Thursday, 3 April 2014

More Puck Head Thoughts on the Toronto Maple Leafs - Part II

Continuing my blog yesterday about all the puck head thoughts traveling the interwebs.  I read an interesting article about David Clarkson's contract by David Mirtle of the Globe and Mail, he makes the argument that it is buy-out proof.  T

So here are the Last Two Major Topics:


1) Fire the Coach.  Well as the expression goes, "you can fire the coach, but you can't fire the whole team."  Carlyle has had success with Leafs as the played well in the prior season and he has a cup ring with Anaheim along with several winning seasons.  I don't think he has the horses to have the success with the Leafs as the game he and all coaches want to play depends on having strength at center. Bozak 26 games missed in November and December did not help in this regard nor did Bolland missing 60 games.  The season is near over and I wouldn't fire him until at least after the exit interviews and hear what the players have to say.  The best teams don't go through coaches every couple of seasons as they have the talent that a coach can work with.

A good criticism in Carlyle failure to use a 4th energy/checking line that can play 7 to 9 minutes a night. Plenty of games the leafs had two fighters ready to play with Colton Orr and Frazer McClaren and they lack the talent to play more a few minutes a games.  The league continues to move away from fighting and per HockeyFights.com, fights recently peaked in 2008-2009 season at 0.60 fights per games and has steadily declined to 0.39 having a fight.  Maple Leafs lead the league with 46 fights as compared and perennial play-off contenders Red Wings have the least with 7. It would make more sense to get young Leafs more opportunity to develop in the NHL than let the goons skate.  Besides you need those young players to fill in for the inevitable injuries.  I think Carlyle has shown poor judgment in this regard.

Carlyle's recent criticism of goalie James Reimer in the media or any young player for the matter, probably does not help the situation. Hurting the player's confidence and adding fuel to the Toronto media is senseless.  Further, publicly criticizing a player may hinder his trade value and it will not appeal to pending free agents. Although, the best way to attract good players is to be a winning team.

Are there better coaches currently out there?  The most prominent NHL coaches that are currently not working are Peter Laviolette, Ron Wilson, Guy Boucher or Brent Sutter.  Laviolette is the only one of these Coaches with a Stanley Cup win (2004-2005 Carolina Hurricanes) and Ron Wilson had his chance in Toronto.  So pickings are slim, unless they want to gamble on hiring an assistant coach or AHL coach.  Firing Carlyle without a decent replacement would probably not help the Leafs current state of mediocrity. I think the Leafs should give him another season and Nonis shoulld put him on a leash for playing goons.  It could be worse... have you seen Tortorella this season.

5) Fire Nonis.  Well he just got the job in full in January 2013, but he's been involved in the decision making process since Brian Burke hired him in December of 2008, he has only made one major mistake since taking charge.  After this season I consider signing David Clarkson for $5.25 for seven seasons a mistake.  If he signed him for $4M I think that would have been reasonable.  The Phaneuf and Kessel extension for $7M and $8M respectively seems too much, but with the cap increasing and the minutes they log it is in that zone of reasonableness of other high caliber players.  I bet the free agent market for Vanek, Moulson, Stastny and Miller will all be for contracts that are $6M plus, as players agents will want to cash in on the expected $7 million increase to the new estimated $71 million salary cap. Kessel is in the top 5 of right wingers in the NHL and is on pace for 40 goals. Phaneuf's $7M would look a lot smarter if he had a more talented defensive partner than Gunnarson and better centers to be the third man back.

Also, on the other side Nonis signed for Bozak for $4.2 million a year for 5 years, which is probably a $1M less than he would earn on the free agent market.  Bernier for $2.9 million a year for 2 years, which is good deal. He also signed Kadri for $2.9 million a year for two years; resisting the the long-term big deal for a player still developing.  All three of these deals are smart.  Further giving Mason Raymond and Paul Ranger $1 million, 1 year deals were smart gambles.  Raymond earned his $1 million at the NHL level.

Nonis not resigning LW Clark MacArthur has been criticized and he has had a successful season with the Ottawa Senators.  Leafs did not have the cap room from the Clarkson signing and Bolland trade.  He'd also be third on the depth chart (after Lupul and van Riemsdyk) on the left hand side and would not have had a decent center to play with.  This puck head argument is weak and I don't consider it a mistake.

