during the 2018-2019 season, Rodrigues quickly became a player who the team needed to move on from. Botterill gets high marks on the signing that will be slightly reduced because of poor results.
Grade: B+
Jake McCabe, 2 years, $2,850,000 AAV
I still don’t know what to think of Jake McCabe. He has had stretches of a season where he has been the Sabres’ best defender and also stretches where he has been the team’s worst defender. There were times when he was paired with Rasmus Ristolainen and it worked incredibly well and others where they were a complete disaster. In two of the past three seasons, the Sabres have overall been better with him on the ice. However, I fully expect McCabe to be at the top of the list of players available partly due to his inconsistent play throughout the season and partly due to the number of defensemen the team has. That is a discussion for another article.
Overall, I don’t have a problem with the Sabres retaining McCabe as it would have made no sense for them to let him walk for nothing. I also don’t think the contract was a huge overpayment. I don’t think Botterill can be knocked too much for this signing. He paid McCabe bottom four money, which is exactly what McCabe deserved.
Grade: A-
Linus Ullmark, 1 year, $1,325,000 AAV
Linus Ullmark came off a successful first season as an NHL regular so getting a new contract was a no-brainer. We had predicted Ullmark to get a one-year contract with a slightly higher AAV but overall this contract seems right in-line with where Ullmark’s value was. I think the only knock here is that the contract was only for one year. Going for multiple years might have been a gamble that would have been worth taking for Botterill, though it takes two to tango and I’m not sure it would have made sense for Ullmark to take something with more term as his stock was most likely going to rise as he received more playing time.
Grade: A
Dalton Smith, 1 year, $700,000 AAV
Even though the impact was minimal, this was a disgraceful signing by Botterill. He signed Smith to play and start a fight against Tampa Bay. Smith had never played an NHL game before and skated less than two minutes in the game. For a team who was starting to slide, wasting a roster spot, even for just a game on a useless player is inexcusable. The last time the Sabres’ did something like this was signing John Scott in 2012. They haven’t sniffed a playoff spot since.
Grade: F
Botterill grades out slightly better for his signings than his trades as his GPA was 2.83 for the signings while only 2.77 for the trades. Though both ultimately land with the same letter grade.
Overall Grade: B-
With the recent news of Botterill being fired, I may condense the remaining planned articles into one. Please follow @afpanalytics and check back to read the remaining articles in the series. Feel free to share your thoughts with @afpanalytics or @k_sticher on Twitter.
Please note all salary figures and trade compensations are courtesy of Capfriendly.com and all statistical information is courtesy of Naturalstattrick.com. Featured image is via the Buffalo News.
KYLE STICH is the Director of AFP Analytics. In addition, Mr. Stich is a tax specialist and Director of Operations at AFP Consulting LLC, whose clientele include professional athletes performing services on three separate continents. Mr. Stich earned his Master of Science in Sport Management with a Concentration in Sport Analytics from Columbia University in 2017. He earned his undergraduate degrees in Accounting and Sport Management from St. John Fisher College in 2015, where he has served as an adjunct professor teaching Sport Finance and Baseball Analytics.
Grading Buffalo Sabres’ GM Jason Botterill: Part 1, Trades
The Buffalo Sabres recently announced that they would retain General Manager Jason Botterill for a fourth season. The decision to do so has not gone over well with the fans of the team as most believe that he has done a generally poor job in his role. I personally haven’t thought that he has done a great job but I also don’t know if going through another regime change, especially given all of the uncertainty in the world right now would be the best course of action for the organization. In this article series, I am going to go through every single move he has made since taking over the organization and grade them. I am going to break the series into four parts: NHL trades, NHL signings, the draft, and minor league management, and overall organizational management. I will provide an individual grade for every move, a grade for each segment, and finally an overall grade.
Before I begin grading, I should set my rubric and the guidelines on how I will arrive at the grade for every move. A good general manager needs to do two things well. First, they need to make good decisions. Second, they need to have good results. In my opinion, when grading a general manager, more weight should be placed on the decision-making process as it needs to be sound to lead to positive results. That said, there are some results that can be predicted and it is a decision maker’s job to do so. As I work through my grading, I will do my best to be objective. I will consider everything from advanced metrics to the current situation of the team. Ultimately though, these will be my opinions that I will try to back with reason.
The first part of the series will look at the trades he made involving regular NHL players. I have discussed the trades in chronological order from oldest to most recent.
Trade for Nathan Beaulieu
Details: Buffalo Acquired D Nathan Beaulieu from Montreal for a 3rd round pick (68th overall)
Botterill’s first player move as a general manager was to add more speed and mobility to the blueline, something that was desperately lacking from the team he inherited. Beaulieu is a defenseman with great speed and puck-moving abilities. He was an odd man out in Montreal but still young enough where it seemed like he could improve. During Beaulieu’s first three years in the league, the Canadiens improved in controlling both shot quantity and quality while he was on the ice. The next two seasons, leading up to him being traded, saw things go south.
When Botterill acquired Beaulieu, there were signs of things going the wrong direction but there had also been signs of strong play earlier in his career. He was a player that had “change of scenery” written all over him. I think overall Beaulieu fit a need for the Sabres and Botterill was able to acquire him for a reasonable price of a third-round pick. Once Beaulieu got to Buffalo, he seemed to fall out of favor for glaring mistakes. However, his metrics were pretty solid for a bottom four defenseman and really did not get a fair chance in Buffalo. It isn’t Botterill’s job to make day to day lineup decisions but he should have had some organizational support/structure in place to assist the coaching staff with lineup decisions. I think there is a lot to like about the process and decision to make the trade but the results did not work out.
Grade: B
Enticing Vegas to take Carrier Opposed to Ullmark
Details: Buffalo gave Vegas a 6th round pick to take William Carrier instead of Linus Ullmark in the expansion draft
This “trade” had mostly been put in place by the previous general manager, Tim Murray, but ultimately Botterill still had to finalize it and could have pulled the plug if he wanted. The Sabres had exactly two desirable assets in the expansion draft, William Carrier and Linus Ullmark. Carrier has turned into a nice role player for Vegas and probably would have been the same in Buffalo. However, allowing Vegas to take Ullmark for nothing would have devastated the organization as he has been the best goalie (not a super high bar to clear) in the organization for the past couple of years. Giving up a 6thround pick to lose a 4th line player instead of a potential number one goalie is a major win. The team got a peek at what life was without him when he was injured this season and the results weren’t pretty. Some of you reading this will probably think I gave Botterill too much credit here but in most group projects in school, everyone gets the same grade. Here, Botterill benefits from having someone else do much of the work but not messing it up at the end.
Grade: A
Trade for Jason Pominville & Marco Scandella
Details: Buffalo acquires Jason Pominville, Marco Scandella and a 4th round pick from Minnesota for Tyler Ennis, Marcus Foligno, and a 3rd round pick.
Jason Botterill’s first couple moves as GM were aimed at shoring up the team’s defense. Much like his trade for Beaulieu, he identified a team that seemed to have a surplus of defensemen and were open to trading them. The best piece in this trade ended up being Jason Pominville. The idea of acquiring a Wild defenseman made a lot of sense. The price of Tyler Ennis and Marcus Foligno was not steep. If anything, trading them away was a net positive for Botterill as injuries had dramatically reduced Ennis’s effectiveness and he was under a contract that paid him more than the value he was providing. Although Foligno had a tremendous season in 2018-2019, he was nothing more than a 3rd line winger, which isn’t overly valuable in terms of trade value, and didn’t project any higher either.
The knock Botterill gets for this trade is that he settled for Scandella. Minnesota likely would have traded one of Scandella, Brodin, or Spurgeon (more likely one of the first two). Of those Scandella was clearly the weakest. Much like Beaulieu, Scandella had started off strong but saw a drop in play in the two seasons leading up to the trade as the Wild did worse in both shot quantity and quality with him on the ice. Had Botterill viewed Scandella as the bottom four defenseman he really was, this trade would have been a home run. However, Botterill thought Scandella could handle playing on the top pair with Ristolainen and matchup with the opposing team’s top players. That was never going to be the case and his failure to realize that was an issue. Botterill still gets high marks for this trade as a lot of the thought process behind this makes trade made a lot of sense.
Grade: B+
Trades Away Evander Kane
Details: Buffalo acquired Danny O’Regan, a conditional 1st (conditions met), conditional 4th (stayed as 4th) for Evander Kane.
The Sabres’ play early in the season quickly signaled that they would miss out on the playoffs so the clock was ticking on making a decision on Kane early in the season. I think Botterill could have justified re-signing him or trading him. Under no circumstances could he allow Kane to walk away for nothing. In my opinion, the total return was very underwhelming as the Sabres were not guaranteed a 1st-round pick. I’m sure Botterill took the best offer at the time but there were probably better trade offers to be had earlier in the season that he failed to make. Kane was not the most tradeable player in the league but he did produce offensively and should have had some appeal as a rental. Botterill turned him into a low-level prospect who had shown no indication of being able to be a full-time NHLer and two draft picks that he later traded away. Botterill doesn’t fail this trade but he certainly doesn’t get high marks either.
Grade: D+
Acquires Matt Hunwick and Conor Sheary
Details: Sabres acquire Matt Hunwick and Conor Sheary from Pittsburgh for a conditional 4th round pick that became third based on player performance (stayed a 4th)
In this trade, Botterill had cap space and a need for some depth scoring. He weaponized the cap space to add Sheary for a low cost by also absorbing Matt Hunwick’s contract. The addition of Sheary made complete sense. He had success playing along highly skilled centers (Crosby and Malkin) in Pittsburgh so pairing him with Eichel seemed great in theory. The worst-case would be provided some scoring depth for a low price. Hunwick inexplicitly played some games for Buffalo and was not good in the few games he played. That was probably more of a coaching issue though Botterill gets some blame for even providing the option.
The results of this trade were not good as neither player contributed much at all. The good news is the draft pick was conditional and did not get upgraded. Although Botterill gets knocked a little for that, this was a home run trade on paper at the time the trade was executed. Sheary was decent when looking beyond his basic box score statistics as the Sabres were better when he was on the ice BUT he just couldn’t produce points which was a major issue.
Grade: A-
Ryan O’Reilly Trade
Details: Sabres acquire Patrik Berglund, Vladmir Sobotka, Tage Thompson, a conditional 1st round pick and a 2021 2ndround pick
Everyone knows this was Botterill’s worst move as GM and probably the main reason fans are still so upset with him as the team has not recovered from it. There is no doubt this was bad but at the time, there was some rationale for trading O’Reilly but the return he got was dreadful. The Sabres were a top-heavy team that was in desperate need of forward depth. O’Reilly was coming off a down season (when he wasn’t playing with Sam Reinhart, the team was worse with him on the ice during 5v5 play) and he had expressed his displeasure publicly. There also was (and still is) some concern with the length of his contract and his future value.
To me, the idea of trading O’Reilly could have been defendable but the return is not in any way. Patrik Berglund and Vladmir Sobotka were never going to be impact players. They were going to come in and be, at best, third line players. If both players needed to be included for financial reasons to get a better overall package for the Sabres, it would have been one thing. However, those two players were centerpieces of the trade and didn’t help improve the Sabres’ haul. With those two players included, the Sabres should have demanded Robert Thomas be included in addition to Thompson or multiple unprotected 1st round picks. Additionally, Botterill needed to have a better plan for the second-line center than Berglund and/or Mittelstadt (maybe it should have been Sam Reinhart). Ultimately, nothing about the trade made sense or worked out and the team is still recovering from this trade.
Grade: F
Acquire Jeff Skinner
Details: Buffalo acquires Jeff Skinner for Cliff Pu, 2019 2nd round pick, 2020 3rd round & 6th round picks
Just like everyone knows the O’Reilly trade was awful, everyone knows the Jeff Skinner trade was a homerun. I think people forget about how lopsided this trade was. It is incredible that Botterill was able to make a horrible trade and follow it up not long after with an excellent trade. Skinner was everything and more for what the team needed. The line of Skinner, Eichel, and Reinhart kept the team in the playoff mix into March almost singlehandedly. The assets Botterill gave up had little value.
Grade: A
Acquire Brandon Montour
Details: Buffalo acquires Brandon Montour for Brandon Guhle and the higher of previously acquired 1st round picks
This was an interesting trade by Botterill. Even after some changes to the blueline, the Sabres were still in need of a fast-skating, puck-moving defenseman and that is exactly what Montour brings. However, Guhle also provides some of those same traits but was much less polished. The idea of “upgrading” from Guhle to Montour made sense. It also helped the team balance their left and right shots. However, Montour has still not settled into a role in Buffalo mostly because Botterill has failed to alleviate a logjam he created. Montour should ideally be playing second pair (or maybe top pair) minutes (on the right side) and quarterbacking the second power-play unit.
I question the price Botterill paid to get Montour. To me, the price should have been a mid-round pick or prospect plus one of Guhle or a 1st round pick. Using the 1st round pick to marginally upgrade Brandon Guhle seemed a little strange to me but I also don’t think this was a terrible trade either.
Grade: C
Trades Away Nathan Beaulieu
Details: Buffalo acquires a 6th round pick in exchange for Nathan Beaulieu
As discussed above, Beaulieu never found his footing in Buffalo and the coaching staff deserves a lot of blame for that. However, his underlying numbers were solid for a bottom four defenseman. Beaulieu publicly made his displeasure known and once that happens the returns are fairly limited. It seems like Beaulieu’s value was hurt somewhat by Botterill holding on for him for so long. A sixth-round pick for a serviceable defenseman with a decent contract and RFA status is not great compensation but something is better than keeping him and letting him walk for nothing in summer.
Grade: C-
Acquires Colin Miller
Details: Buffalo acquires defenseman Colin Miller in exchange for a 2021 2nd round pick and 2022 5th round pick.
On paper, this trade had the markings of another homerun trade for Botterill. When Miller was on the ice, an already good Vegas team performed even better. His advanced metrics were very good. It seemed like Miller would be a perfect fit in the top four in Buffalo and maybe even on the top pair as Rasmus Dahlin’s partner. It seemed like Miller’s acquisition would finally allow Buffalo to move on from Rasmus Ristolainen and recoup or even add assets as they had just found a better, cheaper option.
It took Miller some time to find his footing in Buffalo and finished the shortened season by seeing the team was overall better with him on the ice than when he was off. Miller was not the immediate impact player that Buffalo was hoping and him and Dahlin together early in the season was a disaster (some of that blame also falls on Dahlin). Part of the problem for Miller was his usage was less than ideal for much of the season. Although there were signs that he could maybe slot on the top pair, it became clear that it wasn’t a good idea. Miller also had been given significant power-play time in Vegas as he has a bomb of a shot from the backend. However, Buffalo preferred to use Dahlin and Ristolainen over Miller so he was forced to share the remaining time with Brandon Montour. Confidence goes a long way in hockey and Miller’s seemed shot early but he did rebound as the season went on.
Overall, Botterill gets high marks for this trade as he again capitalized on a team tight to the cap and acquired a quality player for a reduced price. The problem with this trade is it added to an already stocked blueline and created a bigger logjam than one that already existed. Please note, I will have a grade specifically for this aspect of roster management later on so this grade will mostly reflect the acquisition of Miller.
Grade: B+
Acquires Jimmy Vesey
Details: Buffalo acquires Jimmy Vesey for a 2021 3rd round pick
This was an interesting trade that isn’t as easy to grade as many may think. Vesey did not produce many points and was not more than a third-line player. However, over the course of the shortened season, the team was better when Vesey was on the ice, both in terms of shot quantity and quality. He provided the same for a bad New York Rangers team during the 2018-2019 season.
Botterill identified the Sabres as a team that lacked depth and has gone about acquiring players to address that. Vesey is a good depth option. However, Botterill viewed him as more than that as he, on more than one occasion, referred to Vesey as a top-nine forward opposed to middle or bottom six, where he should properly slot. Though Botterill thought he could skate on the top line, the compensation he gave up reflects more of a middle-six player, though I still think that was still too much. The positive is the risk of acquiring Vesey was fairly low as he was signed to a relatively small, one-year contract so if he had a breakout season, the Sabres would have gotten some great value.
Overall, the signs were there that Vesey was nothing more than a third-line player who wouldn’t kill your team if he had to slot higher in the lineup on occasion but shouldn’t have been counted on doing so. Botterill overvalued Vesey and ultimately added another player to the mix of many replacement level players he already had. However, the relatively low-risk nature of the trade, the thought process to improve depth, and the acceptable results of Vesey’s play help this grade.
Grade: C
Acquires Henri Jokiharju
Details: Sabres acquire Henri Jokiharju in exchange for Alexander Nylander
If I were to poll Sabres’ fans on what their favorite trade made by Botterill was, I bet a lot would point to this one. Alex Nylander had quickly fallen out of favor with Sabres’ fans and many were happy to see the team move on and I am guessing many would’ve been happy with a much lower return than what the team got. Jokiharju passes all the tests for a young player you would want to acquire. He is still on his entry-level contract, was a high draft selection, dominated the AHL, and has played time in the NHL and has been successful in doing so. The fact that he plays the highly-valued right defense helps as well. On paper, this seems like another home run for Botterill.
Jokiharju was a very steady performer on the blueline for the early part of the season but showed some decline as the season wore on. When he was on the ice, the Sabres gave up more shots but the quality of those shots were less than the quality the Sabres produced. Considering Jokiharju is still incredibly young and many thought he would play most of this season in the AHL, management and fans have the right to be hopeful.
I have two issues with this trade that prevent it from being an “A.” First, Jokiharju was the second right-shot defenseman acquired in almost as many weeks. Botterill now had Ristolainen, Montour, Miller, and Jokiharju on the right side alone. It is perfectly fine that the team allowed Jokiharju to earn his NHL time but his superb play created a further logjam on the blueline. So, like the Miller trade above, this will negatively impact his grade. Second, I am not against the idea of trading Nylander but the trade created a new hole and added to a problem in the organization. The Sabres’ biggest weakness right now is they are lacking prospects that project well as Top Six forwards. The only four players who may fit that mold are Casey Mittelstadt, Tage Thompson, Victor Olofsson, and 2019 first-round pick, Dylan Cozens. The former two are probably middle-six players at best. Olofsson showed tremendous promise in his rookie season but has not solidified himself either. The signs are positive for Cozens but he has no sample playing against “men.” Though Nylander did not project as a surefire Top Six, he had the skill set that could translate to that spot. With Olofsson “graduated” and Nylander traded, the Sabres have a whole in their prospect pipeline at forward. Trading Ristolainen could (have) solved two problems at once. Instead, an excellent trade in a vacuum exasperated a big problem for the Sabres.
Grade: B+
Acquires Michael Frolik; Trades Marco Scandella
Details: Buffalo traded Marco Scandella to Montreal for a 4th round pick that was subsequently traded to Calgary for Michael Frolik
Though there may be some recency bias, this trade is probably the one most fans would pin as second-worst to the Ryan O’Reilly trade. However, I don’t have nearly as big of an issue with this trade as many fans. Many fans will point to Scandella’s subsequent trade to the Blues for a 2nd round pick in addition to Frolik providing next to nothing for the Sabres as a clear black-eye for Botterill. However, I can’t fault Botterill for 1) The return Montreal got for Scandella, 2) Frolik providing nothing for the Sabres. In order to fairly assess the trade, we need to look at it at the point of time it was made and not play the “what if” game after it was made. For all intents and purposes, Botterill traded Scandella for Frolik and that is how I am going to assess the trade.
Both Scandella and Frolik are impending unrestricted free agents (UFAs) who probably were going to be nothing more than rentals. The Sabres definitely would not be retaining Scandella at the season’s end and needed to add someone to their forward group. Frolik graded out well analytically over the course of his career BUT was having a down season this year. The question is whether he could bounce back with an increased role or whether age had gotten the best of him. Ironically, the opposite of Marco Scandella was true. He had been down the past couple of seasons but was tremendous this season for Buffalo, which is probably attributable to playing a less demanding role and with a better partner. He had quickly become one of the more attractive assets from the Sabres’ crowded blueline.
If we look at this trade as Scandella for a 4th round pick, it isn’t great but not bad either. Everyone in the league knew Botterill had defensemen to deal so they weren’t going to be aggressively bidding for any of them so it was going to be difficult to get full market value for Scandella, which was probably a 3rd round pick at the time. Yes, Scandella was traded at the deadline for a 2nd round pick and a conditional 4th round pick but the devil is in the details. There are four reasons Montreal was able to get a better return. First, the trade deadline adjusts the supply and demand of the market so the price was going to be naturally higher. Buffalo could’ve waited it out for a slightly better return but Botterill would’ve been crucified for that too. Second, Montreal retained salary. The salary retention likely bumped the pick up a round because it was critical for St. Louis and the same would’ve been true of any other playoff contender that might have acquired Scandella. Third, Scandella proved he could play effectively in a different situation in Montreal. Although that wasn’t likely a major factor, it probably didn’t hurt either. Finally, Botterill was always playing from behind because of the logjam of defenseman he had. No opposing GM was going to allow him to “win” a trade of a defenseman. The one knock I do have on the return is the lack of a conditional pick. Every trade made in-season should include some performance, trading, or re-signing clause. This would better allow teams to capture the value the player is providing.
If we look just at the Frolik side of the trade, there is nothing wrong with the price of a 4th round pick. Frolik’s salary certainly isn’t great and likely delayed the trade until the Sabres could move some salary but the idea of acquiring him was not bad. He was a relatively low-risk acquisition who could have provided a decent reward for the Sabres. Overall, I look at this trade as a trade of Frolik for Marco Scandella, a trade of a bottom-four defenseman for a middle-six forward, with similar contract situations. This is what people like to call a hockey trade. I don’t think Botterill made a brilliant trade but he did what he needed to do. The question is whether he did it involving the correct players.
Grade: B
Acquires Wayne Simmonds
Details: Buffalo acquires Wayne Simmonds (with 50% salary retained) for a 2021 5th round pick
I know there are people that don’t like this move but frankly, it was an incredibly low-risk move that could lead to a reward. Simmonds is no longer the player he used to be put still brought some unique skills to Buffalo. Although the coaching staff continued to use Rasmus Ristolainen as the net-front man on the power play, that area was a major weakness for the team. Sam Reinhart has proven to be effective in that position but he can be equally effective on the perimeter as well. Simmonds should have come in and been immediately inserted in that position. Everything else he could’ve provided would have been a bonus. Had he somehow caught fire, Botterill would’ve looked like a genius. He didn’t, as expected, but Botterill is only out a 5th round pick in next year’s draft, which is basically nothing. At worst, Simmonds would have filled the hole that would soon be created by trading Conor Sheary.
Grade: B
Acquires Dominik Kahun
Details: Buffalo acquires Dominik Kahun in exchange for Evan Rodrigues and Conor Sheary
This is a home run of a trade for Botterill and the creative type of trade he needs to do more of. Both Rodrigues and Sheary were on expiring contracts and neither were going to be back in Buffalo (Rodrigues wouldn’t have received a tender as an RFA). Both were assets that would have been gone at the end of the season for nothing and were nothing more than rentals at the trade deadline. I also don’t think either player had much value in the trade market. Sheary was probably going to return a 4th round pick (3rd if lucky or retaining salary) and Rodrigues was probably a 5th or 6th round pick. In essence, both players would have returned a nearly worthless asset. Instead of shopping both separately, Botterill packaged them and got an intriguing asset, Dominik Kahun, in return. Kahun is young, cheap, and has shown he can play in the NHL. He is probably a middle-six forward but is a fairly safe bet to be no worse than that. Though the results are very limited with the Sabres, he did seem to be fitting in well. Regardless, he is a much better asset to have now and likely in the future than whatever those middle to late-round draft picks would have become.
