In this third installment of our look at the NHL Entry Draft
for the Washington Capitals we take a look at what we might call the breeding
ground for the foot soldiers of the NHL, the second and third rounds. Sure, there might be a Milan Lucic (50th
overall in 2006) or a David Krejci (63rd overall in 2004) or a Brad
Marchand (71st overall in 2006…hint, Boston has done well
here). But this is the land of the
Brandon Prust (70th overall in 2004) or a Kris Russell (67th
overall in 2005) or a Gregory Campbell (67th overall in 2002).
These are players generally falling into the category of
“role player,” those who grind in the corners, focus on defense, or provide a
physical edge. They are the third and
fourth liners or third pair defensemen, or perhaps a backup goaltender, unless
you are really good or really lucky in picking in these rounds, as we will see
in a bit.
For the Capitals, well, it has been something of a desert
compared to the fertile ground of the first round. Over the 2001-2010 period the Caps have had
21 selections in the second and third rounds.
Seven have reached the NHL, and three of them have appeared in at least
100 games. Here is that roster of second
and third round picks (ranked by overall selection):
One might argue that if only a few players come out of these
rounds, they still might serve as a productive source for trading assets. In fact, the Caps have used players selected
in this tranche of draft picks for just that.
Theo Ruth (46th overall in 2007) was moved to Columbus for
Sergei Fedorov. Cody Eakin (85th
overall in 2009) was moved for Mike Ribeiro.
Chris Bourque (33rd overall in 2004) was moved for Zach
Hamill, a former eighth-overall draft pick.
There is a common theme there. Centers.
All three of those deals mentioned above brought back a center in
return, two of them specifically to address the long-standing problem of the
lack of a reliable second line center.
In all three cases, though, the solution moved on – Fedorov spent one
more season in Washington before moving back to Russia, Ribeiro signed as a free
agent with Phoenix after one abbreviated season in Washington, and Hamill never
made it to Washington, himself traded to Florida for Casey Wellman this past
January. Wellman has 41 games of NHL
experience (all with Minnesota) over three seasons.
But what of the contributors to the Caps out of this
second/third round pool of draftees?
Only two players – goalie Michal Neuvirth and defenseman Dmitry Orlov –
remain with the club. Neuvirth, who is
the only player drafted by the club in this group and still with the team with
more than 100 games on his resume, has been in a battle with someone – Semyon
Varlamov, Tomas Vokoun, Braden Holtby – for the number one goalie spot almost
since his selection in 2006. He has not,
however, been able to claim the job for his own on a permanent basis, serving
only the 2010-2011 season in that role and playing in only 48 games in the
process, his career high.
The Caps have not had much in the way of contributions from
their second and third round draft picks.
Their trading assets returned short term solutions to long-standing
problems, and their “contributing” players have been few and far between. But is that unusual, or is that ordinary in
the context of the other 29 teams’ performance in these rounds? Here is the list of teams with their history,
ranked in order of total selections:
As you can see, the Caps are smack dab in the middle of the
pack with respect to the number of picks taken.
Would it were true that they ranked at as high as this in the production
numbers. Among the 30 NHL teams and
their second and third round picks, the Caps’ skaters rank:
- Tied for 23rd in players dressing for at least one NHL game
- Tied for 18th in players dressing in at least 100 NHL games
- 25th in games played from this cohort
- 28th in goals scored
- 26th in total points scored
They make up for it some with Neuvirth’s performance in
goal, he being ranked in the top-ten in games played (eighth) and wins
(seventh) among goaltenders selected.
There is another dimension to this worth exploring, that
being the ability to find high-end contributors in this area of the draft. Let’s lay down some criteria for this. As an arbitrary marker, let us say that an
“impact” skater from the second or third round would be one with at least 200
games, at least 50 career goals, and at least 100 career points. Who qualifies?
(click on picture for larger image)
Twenty teams drafting 41 players meeting these criteria
suggest that the second and third round can yield something more than the
garden variety grinder or third pair defenseman. It is not common, but it is not entirely
rare, either. And, given the criteria we
employed here, defensemen of an impact sort are underrepresented. For example, this list does not include Kris
Letang (62nd overall in 2005) or Alex Goligoski (61st
overall in 2004), both selected by Pittsburgh.
It does not include Trevor Daley (43rd overall in 2002),
selected by Dallas. It does not include
P.K. Subban (43rd overall in 2007), selected by Montreal, or Cody
Franson (79th overall in 2005), selected by Nashville. It does not include Fedor Tyutin (40th
overall in 2001), picked by the New York Rangers, nor does it include Matt
Carle (47th overall in 2003), selected by San Jose. All of these players would meet the games and
total points threshold, but not goals.
Meanwhile, the 20 second and third round skaters chosen by
the Washington Capitals have a combined total of 660 games played and a
combined scoring line of 29-110-139. Cody
Eakin is the only skater who could approach being a regular NHLer, let alone
being an impact player. Nathan Paetsch,
who played in 167 NHL games (none with the Caps) has not played an NHL game
since 2010. He played with Grand Rapids
in the AHL in 2012-2013. Sami Lepisto,
who played in 176 NHL games (14 with Washington), did not play in the NHL in
2012-2013, playing with HC Lev Praha of the Kontinental Hockey League.
In the end, even if one tries to explain away the lack of
success with the point that some of these picks were used as trading assets,
the games played by this cohort and combined production, wherever they landed,
cannot be spun into an argument that the Caps have been successful drafting in
this area. Not that drafting is the only
avenue to success in the NHL. Of the
eight teams that realized fewer than 1,000 total games played from their
respective second and third round draft picks over the 2001-2010 period, six
have played in a Stanley Cup final over the last dozen years, and four of them
(New Jersey, Tampa Bay, Carolina, and Anaheim) won Stanley Cups. But since the last of those teams won a Cup –
Anaheim in 2007 – they have fallen on generally harder times. The lack of new blood infusion from the next
tier of draft picks might have something to do with that.
The lack of second and third round success in the draft is a
matter that is especially problematic for a club that relies on the draft as
its fundamental roster development tool.
If a team is not going to do well here, they almost have to hit home
runs in the first round. The Caps have
done well in their first round picks, but they have lost a lot of that talent
to other teams, too, as we saw in the look at those first round picks. An inability to produce in this area of the
draft – the second and third rounds – might be one of the factors in the Caps
persistent difficulties in finding a solution to the second line center problem
or filling out second and third defensive pairs with reliably productive
players. Other teams have found those
solutions here – a David Krejci, a Paul Stastny, or even a Brandon Dubinsky. The Caps have not. And while one might look at a Krejci or a Stastny
as an infrequent product of these rounds, the Caps have had little success in
filling roles from these spots.
As a long-time fan of this club, we really do hope things
improve and that the players taken in the last few drafts make meaningful and lasting
contributions to the club. But insofar
as the 2001-2010 period in concerned, this has been a signature shortcoming of
the draft performance of the Capitals.
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