Further he has proven to be shrewd in trades and he did not sell the farm or any 1st round picks at the most recent trade deadline.  His trade for Bernier proved smart from the LA Kings and the trade for Bolland was a good idea.  Bolland's injury was a freak occurrence and he was wearing the appropriate kevlar socks.  The trade of John Michael-Liles for Tim Gleason was a good deal as the Leafs got a roster player for a player that was playing for the Marlies.  When the Leafs were in dire need of a center he got Peter Holland from the Anaheim ducks, who is serviceable center that can play 4th line player and could grow into 3rd line player. He is only 23 years old.

The real test for Nonis is what he does this off-season.  My suggestion of trying to work with Edmonton or another team that has a high pick to land a top center or defenceman via the draft is sound.  The question is Craig McTavish, Garth Snow or Brian Burke willing to trade.  Further, what players can Nonis land via UFA.  Capgeek has a neat tool to give you a list of UFAs.  If you read my yesterday article, their really isn't much in terms of top talent at center or defense, which the Leafs are weakest at.  There are some decent wingers including Tomas Vanek, Matt Moulson, Marian Gaborik, Ales Hemsky, Milan Michalek and Michael Cammalleri.  However, the wing is probably the Leafs greatest strength with Kessel, van Riemsdyk, and Lupul.  A gamble out of Burke's playbook is sign a UFA winger and then try to trade a Lupul or Kadri as part of a package to get a decent center or top 4 defenceman or top draft picks/prospects.

The other part is can Nonis or re-sign RFA's Franson, Gardiner, and D'Amigo for reasonable dollars or turn them into other assets.  With UFA's Bolland, Kulemin, and McClement I would keep Bolland if he's willing to sign a one year deal for $3.5M as his trial year with the Leafs was a complete bust because of injury. A long term deal would be folly as Bolland may never to skate as well again and bad contracts tie up needed cap space.  Kulemin is a decent depth winger who did not have the best season and was paid $2.8M for this season.  Another deal like that would be reasonable, but he can play the KHL card and I imagine several teams will be looking at a 27 year old seasoned winger. He may want to move on to a better team after 7 seasons toiling  and is the current longest serving Leaf. Lastly, McClement is a penalty kill/defensive specialist and in 2012/2013 he led the leagues second best penalty kill.  This season McClement and the Leafs penalty kill started the season strong, but McClement lost his effectiveness when his minutes got doubled because of injuries at center.  Last season two seasons he earned $1.5 and he is a bargain for what he was able to earn and I imagine that a lot of teams would be looking to give a raise and at 31 years old it may be his last contract.  He probably wants to line his pockets while he can.

One other player that was part of the Leafs prior regular season success was grinder Leo Komorov and he's a proven pest, checker, and energy line player.  He would be a welcome addition to the Leafs 3rd/4th line and be an asset on the penalty kill.  The sticking point this season was money as the Leafs were up against the cap and the KHL paid him well. He earned $1.2M in salary during the 2012-2013 season.  If Nonis can get him signed for $2M he would make the Leafs harder to play against and fit in Carlyle's style of game.

Last major free agent, what will Nonis do with James Reimer? He's a restricted free agent and coach Carlyle has not shown the love for him.  Also, Bernier won the starting job for this season and Reimar played strongly as the Leaf starter in 2012-2013 shortened season.  I'd consider it a success if the Leafs can re-sign him $2.25M as a backup (a raise over the $1.8M a season this year) or can turn him into a 1st round pick and a top prospect.  Based on recent goalie transactions the going rate is a mid late 1st round pick and a good prospect or 2nd to 4th round pick or younger goalie prospect.   Hopefully, the Leafs can get something out of him and even swindle another team like after Boston got from the Leafs Tuuka Rask and the Leafs got Andrew Raycroft who only played 1 and 1/4 horrible seasons with the Leafs.