Grade: A
Summary
I think a lot of the flack Botterill receives comes from the singular focus on one horrible trade and his acquisition of Jeff Skinner gets overshadowed by the subsequent contract he signed him to, which was a home run of a trade. I think the biggest issue Botterill has had is many of the trades that have looked good on paper, haven’t produced the expected results. In some instances, it should have been anticipated. However, in many instances, it is somewhat mystifying as to why players have performed so poorly in Buffalo. The other problem in Botterill’s trading history is there are very few trades where the Sabres are the clear “winners.” He has made plenty of fine and balanced trades but he needs to do more to swing trades in his favor. He should take more advantage of adding conditions to trades. Overall, Botterill grades out as very average on his trades.
Overall Grade for Trades: B-
Please note all salary figures and trade compensations are courtesy of Capfriendly.com and all statistical information is courtesy of Naturalstattrick.com. Featured image is via the Buffalo News.
Please follow @afpanalytics and check back to read the remaining articles in the series. Feel free to share your thoughts with @afpanalytics or @k_sticher on Twitter.
KYLE STICH is the Director of AFP Analytics. In addition, Mr. Stich is a tax specialist and Director of Operations at AFP Consulting LLC, whose clientele include professional athletes performing services on three separate continents. Mr. Stich earned his Master of Science in Sport Management with a Concentration in Sport Analytics from Columbia University in 2017. He earned his undergraduate degrees in Accounting and Sport Management from St. John Fisher College in 2015, where he has served as an adjunct professor teaching Sport Finance and Baseball Analytics.
Friday Focus: October 11th
Welcome to the second edition of AFP Analytic’s Friday Focus section. In the Friday focus post I hope to highlight some of the most interesting events from a numbers perspective during the past week in the NHL. If something catches my eye from other sports, I might mention it here as well. I am intending on this being more of a quick hitter type of read that I hope everyone enjoys. I would also invite any readers to shoot us questions (@afpanalytics) and we will try to answer them every week. We are still early in the NHL season so we want to be careful to speak on definite terms but there are definitely some interesting trends developing that we need to keep an eye on.
Last Week’s Player to Watch – Rasmus Sandin
I previously raved about Rasmus Sandin’s NHL debut against the Ottawa Senators and noted that he is a player to keep an eye on to see if he could sustain his impressive play from his NHL debut. He has still been good but not elite. The Maple Leafs have not allowed a 5v5 goal while he has been on the ice but have also only scored one. The team has controlled the shot share at a 54% rate while basically breaking even in xGF%. Those numbers are perfectly acceptable for a bottom six defenseman but are not super exciting either.
Last Week’s Game to Watch
In last week’s post, I highlighted Tampa Bay-Carolina on Sunday as a game to watch. It did not turn out how I expected. Tampa Bay got absolutely throttled by the Hurricanes. They had no shots on goal in the second period. Carolina had a very nice 69% adjusted shot share and 71% xGF%. It is incredible that Tampa was able to take that game to overtime as they had no business being in the game with the numbers they posted. Again, it is early but Carolina, in my opinion, has announced they have arrived as a legitimate Stanley Cup contender. To me, this game says more about Carolina than it does Tampa Bay. Tampa Bay started slowly last season as well until storming to a historic regular season. But there has to be some concern because…
The Atlantic Division Looks to be a Gauntlet
Again, it is too early to press the panic button or plan the parade but the Atlantic Division is setting up to be absolutely brutal for its members. Ottawa seems like a lock to finish last based on their roster on paper though after having a strong game against St. Louis, they might be pesky enough to not be complete push overs and could sneak into seventh in the division but that would not be ideal for them. Their adjusted xGF% is actually a respectable 50%. Their adjusted CF% is not as strong at 46.58%. They are taking a quantity over quality approach in their defensive zone. They are allowing a high percentage of shots but their decent xGF% means they are likely not as strong in quality.
After Ottawa, things in the Atlantic get very interesting. Montreal and Florida have not gotten off to good starts. Their xGF%s, which is the best predictor of future success, are 45.22% and 41.85%, respectively. The next worst in the division is Toronto at 49%. Boston isn’t much further ahead at 50%. Tampa Bay vaulted themselves to 53.49%, which is tenth best in the NHL despite their dreadful performance against Carolina. The other top two Atlantic division teams in xGF% are two of the biggest surprises in the NHL. Detroit has the eighth best xGF% at 54.6% and the best team in the Atlantic and second best in the NHL is the Buffalo Sabres, who are sporting an impressive 59% xGF% through their first four games. Please keep in mind those are score adjusted numbers.
With Buffalo getting points in every game and Boston, Detroit, and Tampa getting points in three of four games, the early season struggles by Montreal and Florida must be highlighted. Montreal’s early season schedule hasn’t done them any favors, starting on the road against Carolina, Toronto, Buffalo before playing their home opener a night after a tough overtime loss to Buffalo. They at least get a few days of rest before they have to play the St. Louis Blues, the defending Stanley Cup Champions. I think Montreal is a good team on paper and I would expect to see both their underlying metrics and team point total tick upwards. However, the early season hole they find themselves in could be the difference at season’s end. Florida is in the same spot as Montreal as they played Tampa Bay twice and Carolina once. Getting one win out of those three games is commendable. I don’t like saying a team’s fourth game out of 82 is a must win but Florida losing to Buffalo tonight would not be good for the Panthers. Buffalo is likely to be one of the teams they will be directly competing with for a playoff spot and spotting them a seven-point lead might be a problem. It would also keep them in seventh place in the division so they would have to pass at least two Atlantic teams. Hockey fans, especially Sabre fans, will remember Buffalo got off to a fast start last year before choking down the stretch. Last season, their play seemed unsustainable based on how they were winning games. This season their metrics are strong enough that a regression is less likely. Again, it’s early but early season deficits are surprisingly difficult to overcome, especially for teams that were thought of as bubble teams at the beginning of the season.
What is up with San Jose?
San Jose was a popular pick to make a deep playoff run this season. The team lost Joe Pavelski but was able to maintain the rest of their core and now have a healthy Erik Karlsson. For a team that was only six wins from the Stanley Cup and decimated with injuries during the playoffs, it did not seem unreasonable to expect them to be strong once again this season. However, they could not have started worse. They started with two losses to Vegas, the first of which they were throttled (which we detailed last week). They have gotten better each game, even dominating against Nashville and finally got their first win in dominating fashion against Chicago last night, a game they almost had to win.
Although San Jose finally got a win, their underlying metrics are still a major cause for concern. They have just a 51% CF% and a very poor 46% xGF%. Those are both adjusted metrics. The Sharks are going to have to go on a run at some point because Vegas, Arizona, Anaheim, and Los Angeles all rank in the top half of the league in xGF%. Calgary has a decent xGF% and has banked some team points, while Edmonton has worse metrics than San Jose but has still managed to start 4-0. In what will likely be a tough Pacific division and an even tougher Western Conference, San Jose’s slow start has to be looked at critically.
Five Teams Remain Unbeaten
Heading into Friday’s action, we see five NHL teams, the Carolina Hurricanes, Colorado Avalanche, Edmonton Oilers, New York Rangers, and Philadelphia Flyers remain unbeaten but their performances could not be more different. Since New York and Philadelphia have only played two games, I do not want to discuss them further here because of a small sample. I have already touched on Carolina but I once again want to reiterate how impressive they have been early on. They rank fourth in xGF% (57%) and eighth in CF% (53%). As long as they continue to get adequate goaltending, they may want to hold off on scheduling any events in their arena for April and May. Colorado just had an impressive win over a good Bruins’ team, where they had a slight advantage in shots and broke even in xGF%. Their underlying numbers are very average. They were expected to be a top team coming into the season and have only played three games so I wouldn’t be surprised to see their numbers uptick slightly to match their results. Edmonton, the third unbeaten team, instill the least confidence. As previously mentioned, their numbers are not strong. They are the early candidate to be this year’s 2018 Buffalo Sabres, start hot and limp to the finish. Their underlying metrics during 5v5 play have to improve if they hope to make the playoffs.
Player(s) to Watch
Last week I highlighted Rasmus Sandin to see if he could continue his incredible play that he showed against Ottawa and I discussed the results above. This week I want to highlight Travis Konecny and the Buffalo Sabres’ “4th line.” Konecny is a player I have been high on since he was drafted. He has flashed moments of strong play but has not taken the next step in performance. However, he is still young and is playing his first season on a new long-term contract. Although it is still early (2 games), he has been on the ice for 35 shots for and only 13 against (73% CF%). His xGF% is an impressive 85.39%. He has also scored two goals.
The other players I would like to highlight are players that have often drawn the criticism of #SabresTwitter. I mentioned Kyle Okposo last week and want to once again highlight him and his line mates, Johan Larsson and Zemegus Girgensons. The three of them compose Buffalo’s “fourth line” but the trio has arguable been the best line in hockey, by advanced metrics, through the team’s first four games. Okposo ranks second, Girgensons fifth, and Larsson sixth, among players who have played at least ten minutes in xGF%. When it comes to CF%, Okposo is third, Girgensons ninth, and Larsson 16th. For three players who fans didn’t want to be on the opening night roster, they have been extremely steady and impressive. It would be nice to have some goals come from their strong play but for a team that played strong during 5v5 hockey in their first two games and dropped off in their second two their steady play has to be appreciated.
Game to Watch
Like last week, there are some strong contenders for the game to watch this week. On Monday, we have Colorado at Washington, Tuesday there is Tampa Bay at Montreal and Nashville at Vegas, Wednesday has Colorado at Pittsburgh and Toronto at Washington, while Thursday has Tampa Bay at Boston. Last week I highlighted a potential Eastern Conference Final matchup so this week I am going to go for the potential Western Conference Final matchup and go with Nashville at Vegas.
If you have any thoughts or would like to submit questions for next week’s Friday Focus, tweet us, @afpanalytics, or me, @k_sticher.
All data is courtesy of naturalstattrick.com and capfriendly.com
KYLE STICH is the Director of AFP Analytics. In addition, Mr. Stich is a tax specialist and Director of Operations at AFP Consulting LLC, whose clientele include professional athletes performing services on three separate continents. Mr. Stich earned his Master of Science in Sport Management with a Concentration in Sport Analytics from Columbia University in 2017. He earned his undergraduate degrees in Accounting and Sport Management from St. John Fisher College in 2015, where he has served as an adjunct professor teaching Sport Finance and Baseball Analytics.
Who Will Surprise During the 2019-2020 Season? – Part 2: Eastern Conference
Each year, there are players throughout the NHL who seem to come out of nowhere. Jonathan Marchessault is a recent case of a player taking an unexpected step towards stardom. For the upcoming 2019-2020 season, I have taken an in-depth look throughout the league and have identified nine players in each conference who are most likely to be the next Marchessault. Each conference’s group of nine players has been broken into three groups based on their likeliness to exceed expectations next season: probable, coin flip, and possible. These groups represent what I believe to be the likelihood that each player breaks out like Marchessault. I did not want to have this centered on one team more than another, so I avoided picking multiple players from the same team.
This process is not as simple as looking at how many points someone has scored. While that may have some importance, there are many other underlying statistics that can provide a hint as to who may be able to take the next step forward. Other than total points (goals and assists) and TOI (time on ice), I will look specifically at 5v5 statistics (provided by naturalstattrick.com) for each player, as that helps take away any influence by “unfair” situations like the power play and penalty kill. Those situations tend to inflate the numbers of players. Looking at 5v5 ultimately tells us how well the player performed in the basic game of hockey. The analysis of each chosen player will involve the consideration of these statistics, as well as the overall situation and circumstance that they find themselves in. The age listed with the player is the age that they will play the majority of the 2019-2020 season as. I have tried to look at players who were not high draft picks as these players are expected to take a step forward. Instead, the goal was to identify some under the radar players.
Probable:
Marcus Pettersson, 23, LD, Pittsburgh Penguins
Marcus Pettersson is a player who might be a stretch for this list because it may not be such a huge surprise if he takes the next step. However, his small sample size in the NHL lands him on this list. A former second-round pick of the Anaheim Ducks, the left-handed defenseman did not impress enough in Anaheim to earn a spot on their roster for the long-term. Just this past season, the Ducks traded him to the Penguins after just 27 games in exchange for
Moving into the 2019-2020 season, Pettersson should have an opportunity to continue his success with Pittsburgh. The Penguins have Kris Letang, Justin Schultz, and Brian Dumoulin locked into their top two defensive pairs. That leaves one spot for the likes of Pettersson, Jack Johnson, and Erik Gudbranson. Assuming Pettersson can return this upcoming season at the same level he left off on, He should have no problem securing the last spot in the top four. Currently, he is an unsigned RFA and the Penguins are just about out of cap space. This is certainly a situation to watch. Assuming the contract situation gets resolved, Pettersson is in a prime spot to have a great season on the Penguins’ blueline.
Christian Wolanin, 24, LD, Ottawa Senators
Wolanin, a fourth round pick in 2015, had a great first full pro year this past season. He did very well in the AHL, producing 31 points (seven goals, 24 assists) in 40 games as a defenseman. That play earned him a call up to the Senators. He saw 30 NHL games, producing four goals and eight assists for 12 points. His underlying numbers impressed too. He had a CF% of 45.92% and while that is not good, his relative CF% was 2.50%. He was playing for the worst team in hockey. He made the team better in relation to his teammates. After being a very productive AHL defenseman and showing he belonged in the NHL on the Senators in just one professional season, Wolanin is in a prime position to take a step forward.
For a young defenseman looking for an opportunity at a bigger role, there may not be a better team to be on than the Senators. While you might struggle to win some games, there are a lot of open spots on defense. Thomas Chabot is locked into the top pair, while Dylan DeMelo most likely has a top four spot. That leaves two top four spots up for grabs. Christian Jaros, another young defenseman, could definitely be given a shot. There are also veterans Nikita Zaitsev, Ron Hainsey, and Mark Borowiecki who are looking for that type of role. However, none of these defenseman are sure locks for a top four spot. Ideally, they would all be playing bottom pair minutes. If Wolanin can continue at the level he is at, or take another step forward, he could have a 2019-2020 season that puts him on the map for a long-term spot on Ottawa’s blueline.
Oskar Lindblom, 23, LW, Philadelphia Flyers
The 2015 fifth-round pick had his first North American hockey season in 2017-2018. He spent most of the year in the AHL, producing 16 goals and 18 assists for 34 points in 54 games. That same season, he did see 23 games in the NHL. However, he was not as productive. He had two goals and four assists for six points in 23 games. This first season was enough for the Flyers to give Lindblom a shot the following season. In the 2018-2019 season, Linblom played in 81 games for the team. He did fairly well in a third-line role, posting 17 goals and 16 assists for 33 points. Not only was he productive in his role from a scoring standpoint, but his underlying numbers were also good. He had a 50.99% CF%. His relative CF% was 3.40%. Lindblom brought a good two-way game to the Flyers third line. His presence on the ice made the Flyers a better team. Entering the upcoming season at just age 23, Lindblom is in a prime position to take another step and provide the type of value that a top six winger would.
The situation in Philadelphia may lead to Lindblom being stuck on the third line for another season. Down the middle, the Flyers will most likely have Sean Couturier, Kevin Hayes, Nolan Patrick, and Scott Laughton. There are four spots on the wing in the top six. Those spots will most likely belong to Claude Giroux, Jakub Voracek, James van
Coin Flip:
Denis Malgin, 22, C/RW, Florida Panthers
Malgin has played in three seasons for the Panthers. However, he has played just over half of the games in each season. The past two seasons may be the most important for the progression of Malgin’s career. In the 2017-2018 season, Malgin played in 51 games and had 11 goals and 11 assists for 22 points. He had a CF% of 50.94%, with a relative CF% of 2.02%. The next season, in 50 games, Malgin produced only seven goals and nine assists for 16 points. While his production fell slightly, his underlying statistics were very similar. He had a CF% of 51.40% and a relative CF% of 2.45%. Each season, he ultimately was a serviceable player on the ice, and he made his team better when he was playing. The decline in points wasn’t huge, so it shouldn’t cause too much concern for the team when evaluating what type of player Malgin can be.
For the Panthers, two forwards may be going back and forth between the second and third line: Brett Connolly and Frank Vatrano. However, if Malgin can take another step and start producing points more regularly, he could push for that last spot on the second line. The attention will most likely be on those other two forwards, but the fact that there will be some competition there means there is an opportunity. At worst, Malgin should be battling for a third-line role, which would be an improvement on his fourth-line role this past season. There should be a spot on the wing and at
Jesper Bratt, 21, LW/RW, New Jersey Devils
Bratt, a sixth-round pick in 2016, burst onto the scene during the 2017-2018 season that saw the Devils all of a sudden look like a very impressive team. The rookie Bratt contributed to that, as he produced 13 goals and 22 assists for 35 points in 74 games. However, Bratt seemed to have a bit of a sophomore slump in the 2018-2019 season. He only made it into 51 games due to injury. In those games, he was able to get close to his previous point total. He had eight goals and 25 assists for 33 points. His CF%
Bratt is in a good situation in New Jersey. Taylor Hall, Kyle Palmieri, and Wayne Simmonds will most likely take three of the four wing spots in the top six. That leaves one spot open and there is not a clear option to take it. Along with Bratt, the Devils will have Miles Wood and Blake Coleman fighting for that spot. If Bratt can return to the form he s, he should be able to secure that last spot on the wing in the top six. The opportunity is certainly there for Jesper Bratt to take another step and breakout this upcoming season.
Peter Cehlarik, 24, LW/RW, Boston Bruins
A bit of time has gone by since Cehlarik was a third-round draft pick in the 2013 draft. Throughout the past three seasons, he has become a decent AHL forward. He had 38 points (20 goals, 18 assists) in 49 games during the 2016-2017 season, while the 2017-2018 season saw him produce 23 points (11 goals, 12 assists) in 35 games. in the 2018-2019 season, he had 38 points (12 goals, 26 assists) in 53 games. He also saw his longest NHL look this past season. In 20 games as a fourth-line forward, he had four goals and two assists for six points. The advanced statistics on Cehlarik paint a bright picture in those 20 games. His CF% was 59.50%. While that could be attributed to the fact that he was on a great Bruins team, his relative CF% of 6.69% shows that he made the team better when he was on the ice. While it is a small sample size, it is the type of production that you want to see from young forwards when
While Cehlarik showed he may be ready for a shot at an NHL role, the team has quite the forward group. There are 13 other NHL forwards who Cehlarik will have to fight with for a roster spot, and that doesn’t consider any prospects. While Cehlarik may be able to beat out players like Par Lindholm and Chris Wagner, it may be tough to find anything more than a fourth-line role. While he may be ready to make the jump to the NHL and excel, the roster logjam at the forward position hinders the likelihood that it actually happens. If he were available in a trade, he could be a
Possible:
Evan Rodrigues, 26, C/LW, Buffalo Sabres
The Sabres should be loving that Rodrigues has been the type of player he is considering he was an undrafted free agent. Other than Jeff Skinner, Jack Eichel, and Sam Reinhart, there is a case to be made that Rodrigues is the fourth-best forward on the Sabres’ roster. This past season, he saw time from the fourth-line to the first-line and he played well in whatever role he was asked to play. While he had only nine goals and 20 assists in 74 games, it is important to note that he was often playing with teammates like Vladimir Sobotka, Johan Larsson, and Zemgus Girgensons. None of those players had a positive impact offensively on the team. Rodrigues has good underlying numbers. His CF% was 51.59%, and he posted a relative CF% of 2.26%. The team was better when he was on the ice. The ability is there for Rodrigues to take another step and become a strong two-way player who can produce around 40 points. He has proven he has the ability to fill in on the top forward lines. He is anything but a liability on the ice.
Rodrigues has been a good fill-in option in the top six. While it’s possible he takes another step, he is most likely that player who is a great third-liner who doesn’t look out of place on higher lines. Skinner, Eichel, Reinhart, and Marcus Johansson are locked into the top six. Chances are, players like Victor Olofsson, Conor Sheary, Jimmy Vesey, and Casey Mittelstadt will be given a shot in higher roles before Rodrigues. While Rodrigues should improve, it is likely he continues to be the good
Kenny Agostino, 27, LW, Toronto Maple Leafs
Agostino was a fifth-round pick in 2010. He did not get into the NHL until the 2013-2014 season. Agostino has consistently been a dominant presence in the AHL, with three seasons in a row of at least 50 points. In the 2016-2017 AHL season, he had 83 points in 65 games. He didn’t see more than a handful of games in the NHL until this past 2018-2019 season. He played for both the Montreal Canadiens and New Jersey Devils. With the Canadiens, he had two goals and nine assists for 11 points in 36 games. He had a CF% of 56.70% and a relative CF% of 3.44%. He was then claimed on waivers by the Devils, where he went on to have four goals and nine assists for 13 points in 27 games. While his CF% with the Devils was less at 48.86%, his relative CF% was greater at 5.25%. Agostino made both teams better when he was on the ice compared to his teammates.
Agostino signed as a UFA (unrestricted free agent) with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Toronto is close to the cap, so signing Agostino to a deal at the veteran minimum was appealing to them. For Agostino, there is an opportunity to earn a nice NHL role. The top-six will be filled, but the third line is not completely set. Alexander Kerfoot will be the center, but the two wing spots could be up for grabs. Agostino will have to battle with Zach Hyman (who is likely to start the season on injured reversed), Trevor Moore, and Nicolas Petan. While Agostino isn’t guaranteed to beat them out, it wouldn’t be crazy to see. Agostino having a consistent third-line role will be the best role he has been in. While his recent success and the Leafs’ logjam may point to a chance that he breaks out, he is also already 27 years old. Taking the next step at age 27 does not happen often, but Agostino couldn’t have asked for a better situation to make the unlikely happen.
Dean Kukan, 26, LD, Columbus Blue Jackets
Kukan was signed as an undrafted free agent out of the SHL. He never really saw NHL time until the end of the 2018-2019 season and into the playoffs. In a small sample size, he had five assists in 25 games during the season. His underlying numbers, albeit in a small sample, were good during those 25 games. He had a CF% of 53.24% and a relative CF% of 1.53%. Kukan’s most common defensive partner was Scott Harrington, showing that he played in a bottom pair role. What is impressive is the impact Kukan had on Harrington. With Kukan, Harrington had a CF% of 53.29%. Without Kukan, Harrington’s CF% dropped to 37.63%. Kukan made that defensive pairing formidable. Moving forward, Kukan could take a step and look to have a bigger, more consistent role on the Blue Jackets.
An opportunity could be there for Kukan. Columbus had Seth Jones, Zach Werenski, and Ryan Murray locked into the top four. David Savard was the other top-four defenseman, but he has started to fall off. Kukan needs to beat out Savard, Markus Nutivaara (who didn’t have a great season) and Scott Harrington for the last top-four spot. It is clear based off the statistics that Kukan has the edge over Harrington. The opportunity should be there for Kukan to earn second-pair minutes. If he can continue to play
Conclusion
Ultimately, it is very possible that none of these players make it to the level that Jonathan Marchessault did. However, when looking at each team in the east, these nine players were determined as most likely to do so. While some may be more likely than others, these nine are the players to watch closely throughout the 2019-2020 season. There may have been some players excluded simply because of them playing on a team where another player was deemed to be more likely to take a step.
What are your thoughts? Tweet us, @afpanalytics, to share.
Image courtesy of Jay LaPrete / Associated Press
