Kin
New member
mr grieves said:I looked at Hockey-Reference for defensemen managing positive CorsiRel and >50% CF% before turning 21 (its advanced stats go back to 2007-8). There are 27 such players. 17 were early picks (1st-15th), 10 were later picks. Chances are, obviously, better that you get a young, high value contributor with a high pick -- but there are young, high value contributors drafted in the late first and second.
Since the chances of the Leafs drafting very high are, I'd say, very low, the realistic question is how do they maximize their chances of getting a player like Subban, Letang, Maata, Severson, Hamonic, Carlson, Edler, Slavin, Faulk, or Gardiner? (and the premise is: if you add one of those, in his D+2 year, to Gardiner, Rielly, Zaitsev [on a team with a forward core of Matthews, Nylander, Marner and Kadri] do you have legitimate top-4? I'm inclined to think so, but mileages may vary...)
See, there's a slight problem with your premise. I'm assuming that list of 10 defensemen are the 10 who posted the 50%+ Corsi and the positive Corsi Rel before turning 21.
Problem is PK Subban wasn't in the NHL in his Draft+2 year. In his Draft+3 year, which is the only time he spent in the NHL prior to being 21, he played the grand total of 2 regular season games. Like I said before. It was not until his Draft+4 year where he had a solid rookie season.
Likewise, Jake Gardiner did not have positive numbers in those categories before he was 21. He was not in the league before he was 21. He also had his rookie season in his draft+4 season. So these guys are drafted and then full season, full season, full season and then they're NHL players. That means that anyone drafted now, in this year's draft, would not be making that solid contribution until the 2020-2021 season. Here are some other guys who don't seem to meet the criteria you set out:
Alex Edler(drafted 2004, rookie season 07-08)
Kris Letang(Drafted 2005, doesn't meet criteria until 08-09)
Justin Faulk(drafted 2010, doesn't meet criteria until 13-14)
Travis Hamonic(As far as I can tell has never met criteria)
Jaccob Slavin(Didn't debut in NHL until 21 and doesn't seem to have met criteria)
So it's not 10 guys. It's 3. Passing this very, very low bar you've set for high value contributor. Damon Severson with a smoking 50.7CF% over 53 games for the Devil included. The only guys to do it for 60+ games are Carlson and Maatta, both being first round picks. So the evidence that you can get a guy like that outside of the first round is very, very sketchy.
mr grieves said:That's true. But did LA draft forwards who've had the D+1, D+2, and D+3 that Matthews, Marner, and Nylander have had? Did Florida?
And do we have a better supporting cast than Doughty had in Jack Johnson, Randy Jones, Sean O?Donnell, Rob Scuderi, and Matt Greene? If so, do the Leafs really need a Drew Doughty?
I guess it depends on whether or not you see the pinnacle of hockey achievement as being the 2009-2010 LA Kings or last year's Florida Panthers.
I mean, if you'd like an example of a team with super-talented high-drafted forwards who tried to win the Stanley Cup with a pretty good cobbled together defense they exist and they rhyme with Moshington Mapitals.
Even with some pretty good forwards the Kings still needed Doughty, the Penguins needed Letang, the Blackhawks needed Keith and so on.
mr grieves said:Well, this is where the forwards they have, having the D+1s, D+2s, and D+3s that they're having, comes in. The "least bad option" is only a sensible path because they seem to have gotten very lucky choosing all forwards with their high picks. What's "gone wrong" in their chances of drafting a high-pick defenseman is what's gone right in their selection of forwards. 3 rookies are on 50+ point paces, which, as far as I can tell, hasn't ever happened before.
What "went wrong" isn't that Matthews, Marner and Nylander are good, it's that the team never really tore down the shell of the old team and, in some cases(like trading for Andersen) put an immediate competitiveness ahead of potentially drafting some of those late 1st/early 2nd defensive prospects who could be on their way to helping right now as well as steering them towards another high draft pick this year.
Which is where we find the answer to your question. If next year's Leafs had Nylander and Marner and Matthews but didn't have JVR or Kadri or Gardiner...then there's actually a pretty good chance they could draft fairly high in next year's draft. If they used those guys to add other first round picks then they could easily have multiple picks in the top 15.
I'm sure taking a step backwards like that wouldn't be popular with people who are impatient for playoff appearances but at some point you have to ask if this team is ever going to go about things the right way. Crossing your fingers that the next Damon Severson is all the team needs for a championship defense is not the answer.