Final Thoughts for Nonis and Leafs Management Team:


As the expression goes, it easy spending other people's money.  But, saying that the Leafs can spend to the cap and still be a mediocre team.  My best suggestion is keeping $5M in room to be flexible with for the future and be able to take advantage of opportunities.  In the end, Nonis is accountable for the players and the coaching staff and a year and a half is insufficient to evaluate him.  He's made several good decisions and one major error; he's certainly not Mad Mike Milbury.  If he just re-signs this existing team than the Leafs are again a mediocre team; and senior management should find someone better.  If the players he's drafted and overseen the development are produces a star and some top players than we'll know he's a success.  A couple of shrewd trades like the one he did for Bernier or the one he and Burkie did to get Cody Franson and Joffrey Lupul would be even better.  I think we have to wait to see how our 2014-2015 Leaf's perform.


Comments? Thoughts? Suggestions? Did you know that the Leafs drafted Connor Brown who was the reguler season scoring champion in the OHL with 45 Goals and 83 assists for 128 points in 68 games for the Erie Otters.  Past players holding that distinction include Corey Perry, John Tavares, and Tyler Sequin/Tyler Hall (they were tied.) 
















Wednesday, 2 April 2014

More Puck Head Thoughts on the Maple Leafs

Hindsight is 20/20 they say.  I'm pulling a Don Cherry and I said the Maple Leafs should have been sellers at the trade deadline.  Furthermore, I suggested some trades and getting draft picks in exchange for the Leafs pending free agents.  My thoughts have not changed much since then.  I did not expect the Leafs to lose 8 games in a row (the Leafs last did this in 1985) and they would be locking up a play-off spot in the 4th through 6th position.  Last nights 3-2 win over the Calgary Flames does not change much as they would have to go undefeated in the remaining 5 games to wrestle a wild card spot away from Detroit or Columbus. Bernier's recent groin pull, Kessel with his deeply bruised foot and Bolland who is skating terribly coming back after his ankle injury is going to make this feat impossible.  Yesterday, I advocated "lose, baby lose!" and that is the best thing the Leafs can do right now. Just get a higher draft pick for next year.


What the Puck Heads are Saying and my Thoughts:


In the last few days I have reading various Leaf articles from TSN, The Star and The Globe and Mail on what they should do.

1) Take the 'C' off Phaneuf.  Well unless he volunteers to take it off, than this would mean you probably have to trade him after that kick in the teeth. The thought is that Phaneuf will play better with not having the pressure of the 'C'.  He has a limited no trade clause and I could not find any specifics regarding this to gauge how hard it would be to trade him.  I doubt the Leafs could get equal value coming back.  Besides who would replace him as Captain? The alternates are Joffrey Lupul and Jay McClement?  It takes a thick skin to be the Captain in Toronto and the media plays rough.

One other thought about Phaneuf is that he should drop the gloves a few more times a season.  I'd like to see him challenge the other teams leaders/top players when they are down in order to give the team a kick. Sometimes this works to get a momentum change.  Iglina and Thornton have both done this successfully in the past.

2) The Signing Bust in David Clarkson.  I do think the Leafs grossly overpaid for him and the puck heads speculate that he is trying too hard to earn his pay cheque (aka Scott Gomez or Chris Drury disease.)  Missing the first 10 games from a suspension at the beginning of the season was stupid, but the teams need someone who will stand up for his teammates.  I think next season he will play a lot better with a proper start to the season and if he has Bolland or a decent center to develop some chemistry with.  He's making $1.25 too much for the next 6 seasons.  But, he's a proven effective grinder with New Jersey.  I think he will turn it around next season and the signing will look a lot better.

3) Get a True #1 Center.  Well all the pundits said that at the beginning of the season (including me) and looking at the pending UFA's for this summer and there is only one capable center available in Paul Stastny.  Well he is 28 and would likely want a 7 year deal for $7M a season.  That may be a good deal for 3 maybe 4 seasons, but Stastny is going to slow down.  Furthermore, he's a proven to be a second line center on Colorado of recent.  Matt Duchene has surpassed him for top line honours and Ryan O'Reilly is the better two way player.  The latter would dramatically help the Leafs as he's probably gets nominated for the Selke trophy and he does not take dumb penalties.

Other pending UFA centers include the following aging players David Legwand (33), Olli Jokinen (35), and the small Derek Roy (30).  Lastly, there is Mikhail Grabovski (30) who got his contract bought 2 days before his wedding by Nonis.  It would have been better to keep him than Bolland for this season.  I can't fault Nonis on this as who knew Bolland would miss 60 games.  A healthy Bolland is not the answer to their #1 center need though.