James Finch is an analyst at AFP Analytics. James graduated from St. John Fisher College in 2019 with a bachelor’s degree in Sport Management with a minor in Economics. His background with sports and economics have brought about an interest in gaining experience and finding his niche within the sport analytics field.
2019 NHL Free Agents: Five Remaining UFAs Who Could Provide Value
After the initial rush of the 2019 free agency period, there are still many players looking for an opportunity with an NHL club. There are some well-known names still currently looking for a new contract, like Jake Gardiner and Joe Thornton. However, we believe that there is value to be found with the players who aren’t as well-known and who may be looking for an opportunity at a larger role. We have identified five players that teams should be targeting that will, worst case scenario, improve the organizations depth. Best case scenario, these players may surprise and play their way into a more significant role on the team.
Safest Bet: Dmitrij Jaskin
After being a second-round pick in 2011, many within the hockey industry thought that Dmitrij Jaskin would become a solid middle
Most Likely to Take the Next Step to the NHL: Rourke Chartier
Rourke Chartier is a 23 year old forward who has hit the UFA (unrestricted free agent) market. Other players at that age have been in this situation before, but the numbers that Chartier has produced make him stand out. Chartier was a very productive WHL player in his junior days. Once he moved to the AHL in the San Jose Sharks organization, his game seemed to translate well. His first AHL season, he played 67 games and produced 35 points. AHL season number two saw him post 21 points in 28 games. This past season in the AHL, he had 18 points in 26 games. These numbers don’t jump off the page, but they are very respectable. Chartier also saw 13 games in the NHL this past season. In these games, he had just one goal. While that is not great, his underlying numbers gave a glimpse of hope. He averaged 9:24 TOI (time on ice), leading us to the conclusion that he was playing in a fourth line role. He produced a CF% of 53.15%. While that is good, his CF% relative was -4.86%, painting a more negative picture. Looking at these numbers, we can draw the conclusion that he may have benefited from playing on a great San Jose team but would not have been one of the better options in comparison to his teammates. However, we believe that based off of his AHL numbers and the fact that he is still young, he has the ability to make the jump to the NHL. A team looking to take a chance on an AHL player who may be able to become an adequate option on an NHL fourth line should be looking at Chartier. He should end up signing for the minimum, so this would be a low-risk option. Worst case scenario, he plays well in the AHL. Ideally, he takes the next step and becomes an option for the NHL roster.
Top Six Fill in: Pontus Aberg
Pontus Aberg is a former top second-round pick of the Nashville Predators. While he looked good for their AHL affiliate, his numbers did not translate well to the NHL. We would like to highlight that in 37 games with Nashville during the 2017-2018 season, he played over 160 minutes with Calle Jarnkrok. Jarnkrok was the Nashville forward that Aberg played the most minutes with. Aberg finished the 2017-2018 season with the Edmonton Oilers after being traded midseason. In 16 games with the Oilers, Aberg had two goals and six assists for a total of eight points. While his CF% was 48.49, his relative CF% was 2.25%, showing that the team was better when he was on the ice. In these 16 games with Edmonton, Aberg played 75 or more minutes with Drake Caggiula, Leon Draisaitl, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins.
In the 2018-2019 season, Aberg started off with the Anaheim Ducks after being claimed on waivers. In 37 games with the Ducks, Aberg had 19 points. He produced a CF% of 53.60%, and a relative percentage of 7.73%. Aberg looked great playing with his most common Anaheim forward teammates of Ryan Getzlaf (274:46 TOI), Rickard Rakell (130:01 TOI), and Adam Henrique (129:52 TOI).
Midseason, Anaheim traded Aberg to the Minnesota Wild. With the Wild, Aberg struggled in 22 games. He only produced six points. Aberg’s underlying numbers were not good either. He had a CF% of 46.90%, with a relative CF% of -4.70%. Aberg was not helping the Wild when he was on the ice. He was very replaceable on their team. With Minnesota, the most common forward teammates that Aberg played with were Victor Rask (93:03 TOI) and Zach Parise (82:13 TOI).
The main thing that stands out here is that Aberg provided quality numbers when playing with top players. He has been at his best level of play with Ryan Getzlaf and Leon
Veteran Depth Player: Oscar Lindberg
As a former second-round pick, Lindberg came into the league as someone who projected to be a decent middle-six option within the forward group. That never really happened, as the most points he has ever produced in a single year was 28 in the 2015-2016 season. However, he has established himself as a decent bottom-six option. This past year, his season was split between the Vegas Golden Knights and the Ottawa Senators. With Vegas, Lindberg had four goals and eight assists in 35 games. His CF% was 56.44%, with a relative CF% of 4.21%. With Ottawa, Lindberg produced five goals and three assists in 20 games. His CF% was 44.70, with a relative CF% of 0.18%. His numbers looked really good with Vegas. Once he got to Ottawa, his underlying numbers fell, but he produced at a better rate. However, Lindberg was on a really good Vegas team, playing with other quality bottom-six forwards like Cody Eakin and Ryan Carpenter. In Ottawa, he was still making the team better in relation to other players on his team while playing with fringe NHL players, Magnus Paajarvi and Brian Gibbons. After looking at these statistics, we believe that Lindberg would be a quality veteran player to put into your bottom six. If he has other similar players around him, he will look good. If he plays with players who may fit better in the AHL, he may still have the offensive ability to stay serviceable in his NHL role. Ultimately, Lindberg is a solid veteran option to have on your NHL roster.
Boom/Bust Potential: Stefan Noesen
Stefan Noesen was a first round pick in 2011 for the Ottawa Senators. He first broke into the NHL with the Anaheim Ducks, but over three seasons of very limited time, he found himself in the New Jersey Devils organization via waivers. Noesen has had some problems dealing with injuries in his career, but he was able to put together a 72 game season in 2017-2018 with the Devils. During this season, he had 13 goals and 14 assists for a total of 27 points. His CF% was 51.62% with a relative CF% of 3.23%. This was Noesen’s first season where he came close to playing all of the games. The team would have liked to see him take another step forward in 2018-2019, but the opposite happened. Finding himself on the injured list three times throughout the season, Noesen played only 41 games. In those 41 games, he had only three goals and five assists for a total of eight points. His underlying numbers didn’t help either, as his CF% was 45.65% and his relative CF% was -2.74%. Noesen went from looking like a guy who could become a solid middle six option to a guy who may struggle to find an NHL opportunity. The Devils did not give him a qualifying offer this offseason, making him
Photo by Ethan Miller / Getty Images
James Finch is an analyst at AFP Analytics. James graduated from St. John Fisher College in 2019 with a bachelor’s degree in Sport Management with a minor in Economics. His background with sports and economics have brought about an interest in gaining experience and finding his niche within the sport analytics field.
The Best Options for a Sabres Trade of Rasmus Ristolainen
After looking at the options the Buffalo Sabres have to fix their roster logjam, we have taken the process a step further to identify possible outcomes for our most common prediction: trading Rasmus Ristolainen. It’s arguable that the Sabres have surpluses at both forward and defense but it is undeniable that the team has to do something with their defense. We previously discussed how the team has eleven defensemen and six spots to play them. We concluded that Rasmus Ristolainen was likely the odd man out. We did play out a scenario where he is still on the roster come opening night, but it seems unlikely. Teams around the league have to have come to the same conclusion as we have and are likely checking in with Buffalo to see if they can get their hands on Ristolainen. In this article, we will touch on nine teams that we think could have already checked in on Ristolainen or will if they haven’t already. We have ordered the teams based on the likeliness of a trade between Buffalo and them happening.
Before we discuss the teams that could be in play, we need to discuss our views on Ristolainen. When looking at Ristolainen’s underlying metrics, he performs at the level of a bottom-pair defenseman and that might be generous. However, those metrics likely do not reflect what the Sabres and possibly many other teams place his value at. It is very possible that teams view Ristolainen as a top four defenseman. Throughout our analysis, we consider that the perceived value of Ristolainen may very well be higher than we think it should be. Ultimately, a player’s value is what someone is willing to pay and reports are the Sabres are going to demand that price to be high. We have taken the approach that the price settles somewhere in the middle. Based on our previous article, we concluded that the Sabres would likely be looking for a top-six forward, a left-handed defenseman, or a high-end forward prospect, in that order. With that in mind, we will move into the teams and some players that a trade would likely center around. We should add two caveats. First, we don’t know how teams value certain players. We could be much higher or lower on a given player, especially prospects. Second, we have discussed what we think would be the main parameters of a trade but there is a good chance that other pieces get included from each side for a multitude of reasons.
9. Colorado Avalanche
Once Colorado moved Tyson Barrie, the right side of their defense doesn’t look nearly as strong. Currently, they have Erik Johnson and Cale Makar. If having a balance of right and left shots is important to them, they could look to make another move to achieve that balance. Ristolainen might not be the best fit for them as he and Johnson would become a 2a and 2b. They would then have ~$11M committed to their bottom two right shot defenders. However, the team does have the salary cap space to fit Ristolainen and might consider the move if they feel they can bring Ristolainen in without giving up too valuable of assets. When looking at Colorado’s roster and prospects and considering what the Sabres would likely desire, we think the best Colorado would be willing to offer is one of JT Compher or Tyson Jost, and Ian Cole. If the Sabres can’t find a better offer, they might be better off holding on to Ristolainen. A trade like this creates a bigger logjam of middle-six forwards and doesn’t significantly improve the team anywhere.
8. Chicago Blackhawks
Chicago is another team with an unbalanced left-right blue line. However, it is a problem they recently created with the acquisitions of Calvin de Haan and Olli Maatta. On paper and in a vacuum, the Sabres trading Ristolainen to Chicago for one of de Haan or Maatta would make a lot of sense, maybe the most out of any scenario. Either player would be an ideal second-pair left defender for Buffalo and Ristolainen might instantly become Chicago’s best right-handed defender (a scary thought but likely true). The issue here is things don’t happen in a vacuum. Chicago recently acquired both players and if they were going to flip either, they likely would have done so shortly after acquiring them. Chicago and Buffalo also just recently swapped a defender (Henri Jokiharju) for a forward (Alex Nylander) so the optics of them acquiring a right-shot defender from the same team is terrible. We would never say never here but the probability of this trade happening is low. If it did, a straight swap of either de Haan or Maatta makes sense.
7. Vegas Golden Knights
Again, we are touching on a team that just sent a right-handed defender to Buffalo so a trade to get a different one back seems unlikely. However, Vegas has a glaring hole on their right side and with their salary cap situation clearer, Vegas could circle back to Buffalo. In a deal with Vegas, the Sabres would need to salary match or take back more than they send. In this situation, the conversation would likely have to revolve around one of Reilly Smith, Johnathan Marchessault, or Alex Tuch. The Sabres should salivate at the idea of acquiring Tuch but Vegas isn’t likely to do a one for one swap. If a trade fit were there, Smith would likely be the player that makes the most sense. Again, we want to emphasize the unlikeliness of these teams working out another trade that involves a right-shot defenseman. The optics of trading a cheaper, right-handed defensemen to a team and then circling back to the same team and acquiring a more expensive right-handed defensemen, who is arguably a worse player, would make absolutely no sense. If we were strictly looking at roster fits, Vegas might be the most likely scenario but when considering the optics of another trade, they get bumped far down the list.
6. Detroit Red Wings
On paper, the Detroit Red Wings could really use a right shot defenseman. They are a young, rebuilding team, so a 24 year old Rasmus Ristolainen would fit well when considering the path of the team. The only problem that we see with these teams matching up for a deal is that there are not many assets that Detroit would be willing to move that would interest Buffalo in a trade for Ristolainen. The one name that sticks out is forward Andreas Athanasiou. Starting a few seasons ago, there were trade rumors around Athanasiou. However, they seem to have cooled over the past year or so. That makes sense considering he is a 24-year-old forward who just put up a 30-goal season this past year. He has become the type of player that Detroit should be holding on to. Pair that with the fact that Detroit now has a new decision-making group in the front office and it seems unlikely that they’d be looking to move Athanasiou. However, that also could be a wild card as new GM in Steve Yzerman could be looking to put his own stamp on the roster. Overall, we believe that it would be tough for these teams to find a deal, especially as division rivals. There could be a fit though, so never say never.
5. Anahiem Ducks
While looking at the Anaheim Ducks, the recent trade factor (similar to our Vegas analysis) appears. During the past season, the Sabres acquired Brandon Montour from Anaheim. While this is similar to the Vegas situation, there are two key differences. First, the amount of time that has gone by may make it more likely a deal could happen. Second, the Ducks got a good return for Montour (Guhle and a 1st round pick). Vegas did not get a great return for Miller. The Ducks getting an adequate return might make them more comfortable with making another trade. Anaheim is in need of a top four right handed defenseman, as Josh Manson is the only option on their current roster. There are two current NHL players that could interest Buffalo in Rickard Rakell and Ondrej Kase. Both players have shown they can be capable top six options. Rakell is a 26 year old forward capable of playing both center and the wing. He also has two 30 goal seasons and is on a cheap contract. Kase, a 23-year-old winger, was injured this past season, but produced 11 goals and 20 points in 30 games. Rakell would be the first ask, but the Sabres would do well to acquire either player. While those two are great for a rebuilding team like Anaheim, they may be willing to trade from their forward depth in order to strengthen their defense with a long-term option like Ristolainen.
Another way to possibly acquire Ristolainen would be to use prospects. While we think Anaheim is unlikely to do this because of their status as a rebuilding club, it is important to highlight the prospects Buffalo would be interested in. This group includes center Isac Lundestrom, center Sam Steel, winger Maxime Comtois, and winger Max Jones. While some of these prospects may be more available than others in a trade for Ristolainen, these four would be of interest to the Sabres.
4. Edmonton Oilers
The Edmonton Oilers have been looking for top four, right shot defenseman for a few years now. There have been rumors in the past linking them to Rasmus Ristolainen. On paper, there are multiple options that the Oilers could look at to acquire Ristolainen. Buffalo could use a left handed defenseman, so a possible trade including Oscar Klefbom or Darnell Nurse may interest the Sabres. On the forward side, the Oilers have both Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Jesse Puljujarvi to offer. Trading RNH would be pretty detrimental to an already mediocre offense, so the prospect of Puljujarvi may be the more realistic option. The Sabres would be looking at either a left-handed defenseman for their second pair or a possible question mark of a prospect who could end up being a bust or pay off greatly.
Another avenue the team could look is to use prospects. While we don’t think this is likely, there are a couple prospects that would interest the Sabres: wingers Kailer Yamamotto and Tyler Benson. Regardless of the likeliness of these options, there are possibilities here that could bring about a deal between Edmonton and Buffalo.
3. Tampa Bay Lightning
The first time that Tampa Bay was connected to Ristolainen was during the 2018-2019 season. While there hasn’t been much linking them lately, the fact that there was interest in Ristolainen means that there still could be interest. Tampa could certainly use a top four right shot defenseman, as they are currently deploying Hedman, McDonagh, and Sergachev, who are all left shots. While there are not left shot defensive options to swap for Ristolainen, there are plenty of forwards who could find their way to Buffalo. Buffalo would have interest in NHL forwards like Anthony Cirelli, Mathieu Joseph, Tyler Johnson, Yanni Gourde, Ondrej Palat and Alex Killorn (in that order). Cirelli would be the ideal target as he is a young center who seems ready for a top six role, but it may be hard to pry him away from Tampa. It is important to acknowledge that Johnson, Gourde, Palat, and Killorn all have full no-trade clauses that would allow them to block any trade. Tampa has an abundance of forwards and are missing a top four right shot defenseman. Eric Cernak may soon be ready for that role but adding another established defenseman may help the teams’ defense in both the short term and long term.
While Buffalo may have their favorite targets on Tampa’s roster, the main problem is many of them have the ability to block a possible trade. Regardless, if Tampa was really interested in Ristolainen, they have enough NHL assets to find a deal that would work for both teams. If they wanted to deal from their prospect pool, it would need to include one of Taylor Raddysh or Alex Barre-Boulet. For a deal with prospects to work, the Lightning would need to shed salary in the form of Ryan Callahan’s contract and possibly add another roster player. A deal like Johnson, Callahan’s contract, and Raddysh for Ristolainen and Sheary (50% retained) could be close to where a deal like this would need to end up.
2. Columbus Blue Jackets
Columbus is a team that could certainly have interest in a top four right shot defenseman. They have Seth Jones and David Savard at the position. Any other defensive player would be playing on their off side if deployed on the right side of a pairing. Four players stand out that would make sense for Buffalo: Ryan Murray, Oliver Bjorkstrand, Alexander Wennberg, and Markus Nutivaara. Chances are, Ryan Murray wouldn’t be an option as it would create another hole on the left side of the top four defense. If the Sabres could grab Bjorkstrand in a deal, they should absolutely do it. At this point, they might be a season or two too late as he has become a 40 point player who can score goals at age 24. That would leave Alexander Wennberg and Markus Nutivaara.
Wennberg has been rumored to be on his way out of Columbus for quite some time, as he took a step back after the 2016-2017 season and hasn’t returned to be the same player. He is only 24, so there is still potential for him to regain top six form. Nutuivaara is a decent option for a bottom pair. If the Sabres could acquire these two in a deal, they’d be looking at a possible top six option and a bottom pair defenseman that would allow the team to not have Marco Scandella in their lineup. Buffalo would be improving two parts of their roster, while Columbus would be getting the top four defenseman that they need.
If Columbus was looking to trade out of their prospect pool instead of using NHL roster players, the conversation with Buffalo would begin and stop with center Alexander Texier. After him, Columbus’ prospect pool doesn’t have a talent that would interest Buffalo in this type of trade.
1. Winnipeg Jets
The Winnipeg Jets currently have some cap space, but they will be very close to the cap once they get top players like Patrik Laine and Kyle Connor signed. After doing that, they will still have a glaring need on defense. After Joshua Morrissey and Dustin Byfuglien, there are question marks on defense. Newly acquired Neal Pionk could play a top four role, but ideally he would be best fit on the bottom pair. Prospect Sami Niku projects as a top four defenseman, but putting him there at the start of this season may be asking a bit much of him at this point in his development.
If those two were on the second pair, that would mean deploying a bottom pair that consists of two of Nathan Beaulieu, Tucker Poolman, and Dmitry Kulikov. Kulikov should not see NHL minutes, and the other two are bottom pair at best guys who could easily be scratched. There is a clear need for another top four defenseman and, in a perfect world, two more top four defenseman. The Jets match up fairly well with the Sabres. They have forward depth and need to balance out their roster.
The odd man out in their forward group seems to be Nikolaj Ehlers, as he has been in trade rumors for the past year. In order to acquire him the Sabres may need to send Ristolainen and a player like Conor Sheary (retained salary) to Winnipeg. Buffalo would be acquiring a top six forward, while Winnipeg would be getting a top four defenseman and a depth scorer. If Ehlers is not an option, two other forwards stand out: Jack Roslovic or Mason Appleton.
While these two would be great gets for Buffalo, it wouldn’t clear salary for Winnipeg, so they most likely would need to have a possible deal include a bigger contract to make the financials work. Buffalo would most likely be interested in a Roslovic and Lowry/Copp package. While that would further jam up their forward situation, the Sabres would then be able to deal Sheary or even flip Lowry/Copp. If Winnipeg wanted Buffalo to take a player like Mathieu Perreault, the rest of the trade package would need to be greater than Roslovic. It seems that Ehlers would truly make the most sense, but a deal could be found around a different package of players.
Conclusion
We ultimately think a trade of Ristolainen and Conor Sheary (some salary retained on Sheary) for Nikolaj Ehlers makes the most sense for both parties. If we were handicapping where Ristolainen starts the season, we would give Winnipeg around a 35%, Columbus 20%, Tampa Bay 15%, Buffalo 10%, Edmonton 10%, Anaheim 5%, and the field as 5%. We also need to emphasize, the Sabres’ biggest need in a trade might be a left-handed defenseman. There are two questions the team needs to answer. First, can they sign Jake Gardiner, who would be a dynamite addition? Second, can they count on Lawrence Pilut? Although his underlying metrics were strong in a limited sample with Buffalo, there is an injury question as well as a question if his limited sample in Buffalo is sustainable. We aren’t as ready to anoint him as many others and think the Sabres would be wise to look for a more known option. Additionally, the team would still be an injury away from Marco Scandella or Matt Hunwick playing. That cannot happen.
Our current lineup prediction has Jimmy Vesey playing on the first-line. That is definitely not ideal. However, Jack Eichel may be able to drive offense enough to overcome that deficiency. It also has Marcus Johansson as the second-line center. If the team can acquire a better option at center, they should explore it. While the package of Ristolainen and Sheary (or Evan Rodrigues) would work for a top line winger, it likely doesn’t net more than a short-term solution at the center position. If they are looking to acquire a younger, long-term solution at the center position, Casey Mittelstadt probably has to be packaged with Ristolainen. This would make sense from an asset management standpoint as Mittelstadt’s future role would suddenly be filled. However, this seems unlikely to happen. The team gets one shot at moving Ristolainen and they need to ensure they choose the correct return. We have thoroughly been through all the scenarios in our previous article, as well as this one. We now sit and wait to see when the dominoes start to fall.
Image courtesy of Bill Wippert / Getty Images
James Finch is an analyst at AFP Analytics. James graduated from St. John Fisher College in 2019 with a bachelor’s degree in Sport Management with a minor in Economics. His background with sports and economics have brought about an interest in gaining experience and finding his niche within the sport analytics field.
KYLE STICH is the Director of AFP Analytics. In addition, Mr. Stich is a tax specialist and Director of Operations at AFP Consulting LLC, whose clientele include professional athletes performing services on three separate continents. Mr. Stich earned his Master of Science in Sport Management with a Concentration in Sport Analytics from Columbia University in 2017. He earned his undergraduate degrees in Accounting and Sport Management from St. John Fisher College in 2015, where he has served as an adjunct professor teaching Sport Finance and Baseball Analytics.
Solving the Sabres’ Depth Chart
At this moment, the Buffalo Sabres have multiple logjams on their current roster. Both the forward group and the defensive group still have some questions that need to be answered this offseason. At the end of the season, GM Jason Botterill mentioned the team will be looking for a top six winger and second line center.
The Sabres signed Marcus Johansson, who recently played mainly at wing but does have history at the center position. For the purpose of this exercise, he is penciled in as the second line center. This may not be ideal, and it is possible that other options could be chosen. Another assumption that is made is Vladimir Sobotka is not on the roster. He is either in the AHL or leaves for Europe. Another important decision to note is that newly acquired Henri Jokiharju is in the AHL for all of our options. This is done for multiple reasons. First, he is waivers exempt. He can be assigned to the AHL without risk, while others may be lost to other teams. Second, with the logjam that is on defense, it would not make sense to put him in a situation where he could possibly be scratched. Allowing him to see top minutes in the AHL is the best option for his development.
There is still a major domino that needs to fall to really see how the roster may look at the start of the season. The fate of defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen will certainly have an impact on how the Sabres’ roster will look on opening night. Many believe he will be traded, but until he is, we also need to look at what could happen if he isn’t.
Seven options have been identified to help fix this logjam on the Sabres’ roster for opening night. Within these options, it is factored in that both Zach Bogosian and Lawrence Pilut are not expected to be healthy at the start of the season. For the purpose of looking at the roster, we have assumed they will start the season on the injured list and not count against the number of 21 roster skaters. With the Sabres needing to get off to a fast start, we are looking to build the best roster for opening night. Although
Current Situation
Below is the current situation that the Sabres find themselves in.


