Showing posts with label Anaheim Ducks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anaheim Ducks. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

NHL Preview 2019-20: Anaheim Ducks

(This year again, I will twin-post with my Collectibles Blog and write about a player who is related to my Preview post here. Today, it's the Anaheim Ducks' much-maligned former top defensive prospect, Cam Fowler).
GM: Bob Murray (since 2008). 7/10
Coach: Dallas Eakins (since 2019). 6/10

2018-19 record: 35-37-10, 80 pts. (6th in the Pacific Division, 13th in the Western Conference).
Playoffs: Did not qualify.

Departures: Corey Perry (LW), Pontus Aberg (RW), Adam Cracknell (RW), Andrej Sustr (D), Chad Johnson (G), Jake Dotchin (D), Andy Welinski (D), Jaycob Megna (D).

Arrivals: Nicolas Deslauriers (F), Michael Del Zotto (D), Anthony Stolarz (G).

Top forwards: Rickard Rakell (70-75 points), Ryan Getzlaf (captain, 60-70 points), Jakob Silfverberg (50-60 points), Adam Henrique (40-50 points), Daniel Sprong (30-40 points), Ondrej Kase (30-35 points), Nick Ritchie (20-25 points), Devin Shore (20-25 points). Patrick Eaves and Ryan Kesler should not play this year.


Must-improve forwards: Adam Henrique seems to have fallen off some black days. I haven't relaly paid attention to him in recent years, but I remember a goal scorer who looked like he could one day score 40.

Top defensemen: Cam Fowler (35-45 points), Josh Manson (30 points and over 100 penalty minutes), SHampus Lindholm (25-35 points), Korbinian Holzer (15-30 points), Del Zotto (15-20 points).

Goalies: John Gibson (95/100), Ryan Miller (83/100).

Top rookies: Brendan Guhle (22, D), Sam Steel (21, C), Maxime Comtois (20, C/LW), Jacob Larsson (21 years old, D, 2015 first-rounder), Marcus Pettersson (22, D), Max Jones (20, LW, 2016 first-rounder), Troy Terry (22, C).

Analysis:
The Ducks are like Ryan Kesler: sitting idle, waiting for time to get rid of his contract obligations, in the shadows of what used to look like greatness.

Gibson will win a Vezina in the next decade, whether that's this year or not. When he does, Anaheim will have an outlier season and win its division. In the meantime, they'll struggle and have to hustle to make the playoffs.

Even by buying out Perry, the Ducks remain a heavy, slow and physical-to-the-brink-of-undisciplined team (see Getzlaf up-front and Manson out back) who appear ill-suited to even keep up with the likes of the Edmonton Oilers and Vancouver Canucks in their own division, let alone the Calgary Flames and Vegas Golden Knights.

Prediction: 7th in the Pacific Division, 29th in the NHL.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

History Repeats Itself Again

That moment where you just wiped your ass, you fold the toilet paper for a second swipe, but it bursts, and you end up re-pasting yourself with hot, stinking peanut butter...

And the sense of déjà-vu it instills in your soul because it wasn't the first time it's happened...

I have no idea if that has anything to do with this, but in the off chance that it may... here is an article from the L.A. Times regarding the firing of GM Pierre Gauthier. From the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, in 2002, but the facts remain so strikingly similar to the current Montréal Canadiens administration, it's uncanny.

My favourite part:
Gauthier made absolutely no impact on Orange County hockey fans in his four-year tenure. He was not part of the community in any noticeable way. He was anonymous. He tended to make statements that weren't true, in the sense that soon after he'd said something wouldn't happen, it happened.
For instance, Gauthier said he wouldn't think about firing his coach. Then a month later, Craig Hartsburg was fired. He also said he'd never consider trading the team's two superstars, Paul Kariya and Teemu Selanne. Then, a month or so later, Selanne was traded and the die-hards of the dwindling Duck fan base became rightly nervous about Kariya's future in Anaheim.
This season alone, Gauthier fired two coaches (one assistant, one head) and traded superstar sniper Michael Cammalleri. To go with his 5 other shitty trades...

Friday, July 10, 2009

Chopping Their Own Fanbase

Despite having hot chicks model for them, the Iowa Chops of the AHL didn't make enough money at the gates - which led to their parent NHL team, the Anaheim Ducks, to terminate their agreement.

These things happen, they're always sad, but economics rule, don't they?

What sucks is the ownership of the Chops is looking to make it harder on season ticket holders to get their money back. Lucky for them, someone is looking out for their interests: Hockey Blog In Canada is on the case.

We need to pass the word until this situation gets resolved.