The only way the Leafs can get a top center in their prime is via trade or via the draft.  The latter would require tanking to get in the top 3 in draft or just luck to get a star player later in the draft.  I suggested yesterday they try to trade up for a higher draft pick from Edmonton, Calgary or the New York Islanders to get a top center or top defenceman.

4) Get a #1 Defenceman.  A top caliber defenceman is probably the hardest player to find and takes several years to develop.  Adding a Shea Webber, Duncan Keith, Drew Doughty or Ryan Suter to the Leafs would probably add dozen or more points to the Leafs standings and cut about 5 shots a night on net.  The Leafs years ago in the Beauchemin for Lupul trade got Jake Gardiner.  Gardiner now 23 has shown from time to time elite offensive skills and puck handling skills, he played extremely well in the Boston play-off series.  However, he is far from consistent, prone to errors, and defensively mediocre in his own end.  Gardiner now has 2 full seasons under his belt and he paid his dues in the AHL.  Maybe a change of coach or team could get more out of him, he's a 4th or 5th defenceman as of now and not the answer.

Morgan Rielly the fifth overall pick from 2012 might be the answer.  He has played very well in first season with the Leafs and continues to improve.  Give a few more seasons he could be the #1 defenceman or at least #2 or #3 defenceman.  The Leafs also have several prospects Matt Finn (2012 - 35th overall), Stuart Percy (2011- 25th Overall), Petter Granberg (2010 - 116th overall) and T.J. Brennan (2007 - 31st Overall).  The Marlies played a strong season and are 3rd overall in their conference and 5th overall in the league.  TJ Brennan leads the league with 22 goals and 63 points, Petter Granberg is +21, which is 10th overall in the league in his rookie AHL season, Stuart Percy has an admirable 22 points in his rookie season. Matt Finn is the #1 and leading scoring defenceman for the Guelph Storm with 61 points and +57 and 2nd highest scoring defenceman in the league.   Guelph Storm finished the OHL season first in the league and dominated the Plymouth Whalers in the first round of the play-offs.  So, odds after Rielly one of these players will become an effective NHL player.  

Could there be a stop gap on the Summer free agent market that would be an upgrade over the Leafs current defense.  There are several aging top pairing defencemen including Dan Boyle (37), Andrei Markov (35) and Kimmon Timmonen (39).  Timmonen is probably going to retire and Boyle likely resign with San Jose or retire.  Markov the youngest and the best player available when healthy will likely resign with Montreal, it was speculated that Markov wants 2 or 3 year deal worth $6M a season.  Probably too much for Leafs or most teams.

There are several depth defenceman available and you can see a list at Capgeek.com.  The best candidates include Kyle Quincey (28), Matt Niskanen (27), Andrew MacDonald (27), and Brooks Orpik (33).  An addition of one of these players would improve the Leafs back end, one of them would be a step up on Gardiner, Gleason or Ranger.  However, it would only make a marginal improvement in standings and shots against.


Stay Tuned:

Tomorrow I discuss the two major remaining points 'Fire the Coach' and 'Fire the General Manager.'

Comments? Thoughts? Suggestions?  How are you going spend your Spring when the Leafs are not on TV.

Tuesday, 1 April 2014

Maple Laughs Return

Once again the Leafs return to classic losing form and will miss the play-offs.  They teased us with a strong start to the the season and good January before the Olympics.  But they went off a cliff twice, once in November (after Bozak and Bolland's injury) and in March (Bernier's groin pull.)  Injuries aside, they consistently got out shot, out drawn and have the second worst puck possession time in the NHL.  But, my hopes of a play-off run now dashed, why not keep that losing streak going.  They are at 8 games lost in row and play Burkie's Calgary Flames tonight.

Lose, Baby Lose!


The good news is that if the Leafs keep losing they can likely pick higher in this Summer's draft and hopefully find that two-way center or shut-down defencemen they need.  Thankfully, they did not trade away their first round pick like so many times before.  The Leafs are currently 11th place in the race for the bottom.  First through 5th are respectively held by Buffalo, Edmonton, Florida, NY Islanders and Calgary.   The Leafs could lose all remaining 6 games, but they can't catch these teams.  With a few more losses the Leafs could drop to 8th or 9th draft position.