E
The defensive side of the roster is interesting because of the logjam and the possible pairings that could be used. Currently, we know that Dahlin could basically make anyone better on the top pair. First, finding a good fit for Ristolainen is important. In only 17:24 TOI 5v5, Ristolainen and Montour produced a 56.57 CF%. While Montour was forced to play his off side, this pairing worked. It would be worth exploring this combination to see if they could replicate this strong play. With that as the second pair, finding the next
Marco Scandella is the odd man out here, as he would be scratched as the extra defenseman on the roster. The defenseman in green will find themselves on the AHL roster to start the season. Henri Jokiharju may be good enough to be in the NHL, but there is not a clear spot for him to play. That being said, it is important for him to see time in the AHL and not be a healthy scratch at the NHL level. Based off of this current depth chart, it is safe to say that more moves need to come in order to clear the logjam.
Below we will discuss what moves could be made to clear the logjams and, in our opinion, give the Sabres the best opportunity to contend for a playoff berth next season.
Option 1: Trade Ristolainen and Sheary for Forward; Sign Jake Gardiner

Option 1 includes multiple moves to improve the roster. With a weaker left side on defense, bringing in Jake Gardiner would allow for McCabe to slide down into a role that fits better. All of a sudden, the Sabres can be pretty confident with each pair.
Ristolainen certainly has value as a young, controllable defenseman, but adding Sheary to the deal could help acquire a bonifide top six forward and eliminate the logjam on the roster. If this forward is a center, Johansson can move to wing. If the forward is a winger he could slide onto Eichel’s wing and push Vesey back to a more reasonable fit on the third line. In this scenario, one of Girgensons, Wilson, or Smith could slide into the fourth line left wing role while the other two are kept as scratches on the NHL roster.
Defensively, the Sabres can run with a top pair of Dahlin and Montour, which is the most ideal combination for the two. In 120:21 TOI 5v5, the two posted a 57.38 CF%. They are both expected to be top defenseman on the team, and their success together last season showed that the team can rely on them as the top defensive option. Gardiner and Miller are two top four defensemen new to the team. To start the season, they are the natural tandem for the second pair. This allows McCabe and Nelson to play together. In reference to what was previously mentioned, this bottom pair has shown the ability to play well together. It is reasonable to believe they could replicate that.
Option 2: Ristolainen for prospect (likely forward); Sign Jake Gardiner