That draft position could be fruitful as once can see going back a few years in the NHL:

                                                                    GP - G - A - Pts
2006 - 9th Overall - Min - C James Sheppard - 317 - 16 - 57- 73
          8th Overall - Pho - C Peter Mueller - 297 - 63- 97 - 160
2007 - 9th Overall - SJ - C Logan Couture - 211 - 109 - 105 - 214
          8th Overall - Bos - C Zach Hamill - 20 - 0 - 4 - 4
2008 - 9th Overall - NYI - C Josh Bailey - 398 - 62 - 114 - 176
          8th Overall - Pho - LW Mikkel Boedker - 331 - 53 - 89 - 142
2009 - 9th Overall - Ott - D Jared Cowen - 158 - 12 - 21 - 33
          8th Overall - Dal - C Scott Glennie - 1 - 0 - 0 - 0
2010 - 9th Overall - Min - LW Mikael Granlund - 90 - 10 - 39 - 49
          8th Overall - Wpg - C  Alexander Burmistov - 194 - 23 - 35 - 58
2011 - 9th Overall - Bos - D Dougie Hamilton - 99 - 12 - 29 - 41
          8th Overall - Phi - C Sean Couturier - 197 - 27 - 51 - 78
2012 - 9th Overall - Wpg - D Jacob Trouba - 59 - 9 - 18 - 27
          8th Overall - Pit - D Derrick Pouliot - No NHL Games Played

So, based on 7 seasons from 2006 to 2012, 11 of 14 players are NHL regulars.  Mueller now plays in the Swiss league, but concussion and injuries curtailed his career.  Derrick Pouliot is 20 years old and the team leading defencemen on the Portland Winterhawks who are the second best team in the WHL.  I'm guessing with his 17G, 53A for 70 points in 58 games and we will see him in the NHL.  So, that is really 12 out of 14, or 86% chance of landing an NHL player.  The majority of the above players have developed into second or third liners or 4th/5th defencemen on their respective teams.  All are still young and improving.

The Next Great Blue & White Hope:


Looking above a couple of these players drafted around 8th or 9th are true difference makers, specifically Logan Couture (who just missed out on being on Canada's Olympic Team) and Mikael Granlund who shined for Finland and was selected as one of the Tournament All-Stars.  So, who will the sharks of the Toronto media be circling?  The draft is still awhile way on June 27th in Philadelphia.  

I checked NHL.com and TSN.ca, and the draft ranking have not been updated since January. Bob McKenzie is wrong the majority of the time with his trade speculation, but his final draft ranking are reasonably accurate.  The most recent Draft Ranking I could find is from Craig Button TSN's Director of Scouting, see it here.  Based on Craig's list the Leafs could select C Jared McCann, LW Adrian Kempe, D Haydn Fleury, RW David Pasternak, or D Anthony DeAngelo.  Play-offs are currently occurring in the CHL and will be a chance for some of these players to further distinguish themselves.

Wikipedia has an article that details all the transactions affecting the draft if you want to know who has moved their respective draft picks.


The Hail Mary:


Moving up in the draft does occur occasionally and this could be a season that this could occur.  The Leafs could package a roster player and their first round pick for a top 3 pick.  Players such as Gardiner, Franson, Reimer or Kadri who are younger and proven enough may be enough to entice another team that wants to improve quicker. I'm specifically thinking of Edmonton Oilers who need help on defence and Franson would be #1 on their depth chart based on looking at their team. Florida similarly may want help on defence and Kulikov their best defenceman's contract is up and he has turn down offers to sign with Panthers this season.  He is rumored to want to cash in by returning to play in Russia and play in the KHL.  Franson or Gardiner would help replace Kulikov's loss on the power play.  I doubt Buffalo would move their pick as they are on record saying they want to bottom out and restock the organization.  NYI and Calgary who would pick 4th and 5th under Garth Snow and Brian Burke's supervision are both known to trade... but would moving up to 4th or 5th be worth a roster player?  A top prospect and the Leafs first round pick could do it. If Nonis were to able to work some magic than these are 3 players to aim for.  (Stats are for the recently completed CHL season.)