Option 2 allows the Sabres to add to their prospect pool, while still improving a part of their team. Jake Gardiner is signed for the defense, and the corresponding move is Ristolainen being traded for a good forward prospect that is either ready or close to ready for the NHL. Gardiner is an upgrade over Ristolainen. It also helps to move a right-handed defenseman in Ristolainen and then bring in a left-handed one in Gardiner to better balance the defensive corps. The forward group does not change from its current self, but the defensive group sees an upgrade. Like our first option, it allows the Sabres to have McCabe on the bottom pair and create three strong pairs. Scandella is the odd man out and would likely be scratched in this situation. After trading Alex Nylander and likely graduating Victor Olofsson, the Sabres’ prospect pool at wing is Tage Thompson (and possibly Dylan Cozens). They certainly could use another winger with a high ceiling.
Option 3: Ristolainen traded for LHD (left handed defenseman)

The third option here involves a defenseman for defenseman trade. The Sabres do not have a balanced defense. In theory, you can enter the season with McCabe on the second pair, but that is not ideal. With too many right handed defenseman, moving Ristolainen for a left handed defenseman would create balance within the lineup. Top four defenseman for top four defenseman would work if the Sabres can identify a team with too many left handed defenseman and not enough right handed defenseman. This may be tough to pull off, but it would ultimately be a decent option for the team.
The forward group does not improve from its current self. On defense, the same situation plays out here as it did for our options that added Jake Gardiner. The acquired defenseman would slot in with Colin Miller on the second pair. Once again, Scandella would most likely be the odd man out due to McCabe sliding down to the bottom pair with Casey Nelson.
Option 4: Ristolainen for forward; Larsson not retained