1) Sam Reinhart - Kootenay Ice Dogs - 6'1, 185 LBs - GP 60 G 36 A 69 PTS 105

A player with high a hockey IQ that knows where to be at both ends of the rink.  Capable of scoring and a team leader, he is projected to be a top center and could be the 1st or 2nd line center the Leafs need.

2) Aaron Ekblad - Barrie Colts - Defence - 6'4, 216 LBS - GP 58  G 23 A 30 PTS 53

A big body defencemen who can play 25 minutes a game at both ends of the ice.  Projected to be a star defenceman and could be that #1 or #2 defenceman given seasoning that the Leafs need.

3) Sam Bennett - Kingston Frontenacs - 6'0, 178 LBS - GP 57 G 36 A 51 PTS 91

Again another center that is versatile and good at both ends of the ice.  He plays with an edge and has proven to step up when it counts.  Another projected top center and again could be 1st or 2nd line center the Leafs need.

None of the above players are projected to be Superstars like Crosby or Thornton or 2015's Connor McDavid, but if I'm in Nonis shoes I'd certainly gamble on getting one of these 3 players.


Knowing the Leafs:


My last thought is the Leafs will of course go on a 3 game winning streak to close out the season and shoot themselves in the foot and move down in the draft rankings.   It is the Maple Laughs way!


Comments? Thoughts? Suggestions?  Are you about to throw your Maple Leafs jersey on the ice?  Please share below.




Thursday, 27 February 2014

Projecting the 2018 Men's Canadian Olympic Hockey Team

It is only a few days since Canada's Men won the Olympic medal and we will not know for months whether the NHL will participate again in Pyeongchang in 2018.  But I realized that the majority of players are on the 2014 are in there prime and many of them will still be under 32 at the next Olympics.  Unlike other countries Canada typically does not have many players over 35 on their roster.  Recent greybeards included Teemu Selanne (43- Finland), Jaromir Jagr (42 Czech), Peter Nedved (42, Czech) and Sandis Ozolinsh (41 - Latvia).  The most recent tournament the oldest Canadian player was Martin St. Louis (38) and he was a late bloomer playing his first NHL season at 23.  The oldest NHL Canadian player to participate in the Olympics was defenseman Al MacInnis in 2002 at 39 years old.  Other notable players such as Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Steve Yzerman and Joe Sakic were all 37 in their final appearance at an Olympic Tournament.




The Final 2014 Men's Olympic Roster


(In brackets there age at the start of Olympic Tournament)
  
Forwards:
Left Winger
Center
Right Winger




  Line 1:
Chris Kunitz (34)
Sydney Crosby (26)
Patrice Bergeron (28)




  Line 2:
Patrick Marleau (34)
Jonathan Toews (25)
Jeff Carter (29)




  Line 3:
Jamie Benn (24)
Ryan Getzlaf (28)
Corey Perry (28)




  Line 4:
Rick Nash (29)
John Tavares (23)
Matt Duchene (23)




Defensemen:
Left Side
Right Side





  Pairing 1:
Shea Weber (28)
Duncan Keith (30)





  Pairing 2:
Drew Doughty (24)
M.E. Vlasic (26)




 Spares:
  Pairing 3:
Jay Bouwmeester (30)
Alex Pietranagelo (24)
 Steven Stamkos (24)



 Patrick Sharp (32)
Goaltenders:
Roberto Luongo (34)

 Martin St. Louis (38)

Carey Price (26)

 Dan Hamhuis (31)

Mike Smith (31)

 PK Subban (24)

Per the IIHF they are allowed to have a 25 man roster that consists of 3 goalies and 14 forwards and 8 defensemen.(Note: During the 2010 Olympics rosters were 23 man in size, it was expanded to 25 for Sochi to allow emergency replacements to be easily available.  Bench size consists of 21 players (2 goalies and 19 nineteen skaters.)  There is 26 players above as Steven Stamkos broken leg did not heal in time and he was replaced by Martin St. Louis.