As of now, it is not a guarantee that the Sabres bring back Johan Larsson. There have been some rumors floating around that he could end up in Europe for the next season. That rumor could become a reality if the Sabres trade Ristolainen for a forward.
With this option, Ristolainen is traded for a forward. If it is a center, Johansson then moves to the left wing slots and one of Vesey or Olofsson moves to the right side. If it is for a winger, then the winger would slot in on Eichel’s right wing. With the Sabres needing Rodrigues to play the fourth line center role, that leaves the third line left wing spot for Jimmy Vesey (or possibly Johansson). This option would allow for Wilson, Girgensons, and Smith to rotate as the fourth-line wingers.
For the defense, Dahlin and Montour are the top fair. Then the Sabres would need to deploy McCabe and Miller on the second pair. It would not be reasonable to have Scandella play top-four minutes. The third pair would then consist of Casey Nelson and most likely Marco Scandella. In 132:28 of 5v5 play, Scandella and Nelson posted a 45.15 CF%. That is not good, but using this combination is more realistic than Scandella playing top-four minutes. If it goes south fast, the Sabres could turn to Hunwick or another defenseman in the AHL (or hope
Option 5: Ristolainen and Sheary for forward

This option is based off the idea that if you add Sheary to Ristolainen, the returning player will need to be a bit better than if you were to only deal Ristolainen. The downside to this scenario is that you are losing a defenseman and are not bringing a left shot defenseman in. It recreates the problem that we saw in option four. The positive here is that the Sabres use their defensive logjam to improve their forward group.
The acquired forward would slot in on Eichel’s wing. That would allow for Vesey to replace Sheary as the right winger on the third line. The defensive logjam, specifically on the right side, is now in a much better spot. Montour, Miller, and Nelson down the right side is good. The left is still not ideal, with Dahlin, McCabe, and Scandella. This option helps improve the team a bit, but more moves could be made on top of this one in order to improve the defense.
Option 6: Ristolainen for prospect (likely forward)

Option six involves trading a defenseman for a prospect and not adding to the NHL roster. The forward group, in this case, would stay the same. The defense is then good on the right side, with Montour, Miller, and Nelson. The left side still needs work, as McCabe on the second pair is not ideal. Scandella will see bottom pair time. In a perfect world, the Sabres add someone else to play on this left side with Colin Miller, allowing McCabe to slide down. This option fixes the immediate problem of too many defenseman, but it doesn’t add a piece to your NHL roster to help the team now.
Option 7: Ristolainen stays; McCabe goes