How Old Will These Players be in 2018

(Highlighted in yellow players over 34 Years Old)

Forwards:
Left Winger
Center
Right Winger




  Line 1:
Chris Kunitz (38)
Sydney Crosby (30)
Patrice Bergeron (32)




  Line 2:
Patrick Marleau (38)
Jonathan Toews (29)
Jeff Carter (33)




  Line 3:
Jamie Benn (28)
Ryan Getzlaf (32)
Corey Perry (32)




  Line 4:
Rick Nash (33)
John Tavares (27)
Matt Duchene (27)




Defensemen:
Left Side
Right Side





  Pairing 1:
Shea Weber (32)
Duncan Keith (34)





  Pairing 2:
Drew Doughty (28)
M.E. Vlasic (30)




Spares:
  Pairing 3:
Jay Bouwmeester (34)
Alex Pietranagelo (28)
Steven Stamkos (28)



Patrick Sharp (36)
Goaltenders:
Roberto Luongo (38)

Martin St. Louis (42)

Carey Price (30)

Dan Hamhuis (35)

Mike Smith (35)

PK Subban (24)



Based on the amount of elite players Canada has, the players ages and generally speaking players are in there prime from about 24 to 32 before they start a slow decline and injuries catch up. Further players past 35 that have played for Canada have been 1st Ballot Hall of Famers (ie Gretzky, Lemieux, Neidermayer, and Yzerman.) Based on that and there level of play I'm fairly certain that these players will not be Olympic Participants in 2018. 

1) Martin St. Louis (42) 
2) Chris Kunitz (38)
3) Patrick Marleau (38) 
4) Roberto Luongo (38)
5) Patrick Sharp (36)
6) Dan Hamhuis (35)
7) Mike Smith (35)


Based on talent and play at the 2014 Olympics I doubt these players will be returning:


8) Jay Bouwmeester (34) - 3rd pairing Olympic defenseman who did not play key moments during the game.
9) Rick Nash (33) - Played 4th line minutes (8:32 minutes average per game) and was the third least used forward on the team. He also got only one assist as well and did not deliver as a goal scorer. Only Matt Duchene and Patrick Sharp played fewer minutes.


Predicting the 2018 Team:


It is fool's folly to try predict the 2018 team as so much can change by then.  For example both Crosby and Bergeron based on their past concussion issues may be injured out of the game. Further everyday injuries and broken bones. Just recently Sweden had both their top two centers (Henrik Zetterberg and Henrik Sedin) unavailable because of injury.  Players go through hot and cold cycles, such as Claude Giroux, who was playing terrible in the Fall and since Christmas he's been one of the best players.  Above, I eliminated 9 players from returning to the 2014 team and here my suggested replacements.

Forwards:


This is the position where Canada has the most depth and is hardest to differentiate the talent of players. Considering that St. Louis, Marleau, Kunitz will likely be retired and that both Sharp and Nash are in the declines of their career that there would be 5 spots open.  

1) Claude Giroux (C/RW) - He had terrible start at the beginning of the season, but has established himself as a top tier center and point per game player.  At forward many of the talking 'puck heads' argued he should have been on the 2014 team and should have replaced Stamkos over St. Louis.  He's also has proven in the past that he can play RW, thus has some versatility.  He would be 30 and thus in his prime for 2018.

2) Taylor Hall (LW) - The 1st overall pick of 2010 would be 26 at the next Olympics. He has a knack for the net and has progressed into a point per game player.  Yes, his defense could improve and it is baffling that Edmonton has yet to turn the corner with all their high draft picks, but I suspect soon the Oilers will be a contender and he'll be leading the charge.  With some playoff experience he could develop that clutch experience team Canada needs and expects.

3) Tyler Seguin (C) - The 2nd overall pick after Taylor Hall and the player part of the trade for Phil Kessel is now in his 4th season in the NHL.  He like Hall has developed in a points per game player and has demonstrated great chemistry with Jamie Benn who played on the 2014 team.  Give him a few more seasons on a rebuilding Dallas Stars and he hopefully get the playoff experience to turn him into a clutch player.

4) Jordan Eberle or Jeff Skinner or Evander Kane- all first round picks and all have shown glimpses of capable goal scorers, will they all they turn the corner and become clutch players? Jeff Carter was able to score a hat trick and gave Canada many scoring chances.  Will one of these players develop into a consistent goal scorer? They are all on teams that have done poorly for years (Edmonton, Carolina and Winnipeg), so one of these teams at least has to turn the corner and become a contender.