Option seven is different than the other six options. It seems as if Rasmus Ristolainen is the odd man out and will be traded. However, until it happens, that is not guaranteed. This seventh option shifts away from trading Ristolainen and looks at trading restricted free agent (RFA) Jake McCabe. This option is less than ideal, but it wouldn’t be a huge shock if it happened.
Nothing changes with the forward group. Wilson and Smith are still fighting with Girgensons for that left wing spot on the fourth line. The defensive depth chart is where this gets interesting. With McCabe, the Sabres are thin on the left side. After trading him, it is much worse. It forces the Sabres to look at their right-handed defenseman and decide who is able to play the left side. Montour has some experience on the left side or at least more than the other options. With that, the team must break up their top pair of Dahlin and Montour. The team would need to run Dahlin and Miller as the top pair, Montour and Ristolainen as the second pair (which we know worked in a small sample), and Scandella and Nelson as the bottom pair. Moving Montour out of his comfort zone is not really improving your team. It is just the best and quick fix for this situation, but not ideal. McCabe is not likely to bring back a significant roster piece, so the value he provides on the Sabres roster at the beginning of the season most likely outweighs anything that you would acquire in return. This option of keeping Ristolainen and trading McCabe seems to be one of the less appealing moves that the Sabres could do. It does not really improve the team, and it takes a top defenseman in Montour and asks him to play in a situation that isn’t going to maximize his abilities.
If you would like to weigh in, follow us and tweet us on Twitter, @afpanalytics.
James Finch is an analyst at AFP Analytics. James graduated from St. John Fisher College in 2019 with a bachelor’s degree in Sport Management with a minor in Economics. His background with sports and economics have brought about an interest in gaining experience and finding his niche within the sport analytics field.
KYLE STICH is the Director of AFP Analytics. In addition, Mr. Stich is a tax specialist and Director of Operations at AFP Consulting LLC, whose clientele include professional athletes performing services on three separate continents. Mr. Stich earned his Master of Science in Sport Management with a Concentration in
NHL 2019 Free Agent Predictions
Forwards
Artemi Panarin
James Prediction:Florida Panthers
Even before Panarin was traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets, there were rumors that only a few destinations were on his long-term radar. New York, Los Angeles, and Florida. Florida will make the splash and do whatever it takes to sign Panarin. There is definitely a need in the top six. Panarin could play the wing with either Aleksander Barkov or Vincent Trocheck and quickly be the best winger either player has played with. The Florida Panthers have the cap space needed for Panarin, with just under $22 million currently. With nobody up for a new deal that will break the bank, and some possible trades that could take place to move players out, they are setting themselves up perfectly to be Artemi Panarin’s next destination.
Kyle Prediction: Florida Panthers
This seems to be the foregone conclusion for a while. For much of the season, I thought he would end up with the Rangers. However, the Panthers’ hiring of his former coach, Joel Quenneville, I’m now willing to accept that the Panthers are his likely destination. I personally think the Panthers might be smart to spend their money elsewhere but the team seems poised to make a big splash and Panarin would be just that. A top six including Huberdeau, Barkov, Hoffman, Trocheck, Dadonov and Panarin would be unstoppable. However, the forward depth at the bottom of the lineup would be questionable. I also wouldn’t love their blue line and think a savvier move would be throwing money at Jake Gardiner and Brett Connolly but that wouldn’t be a splash.
Mitch Marner
James Prediction: Toronto Maple Leafs
There are a lot of rumors about the offer sheet this offseason. I predict that Marner will sign one, but it will be matched by the Maple Leafs, keeping Marner in Toronto. The offer sheet will be a four-year deal for an AAV of $10,500,000, just inside the compensation requirements of two first round picks, one second round, and one third round pick. This offer sheet will be signed with the New York Islanders. The Islanders have Toronto connections with Lou Lamoriello at the helm and may be looking for some retribution for losing John Tavares to Toronto. For the Islanders, if you get Marner, you are happy that Mathew Barzal has another young forward next to him. If not, you hurt the Maple Leafs’ cap situation and cause other problems for them. I don’t believe that the Leafs will let Marner go for that specific offer sheet compensation, so they make the decision to match and deal with the consequences of doing so.
Kyle Prediction: Toronto Maple Leafs
Even though I have Marner staying with the Leafs, I do think things get interesting. I’m not predicting he signs an offer sheet, but I think the rumors will swirl until he gets a contract signed and I definitely won’t rule it out. The Leafs can’t lose him under any circumstances so even if he signs one, I expect them to match. Marner is an elite talent and the Leafs are in a win-now window so four first round draft picks would be near useless to them. If a team is really trying to put the squeeze on them, they should offer Marner a four-year contract to take him directly to free agency with a cap hit approaching $11M; that same team should then turn their attention to Kapenen or Johnsson because a subsequent offer sheet for one of those players would likely allow them to land them. Carolina or the Islanders would be teams I would have my eyes on here.
Brayden Point
James Prediction: Buffalo Sabres
Point should not be in a Tampa Bay Lightning uniform for the 19-20 season. That may seem crazy, but the cap situation that Tampa has set up for themselves is coming back to haunt them. They have roughly $10.6M in cap space this summer, which may be just enough to sign Point and another not so great player. They need to still sign Erne, Paquette, and replace Stralman and Girardi. Stamkos ($8.5M), Palat ($5.3M), Gourde ($5.16M), Johnson ($5M), and Killorn ($4.45) all have full no trade clauses. In theory, they could all deny a trade, so we need to assume that moving one or more may be difficult. The only other player on the roster making significant money without full trade protection is Nikita Kucherov. Kucherov is going nowhere. For now, let’s look at the next offseason. The only cap space they’ll really have will be a cap increase, so let’s say they sign Point to a $9 million deal and spend the remaining $1.6 million on a role player. We’ll project $84 million in cap space for the 20-21 season, an increase from $81.5 million. That would give Tampa $2.5 million in cap space next offseason. They’ll then need to sign Cirelli, Joseph, Sergachev, Cernak, and Vasilevskiy. Sergachev and Vasilevskiy will both command a cap hit higher than $5 million. Now all of a sudden that $9 million that was given to Point could be really useful. With the offensive group as strong as it is, I think it makes the most sense for Point to go instead of a defenseman.
The Buffalo Sabres are a team that could provide the Lightning with both immediate and future value. Rumors have surfaced that the Lightning have interest in Rasmus Ristolainen. The defenseman is under contract for three more seasons at $5.4 million. This is a contract that the Lightning could fit now. Next offseason, they can then decide if they are wanting to consider him a main piece and figure out how to keep him or they can easily deal him after one season to help clear more cap space. Ristolainen does not have a trade clause, so he is a more moveable asset than other players previously mentioned. Along with Ristolainen, the Sabres would need to send along one of their top young centers. This would be either Casey Mittelstadt or Dylan Cozens. With Cozens just being drafted, it would make sense that Mittelstadt would be the player involved in the deal. Add in a first round pick or and probably another decent pick, and you might be able to come to a deal. Another factor in the Sabres favor is they could threaten an offer sheet. While the Lightning could receive four first round picks for Point, those are all future unknown assets that don’t help the team now. Ristolainen and Mittelstadt would both help now and in the future, along with the picks involved in the trade. If an offer sheet is threatened, the trade route may be more beneficial for the Lightning. This trade would leave them with $5.2 million in cap space, enough to resign Erne, Paquette, and replace Stralman and Girardi. With this trade, the Lightning would most likely need to still move two of the forwards with a no-trade clause (Palat, Gourde, Johnson, Killorn) or one of them and Ristolainen in order to make room for new Sergachev and Vasilevskiy deals, among others next season. Getting two players to waive their clauses could be tough, and this is assuming that Point and his big contract are not on the roster. The Sabres would get that second top center that they are looking for, and they have the cap space to sign Point long term. While yes, this is unlikely, it is what I hope the Lightning at least consider. Taking the “we’ll deal with it later” approach and singing Point long term is going to put them in an even worse cap situation next offseason. Worst case scenario, that situation could see them lose Sergachev and Vasilevskiy. I suggest Tampa takes my advice and does not let that happen.
Kyle Prediction: Tampa Bay Lightning
I don’t think this is a sure thing because the team is going to have to face the reality of moving some talent in the next year or two because they just have too many incredible players. I am working off the assumption that Point will sign a long-term, big money deal. If that’s true, fitting Point in their salary cap this season isn’t overly complicated. Next offseason is where things will likely get interesting and not keeping Point this year should make next offseason much more manageable. Eventually, Tampa is going to have to make a tough decision. Do they make it this season or the next? I don’t see how the best team in the modern NHL can not take another run at it. If they fail to win the Cup next season, they are going to have to take a long look at their roster anyways. I don’t love the idea of kicking the can down the road, but this team is close and I would give them one more shot at it.
Matt Duchene
James Prediction: Nashville Predators
Duchene has experienced losing for a majority of his career and finally made it onto a winning team in the Columbus Blue Jackets. They made their run in the playoffs and may end up losing multiple key pieces on their team. With that, Duchene looks elsewhere and signs with the Nashville Predators. Both sides are rumored to have an admiration for one another. The Predators traded PK Subban for a subpar return to move salary and it is highly expected that they make a run at Duchene to improve their forward group. With just over $13 million in cap space, the Predators will get this deal done.
Kyle Prediction: New York Rangers
The Rangers have been patient in their retool the last couple seasons and have added some quality young pieces in the last couple and will add another with the second overall pick this year. Everyone is expecting the Devils to take Jack Hughes and leave Kaapo Kakko to the Rangers. As long as this happens, the Rangers could definitely use a center to pair with Mika Zibanejad to have a really nice 1-2 punch down the middle. The Rangers have the cap space this year to make a splash or two and have plenty of contracts, particularly at forward, coming off the books next year, where they can certainly justify shelling out a big contract for a high-end player.
Duchene has been connected to Nashville and it seems like he is open to remaining in Columbus as well. I really think if Nashville desperately wanted him, he would’ve been there already. They would need to move PK Subban or Kyle Turris to fit Duchene in. If either of those players move between now and the start of free agency, I would watch out for Nashville as well. Columbus is going to need to do all they can to keep Duchene but I think will be hard pressed to do so if he listens to other teams. Duchene has never had the opportunity to play in a big market so why not go to the biggest in the world?
Joe Pavelski
James Prediction: Dallas Stars
Joe Pavelski and the San Jose Sharks have been searching together for a Stanley Cup for 13 seasons. It hasn’t happened, and this past season may have been one of the best chances (on paper) for the team and Pavelski to reach that goal. They’re definteily close to a cup, but with their cap problems, the Sharks have to move on from Pavelski. Pavelski was very productive this past season, scoring 38 goals and totaling 64 points. Along with his stellar performance, he provides leadership. Dallas has about $10.2 million in cap space, which will be enough to sign Pavelski. They are in need of a second line center behind Tyler Seguin. After a pretty decent season, they are in win now mode. A deal gets done between these two parties.
Kyle Prediction: Tampa Bay Lightning
It seems like this is a three-team race, Dallas, Tampa, and San Jose. I don’t think the door should be completely shut on the Sharks but they are going to have to make a sacrifice and it looks like Pavelski may be the player they let go. It probably would be the smart decision but definitely not an easy one. Pavelski has to be focused on contending teams as his ultimate goal has to be to win a Cup. Dallas probably needs him more but if Tampa can make room for him, it should be a no-brainer. Playing in a state with no income taxes should allow them to sign him to a contract whose gross value is below his market value. Tampa should be the Cup favorites again this year so Pavelski would be going to the team that should give him the best spot to win.
Andres Lee
James Prediction: New York Islanders
Anders Lee is the captain of the Islanders team, and I doubt they are looking to find a new one once again after losing John Tavares to Toronto. Lee is a productive player who is good for 50 points each season. As a key piece of the team both on the ice and in the locker room, it makes too much sense for both the team and the player to work out a deal. It will be north of Brock Nelson’s 6 year, $6 million AAV, but that shouldn’t deter the team from locking Lee up. A goal scoring threat and a team leader, it may be best for both sides to continue with what they’re both comfortable with.
Kyle Prediction: New York Islanders
I just can’t see how the Islanders could possibly let their captain walk as a free agent two years in a row, especially considering the season they are coming off of. The team has plenty of cap space to make the deal happen. The concern would be committing dollars and term to a power forward approaching 30. If the Islanders can make a big splash (Marner? Panerin?), maybe their fans would be forgiving of losing Lee. Maybe Lee looks to go home to Minnesota but there are no indications that he is looking to leave New York. Colorado and Chicago are also teams to keep an eye on.
Gustav Nyquist
James Prediction: Colorado Avalanche
The Colorado Avalanche were a pretty exciting team to watch this season. Well, at least their top line was. After that, the team lacked any punch on offense. Secondary scoring will be a priority for the Avalanche. With multiple center prospects who are looking at NHL time like Kerfoot, Jost, and Compher, bringing in a veteran winger who can score goals will do wonders for their development. That is where Gustav Nyquist comes in. Over 81 games with the Detroit Red Wings and San Jose Sharks, Nyquist scored 22 goals and 38 assists for 60 points. He also did well during the playoffs, with a goal and ten assists in 20 games. The Avalanche have $37 million in cap space this offseason, the most of any team. This type of move is a no brainer. They have the ability to be the highest bidder and should do what it takes to get Nyquist. It will help their offense grow moving forward.
Kyle Prediction: Columbus Blue Jackets
If my prediction of Duchene leaving Columbus is correct, the Blue Jackets are going to have to dip into the free agent market and add some firepower up front. They aren’t going to be able to add via trade as they are void of quality assets so a replacement for Panerin and Duchene will have to come via free agency. I think Nyquist is the biggest name they will have a chance at landing and it doesn’t seem like Nyquist necessarily has his sights set anywhere. If Columbus has the best offer, which they likely will, I think it’s very plausible he signs there.
Ryan Dzingel
James Prediction: Minnesota Wild
Ryan Dzingel had quite the year with the Ottawa Senators, scoring 22 goals and 22 assists in 57 games. After being traded to Columbus, he scored 4 goals and 8 assists in 21 games. As a player who can play both center and the wing, he could be very valuable to some teams. He most likely slides in on the second or third line of a team. For reasons unknown, the Minnesota Wild seem likely to move Jason Zucker. He will need to be replaced and the Wild should have enough cap space to bring in a player like Dzingel even if salary comes back in the Zucker trade. Bringing in Dzingel should help the Wild stay relevant and push for the playoffs, but more will need to happen for the team to get back on track after this past season. Dzingel may be the first step, especially if Zucker is traded.
Kyle Prediction: Buffalo Sabres
This fit makes a lot of sense to me. The Sabres need a second-line center for the short-term. The Sabres probably should’ve inquired on Carl Soderberg and should look to capitalize if another team is looking to shed a veteran’s cap hit. Buffalo shouldn’t have a salary cap issue this year nor next. Since that route doesn’t seem likely, Dzingel would be the best alternative. I don’t see Dzingel as a long-term center option but he could prove to be an adequate stopgap while some of the younger Sabre centers develop. With the Sabres drafting another young center, Dylan Cozens, with the 7thoverall pick in the 2019 draft and already having Casey Mittelstadt, the team better have hit on at least one of the two players. One of the two has to be penciled into the second-line center role in two to three seasons so committing high dollar and long term to anyone who is older will probably be a mistake. If they can swing a trade for a young, proven center, that’d be fine but I highly doubt that happens. Dzingel likely won’t command top dollar or term and also has flexibility to play the wing.
Phil Kessel
James Prediction: Pittsburgh Penguins
I think it would be ideal for the Penguins to find a suitor for Phil Kessel. He is only getting older and each year seems like he is possibly on the outs. His high cap hit may deter some teams as he ages, and many teams with a lot of cap space don’t seem like realistic fits. That ultimately keeps him in Pittsburgh. While it isn’t the best outcome, you still have a (most likely) 30 goal scorer for at least another season. It isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
Kyle Prediction: Arizona Coyotes
This fit seems to make way too much sense. Arizona needs scoring and it seems like one of the few destinations Kessel would be open to going to. Yes, Rutherford has said he is perfectly fine keeping Kessel, but that is exactly what you say when one team knows they hold all the leverage in the negotiations. Rutherford needs Arizona to show a little urgency to make this deal happen. I think Arizona is smart enough to realize they can add a productive player for a discount. There has been too much smoke around Kessel to have Pittsburgh keep him so I have predicting he ends up in the most likely trade destination.
Jason Zucker
James Prediction: Boston Bruins
The Boston Bruins, coming off a great season where they just missed another Stanley Cup, are most likely going to have an empty spot on the second line wing next to David Krejci. One thing they could look to do is move a player from their center depth and add Jason Zucker. It is clear that Zucker is on his way out of Minnesota. From the Zucker/Kessel rumors, it is also clear that Minnesota is looking for another good forward in return. In return for Zucker, the Wild would receive RFA forward Danton Heinen and a 2019 3rdround pick. While Heinen might not become quite the goal scorer that Zucker can be, he is a young playmaker who has looked good in both the offensive and defensive end. When given the ice time, he should produce 40 to 50 points consistently. Boston has a lot of options at center. With this trade, they can still role with Bergeron, Krejci, Coyle, and Kuraly down the middle. They also have center prospects Trent Frederic and Jack Studnicka on the way. With $14 million in cap space, Boston can afford to add Zucker’s $5.5 million. Minnesota would have about $27 million without Zucker, easily allowing them to extend Heinen somewhere in the $3.5 million to $5 million range. This type of deal gets Boston a top six winger and Minnesota a young developing winger and a pick that could allow them to be more open to other trades during the draft. This deal works for both teams, on the ice and cap wise.
Kyle Prediction: Minnesota Wild
I think Jason Zucker still wants to stay in Minnesota despite all the trade rumors swirling. The team has made enough bad trades of their scoring forwards that maybe they will learn their lesson and keep Zucker, who has been arguably their most important forward the past couple years. They have had two trades fall through and when I look around the league, I don’t see enough teams having the cap space, assets, and a place Minnesota would be willing to send Zucker. The team is also under a time crunch with Zucker having a no-trade clause kicking in on July first that will further limit Minnesota. Unless the Wild are close on a deal, they likely would be rushing into something, which would be a very bad idea and how they end up with Viktor Rask again.
Defensemen
Jake Gardiner
James Prediction: St. Louis Blues
The Blues are in a great spot to add some salary if they choose to do so. One spot that could be bolstered is their blueline. The top four currently consists of Pietrangelo, Parayko, Dunn, and Bouwmeester. Ideally, Bouwmeester would take on more of a bottom pair role along with defensemen like Joel Edmundson (RFA) or Robert Bortuzzo. That leaves an open spot in the top four. Dunn and Pietrangelo played the most together and it went very well for them both. That would leave Jake Gardiner slotting in next to Colton Parayko. Both of these pairings would be very capable of playing minutes against other teams’ top lines. Cap wise, the Blues have about $18.7 million projected to spend. They don’t have many free agents who will break the bank. Binnington, Sundqvist, Maroon, and Edmundson are the somewhat main pieces that may need to be resigned. With Gardiner projecting to come in around $7 million a year, they’d still have just under $12 million to resign those pieces. They may also look to move a contract like Jake Allen ($4.35). Alexander Steen would be good to move, but with a not so good year and a full no trade clause, it may be tough to do so. Either way, the Blues have the ability to add to their roster, and further strengthening the defensive group with Gardiner will only increase the chances they go far once again in the playoffs next season.
Kyle Prediction: Detroit Red Wings
Steve Yzerman has to make some major changes to his team’s roster because it is nowhere near good enough. They have some nice forwards to build around but their defense is dreadful. They also only have one veteran defensemen, Danny DeKeyser, under contract past this upcoming season. If the team could add Gardiner, he would instantly become their best defenseman and could provide some stability at the position for years to come. The team has some promising prospects in the pipeline but having a veteran under contract as a complement wouldn’t be ideal. Gardiner is probably going to be overpaid but he is clearly the best defensemen available on the open market and a much better option than Tyler Myers. Detroit isn’t really in a position to move young assets or draft picks to acquire a defenseman so they might be wise to pay a little more in the free agent market to get a long-term option that is a known commodity.
Tyler Myers
James Prediction: Vancouver Canucks
With a thin free agent market for defenseman, chances are whoever gets Tyler Myers will overpay for him. The Canucks seem like a team that might just agree to do that. They are certainly in need of some help on defense, especially after not qualifying Ben Hutton. With about $15.5 million in cap space, they certainly have the ability to sign Myers. It has been rumored that they could be a fit for him. These two parties will find a deal.
Kyle Prediction: Vancouver Canucks
This pairing seems bound to happen. Vancouver could certainly use another defender. Jake Gardiner would be the FAR smarter signing. However, this is the Vancouver Canucks so they will not only sign the inferior player, they will probably pay him more as well. If reports that are coming out are correct, this signing will easily be in the top five for instantly regrettable moves on July 1st. I think a return to Winnipeg could be a possibility as well but Vancouver is probably going to have the best offer on the table and there is no reason for Myers not to take that.
Rasmus Ristolainen
James Prediction: Tampa Bay Lightning
I have Ristolainen in my scenario for Brayden Point. Even if it is a trade that doesn’t include Point, I think Tampa may try to make this work. They have been rumored to be in on Ristolainen dating back to the deadline. They have interest in trying to improve their defensive corps. They may be able to get a smaller deal done than the Point deal I have laid out, possibly a deal involving Tyler Johnson or Alex Killorn. Either way, I think Ristolainen ends up in Tampa Bay.
Kyle Prediction: Edmonton Oilers
There seems to be too much smoke around Ristolainen to predict he stays in Buffalo. Add in Buffalo’s acquisition of Colin Miller and the writing seems to be on the wall. The one potential wrinkle is Zach Bogosian’s health. If the Sabres don’t think Bosogian will play a game this season, or at least miss a good portion of the season, the team might hold on to Ristolainen so they don’t find themselves in a pinch on the right-side. However, there are plenty of teams in need of defensemen and a thin UFA class should lead to plenty of interest in Ristolainen. As a new GM in Edmonton, Ken Holland will certainly be looking to put his stamp on the roster. I wonder if Holland would be willing to swing big and move Jesse Puljijarvi and one of Darnell Nurse or Oscar Klefbom for Ristolainen and possibly another asset from Buffalo. In any deal with Edmonton, the Sabres should look to get Puljijarvi included. Many of their prospects are European born so Puljijarvi should be in a better situation to succeed. If one of Klefbom or Nurse came back, that would be an absolute coup for Buffalo. It shouldn’t happen but I don’t think it’s entirely out of question.
Nikita Zaitsev
James Prediction: Toronto Maple Leafs
Zaitsev has apparently asked for a trade out of Toronto. The Leafs have said they will try to accommodate him, but not at the expense of their team. His contract is not the greatest for the value that he provides. Because of that, it will make it hard for Toronto to move him without taking salary back. That would defeat the purpose of moving him especially because they need more NHL defenseman, not less. The Leafs end up keeping Zaitsev.
Kyle Prediction: Ottawa Senators
As I was finishing this piece it has been reported by Elliotte Friedman that Zaitsev to Ottawa was likely. James wrote his before the news. If Ottawa can get some additional assets for taking on the contract, this trade makes a lot of sense. If Cody Ceci goes back, that also would be a win for Ottawa.
Kevin Shattenkirk
James Prediction: New York Rangers
Shattenkirk is making $6,650,000 for the next two seasons. There have been rumors of a trade, but based on his recent play, it’d be tough to see a team wanting to take Shattenkirk without sending a so-so contract back to the Rangers. New York just traded for Jacob Trouba and that will allow Shattenkirk to play a slightly smaller role. Hopefully that helps, because I don’t think it makes too much sense to move him at this point because of the type of trade that would need to be done.
Kyle Prediction: Tampa Bay Lightning
Tampa Bay needs a right shot defenseman and Shattenkirk could be a nice fit with the Lightning provided the Rangers are willing to retain some salary. If the Lightning could get one of Palat, Gourde, Johnson, or Killorn to waiver their no-trade, New York could get a nice return as they would certainly have the salary cap space to make this move work. If they want to opt for a prospect, they could probably leverage a quality one if they are willing to retain half Shattenkirk’s salary.
Carolina Defense
James Pick: Brett Pesce to Toronto
Carolina is in need of improving their forward group. They have arguably the best defensive corps in the NHL. This deal will involve Brett Pesce going to Toronto and William Nylander going to Carolina. Toronto will receive a really good defenseman who is making $4,025,000 for the next five seasons, while Carolina will receive a top six forward who can instantly be put on Aho’s wing or make the second line in Carolina stronger for the next five seasons. This also clears some cap space for Toronto, which should really help spark their interest in making this happen.
Kyle Pick: Brett Pesce to Winnipeg
I have been all over this trade since January. I think a swap of Pesce for Nikolaj Ehlers would make a lot of sense for both teams. Winnipeg would get their RHD with a cost-controlled contract that they will desperately need this offseason with the departure of Trouba and likely departure of Myers, while Carolina would get someone who can add some offensive bunch. The trade of Calvin de Haan makes another trade of a defender less likely, but using another one of their defenders is likely the best option to acquire someone cost controlled without breaking the bank.
Goalies
Sergei Bobrovsky
James Pick: Florida Panthers
I believe that Bobrovsky will follow Panarin to Florida. The Panthers need a starting goalie and have been rumored to have some big plans for this offseason. On top of that, Bobrovsky has basically followed Panarin around on free agent visits, leading many to believe that the two players will be a package deal. Florida has just under $24 million in cap space, which is enough for both Panarin and Bob. Not only does the friendship point to this happening, but there is a natural fit with the team as well.
Kyle Pick: Florida Panthers
This seems inevitable but I think this will be a move Florida ends up in a few years. Florida coaxed Roberto Luongo into retirement and seemed poised to move on from James Reimer as well. All of this doesn’t happen unless the Panthers are confident in landing Bobrovsky. There are savvier moves that the Panthers could make but they’re going for the tidal wave so here comes Bobrovsky.
Robin Lehner
James Pick: New York Islanders
I think that the Islanders will have their nose in just about everything this summer. Even looking at Panarin and Bobrovsky is an option for them. However, Lehner seems very interested in resigning. If they are able to get Lehner on a discount, it may be very beneficial to pull the trigger on this deal. Lehner really found his game with the Islanders and looked like a clear number one goalie. Ultimately, the two sides find common ground to keep a strong relationship between player and team intact.
Kyle Pick: Carolina Hurricanes
The Hurricanes made a very interesting trade in moving Calvin de Haan, which cleared $4.55M in cap space. Lehner will likely require more than that but that cap space will go a long way. I don’t think a return to New York should be ruled out but the Islanders might not want to pay Lehner what he thinks he deserves. I think there is also a question of whether Lehner was a product of the system and whether or not the team could plug someone else in at a cheaper price. The Islanders might be wise to gamble on letting Lehner go while Carolina might want to take the gamble on Lehner. The Hurricanes were the runner-up in the East and their weakest link was definitely their goaltending. If Lehner works out, Carolina could be a serious threat in the East next season.
Feature Image via NBC Sports.
KYLE STICH is the Director of AFP Analytics. In addition, Mr. Stich is a tax specialist and Director of Operations at AFP Consulting LLC, whose clientele include professional athletes performing services on three separate continents. Mr. Stich earned his Master of Science in Sport Management with a Concentration in
James Finch is an analyst at AFP Analytics. James graduated from St. John Fisher College in 2019 with a bachelor’s degree in Sport Management with a minor in Economics. His background with sports and economics have brought about an interest in gaining experience and finding his niche within the
Is Signing Jeff Skinner a Wise Financial Move for the Buffalo Sabres?
The talk of Buffalo, NY for the past month plus has been what is going to happen with Jeff Skinner. He was the most prolific goal scorer that the city has seen since Thomas Vanek in his prime. However, the overall team performance was poor once again and fans have been left wondering if the team should pay Skinner a significant amount of money. Our contract projection has Skinner signing a deal worth around $60M over seven years. However, if the Sabres want to prevent Skinner from listening to other teams, they likely will have to pay between $70M and $72M over eight years.
There are some Sabre fans who wonder if this would be a wise investment. Some of this fear is over ghosts of contracts past, while others worry about being committed to a player into his mid-thirties who has had moments of inconsistency throughout his career. It is also fair to wonder if the team could plug any player next to Jack Eichel and have them produce near the level of Skinner at a significantly cheaper cost. My goal in this post is to dive into the financial impact of a potential Skinner contract and see if the team can justify giving Skinner a $72M contract.
Assessing Monetary Worth to a Team
Hockey contracts are negotiated and signed almost exclusively based on a player’s past performance. This is the reason many teams end up with “poison contracts” on their payroll. When players earn their unrestricted free agency (UFA), they are often in their late twenties, which is often times around their peak performance. Once they sign their UFA contract, they are usually on the decline of their career. This does not mean they will automatically be poor players the instance they sign, but they will probably have a gradual decline in performance from season to season. Jeff Skinner is unique as he is set to become an UFA younger than many other players because he started playing in the NHL at age 18. Therefore, Skinner may not start his decline for another year or two.
Regardless of when Skinner starts to decline, the Sabres (or any other team) should be looking to pay him what he is worth to them in future years. My goal is to do my best to determine what that value is. To do so, I will borrow a concept that was first introduced in baseball by Vince Gennaro in his book Diamond Dollars. This concept is the use of a team’s win-curve to project the monetary value Skinner will provide in the years he is under contract. Before we get to Skinner, we need to understand the concept of the win curve and how I went about constructing one for the Sabres.
A win-curve is intended to measure how responsive fans are to additional wins and overall on-ice success. Once we establish that, we can then take the fans’ responsiveness and translate it to a monetary amount. We need to look no further than this year’s Carolina Hurricanes as evidence that winning can provide a monetary boost in the NHL. However, the Sabres are not the Hurricanes. No one would blame Sabre fans if they chose to spend their hard-earned dollars elsewhere. Through the ups and downs, the team has enjoyed pretty consistent support, which makes it more difficult to conclude that additional wins will dramatically impact the team’s attendance. However, there is a definitely a positive relationship between the Sabres’ wins and attendance. Let’s take a look.