5) Nathan MacKinnon (1st overall - 2013 - Colorado) - He has 44 points in 58 games in his first season of the NHL and will likely win the Calder Trophy.  With Patrick Roy coaching and Joe Sakic as the GM he has two winner to learn from and I suspect that Colorado will become an annual playoff contender with the depth of young talent they now possess.  MacKinnon plays center and not wing, but with 4 years of more experience be able to challenge Crosby, Toews, Getzlaf and Tavares as a starting center?

Honourable Mentions:

Predicting out Goalie and defenseman is nearly impossible.  Forwards often do show that talent far earlier and the next one is Connor McDavid (C).  At the moment per 'puck heads' he's expected to be drafted first overall.  That is two drafts from now, but in four years he would be in his second NHL season.  He like Tavares was granted exceptional player status in the OHL and in his first Under 18 tournament led in scoring with 14 points in 7 games at the age of 16.  Is he going to be the next superstar?


Defenseman:


With the age and strong play of Keith, Doughty, Weber, Vlasic and Pietrangelo that is 5 spots taken. PK Subban would likely be the 6th although he only played in 1 game and for 11 minutes in 2014 Olympics.  Thus leaving two spots. I would imagine it would be two up and coming defensemen and it does take years to develop into a strong two-way player.  

1) Erik Gudbranson (2010 - 3rd Overall - Florida) or Dougie Hamilton (2011 - 9th Overall - Boston)  - Both of these defensemen are 6 ft 5 and have large reaches; they also have both established themselves as second pairing defensemen in terms of minutes.  Neither have shown the offensive prowess of the next two players, but they are developing skills to shut down opposing forwards.  Also, they are both starting to fill out to the size of their frames.  Given 4 seasons they will be a lot harder to play against and one of them will be a top stud defenseman.

2) Morgan Rielly  (2012 - 5th Overall - Toronto)  or Ryan Murray (2012 - 2nd Overall) - Both of these players have had strong starts for rookie defenseman and have played 50+ games in their first seasons in the NHL.  Given 4 years experience and that they both were exceptional players in the WHL one of them will likely be a top offensive defenseman.  

Honourable Mentions:


Brent Seabrook - A consensus pick to play in 2014 by the pundits and Duncan Keith's defensive partner in Chicago.  He will be 32 in 2018 and likely still playing with Keith.  

Kris Letang - One of the best offensive defenseman in the NHL when healthy, but the injury bug has been terrible the past two seasons.  He would be 30 in 2018 and his ability to both score and setup a play from the point would merit him being part of the discussion.


Goalies:


Carey Price is the likely starter or would be hard not to pick since he played so well in 2014.  That leaves two up and coming goalies. At the moment only 25 of 60 NHL starters and back-ups are Canadian born per NHL.com. This is the position that Canada has the least depth on.  

1) Jonathan Bernier - Great save percentage and skill level.  Continuing to develop on the Leafs and would be 29 years old.  Right in his prime for a goaltender.  

2) Malcolm Subban - (2012 - #24 overall - Boston) or Martin Jones (Undrafted - LA Kings).  Subban will be 25 and be coming into his own in the NHL.  He'll likely start backing up Tuuka Rask on a defensive team and will have a chance to develop slowly. He would be 25 in 2018. Martin Jones was undrafted by the Los Angeles Kings and has steadily developed.  He gave the Kings the confidence to trade Bernier and in his first NHL season as Quick's backup he has 8 and 4 record, with a .940% and 1.71 GAA. 

Honourable Mentions:

Corey Crawford or Marc-Andre Fleury - Both goalies have won a Stanley Cup and have played in numerous play-off games.  Crawford has a strong defense in front of him and is not known for stealing games yet, but rarely lets in bad goals.  Fleury is consistent during the regular season and was instrumental a few years ago in the Penguins winning the Stanley cup.  But the last few play-offs he was wildly inconsistent and the Penguins could not get past the first two rounds.  Both goalies would be 33 in 2018 and one of them may be on top of their game.


Thoughts?  Suggestions?  Is there a young Canadian player that is a star in the making that I did not include?  Please add your comments below.