I should make a few notes of how I constructed the above win curve. First, I collected wins and attendance numbers from the 2000-2001 season to the 2018-2019 season. I excluded the lockout shortened 2012 season as well as the 2013-2014 and 2014-2015 seasons where the Sabres were fielding a team that was not designed to win. However, fans were more engaged than ever because they were hoping the losing would result in Connor McDavid or Jack Eichel. Those two seasons do not represent the fans’ responsiveness to winning. Finally, the Sabres’ arena capacity changed during my sample. To account for this, I translated all attendance numbers into the current arena capacity. I then plotted the data and fit a linear regression where the x-variable is wins and the y-variable is attendance.
It is too early to know what the Sabres’ opening lineup will look like for the 2019 season. I am going to make an assumption and say the Sabres’ without Skinner will be around a 35-win team. Using our win-curve formula displayed on the graph above, I am going to assume a 35-win season would see the team draw around 734,719 fans. The multi-million-dollar questions is how much revenue would be expected from this number of fans.
Without access to the team’s private financial numbers (if anyone wants to slide into my dms, they’re open 😉), I will do my best to estimate revenue. I have used the Sabres’ fan cost index to attempt to calculate the team’s revenue directly related to attendance. In simple terms, the fan cost index looks at the cost of a family of four to attend a game. This includes tickets as well as food, drinks, merchandise, and parking. Unfortunately, the most recent season I could find was the 2014 season, which had a cost of $291 for a family of four. I divided this number by four to get the average cost for one person. I then employed an inflation rate of 10% for each season. This means I estimated the revenue from one person attending a Sabres’ game to be $107. Based on the team’s attendance, I estimated the Sabres would have made $78,206,094 from attendance in 2018. In the table below, I estimate approximately how much additional revenue the Sabres may generate with an additional win in the next eight seasons. This does not take into account “corporate money,” which could include sponsorships and television advertising since Pegula Sports and Entertainment runs their own broadcast network.

The big money really comes from the sponsorships and advertising, which are excluded from the table above. As I’ve previously stated, the Sabres have benefited from tremendous fan loyalty so there is only so much they can add in attendance and subsequent revenue. We now need to turn our attention to the impact of Jeff Skinner on the team’s wins as well as the impact of winning on sponsorships and advertising.
The Impact of Jeff Skinner
There have been many attempts at creating models that capture how many wins a player is responsible for in hockey. One such model is from @EvolvingWild. Their calculations have Jeff Skinner as a player who provided three additional wins in the 2018-2019 season. All of their work is housed on their website, https://evolving-hockey.com/. Although I respect the work they have done in this regard, I think using just three wins as Skinner’s impact is a little low. Let’s look at it this way. Skinner himself provides three wins. Additionally, his presence in the lineup allows other players to play different roles as well.
Let’s assume Skinner plays on the top line with Eichel. If Skinner were not there, the Sabres would have to play Conor Sheary there instead. Now Conor Sheary is not available to play on the second-line so Evan Rodrigues would need to play that role, instead of centering the third-line. Now the Sabres have to use Johan Larsson or Vladimir Sobotka as their third-line and fourth line centers instead of only having one of them in the lineup and the other off the roster. How many wins is this impact worth? I do not have a good answer so I estimated the impact to be another three wins. Therefore, I think Skinner’s presence in the Sabres’ lineup helped the Sabres earn approximately six additional wins. I want to be clear, this estimate is not based in any sort of math or statistics. Below I have provided a table showing what my estimates are for the Sabres’ win totals for the next eight seasons, with and without Skinner. Again, these estimates are not based on any sort of model.

I then took these numbers and translated them into a monetary amount, using the revenue from additional win table. The results of this exercise can be found in the table below.

At this point, it looks like signing Skinner would not be a wise financial move for the team. However, we still haven’t accounted for the additional sponsorship and advertising revenue the additional wins could generate for the team. Below are what I think could be the revenue generated from sponsorship and advertising for an additional win for the next eight seasons.

Let’s now take a look at the updated difference when taking the sponsorship and advertising revenue into account.

My revenue projections do not seem to justify paying Skinner what he is likely to sign for. Since my revenue and win projections, are based in some fact but are ultimately estimates, they should be taken with a grain of salt. I assumed there would be no impact on sponsorship and advertising revenue by having Skinner be a player that has a negative impact in his final season.
One factor that could come into play that my calculations do not capture is if the Sabres’ fans finally say enough losing and dysfunction is enough and stop showing the same level of loyalty. If Jeff Skinner walks and the team fails to make any other major additions, things certainly could hit that level. Now we are not just discussing the additional revenue Skinner’s performance and presence will likely provide, but also a loss of revenue without Skinner. Taking this into account, could make the revenue difference close to what Skinner could be paid. Below I have assumed the Sabres lose half of what they would make if they were to retain Skinner in the next three seasons. That would also have a compounding effect as they likely wouldn’t be able to start inflating their revenues until 2023. Below I show two tables. The first is how revenues could be impacted in this situation, the second shows the difference with and without Skinner.


Now the numbers start to tip towards the side of signing Skinner being a financially wise move. To wrap this section up, I will look at the revenue and expense of Skinner’s contract in net present value (5% discount rate), to assess whether this contract would be a worthy investment. Although it would be extremely unlikely, I assumed Skinner receives his $72M in equal payments of $9M a season. I am also working off the assumption that this happens in a vacuum. The Sabres would likely spend some or all of that money on other pieces. They would obviously provide some value but it is impossible to predict what level of impact they could have.

Based off of my assessment, I do not see the financial value of signing Skinner being there. My assessment should not be taken as the end all, be all but there should definitely be some internal discussions in Buffalo. From a hockey standpoint, the team needs to retain Skinner so the question is how do they make it work?
How do the Sabres’ Justify Signing Skinner
I see two ways the team can justify signing Skinner even if his contract results a financial deficit. First, the team can supplement the roster with underpaid talent. The easiest way to accomplish this is with players on their Entry-Level Contracts (ELCs). However, value can also be found with restricted free agents and even UFAs if done properly. Going into next season, the Sabres will have Dahlin, Reinhart, Mittelstadt, and Montour who should fall into this category along with any other prospects that play significant minutes. Over the life of Skinner’s contract, it will be critical for the Sabres to wisely manage their young assets as well as draft and develop well as many of the afore mentioned players will be in line for significant raises soon.
The second way the Sabres’ justify this financial commitment is by going through the exact exercise I have with their internal data. Predicting future win totals is difficult, regardless of the level of data you have access to. Predicting attendance and revenue is much less difficult to do internally. The Sabres or any team looking to make a big free agent signing should be going through the exact process I have. Having a salary cap and revenue sharing structure makes the NHL different from MLB but not drastically different where teams should not be employing many of the same valuation methods. The amount of data available to teams has grown exponentially and will hopefully take a massive step forward next season with the addition of tracking data. The time is now for teams to transition from paying players based on past performance to paying based on the future value they will provide and using data to support those contracts.
Image via BuffaloNews.
KYLE STICH is the Director of AFP Analytics. In addition, Mr. Stich is a tax specialist and Director of Operations at AFP Consulting LLC, whose clientele include professional athletes performing services on three separate continents. Mr. Stich earned his Master of Science in Sport Management with a Concentration in Sport Analytics from Columbia University in 2017. He earned his undergraduate degrees in Accounting and Sport Management from St. John Fisher College in 2015, where he has served as an adjunct professor teaching Sport Finance and Baseball Analytics.