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2013 NHL Entry Draft - Top draft prospects list and analysis

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May 25, 2011
Up and Coming
Saskatoon Westerns, 1983-84

by Iain Fyffe

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When last we checked in with the fictional Saskatoon Westerns (the former St. Louis Blues), general manager Ardal Ekrub had made a series of moves to reshape the team's roster and to acquire a number of draft picks in the 1983 NHL Entry Draft, the team's first in its new location in Saskatchewan. Knowing that the team had already traded away its top two picks in this draft before the change of ownership, Mr. Ekrub was counting on his Project-a-Tron objective drafting system to identify the best available players.

"We think there are certain types of players that will be overlooked by other teams in this draft, and we expect to be able to select many good ones", he tells the Saskatoon media in the days leading up to the draft. While he was clearly correct that certain types of players are heavily discounted by most hockey insiders, it would be a number of years before the effectiveness of his system could really be proven. Very few 18-year-old players step right into an NHL lineup to make a real impact on the game. The team would have to muddle through for at least a few seasons before their young players developed enough to change the face of the club.

Looking over at his list of Project-a-Tron projections (which are, coincidentally, identical to what we know today as the Projectinator), Ekrub knows he's not going to get a lot of the best players. He doesn't have a pick until #33, though he's acquired a large number of picks soon after that one. He hopes that his advantage in objective evaluation of players will offset his lack his of early draft choices.

The following tables show the top 30 players according to the system, including their projected peak GVT (PGVT+) and where they were drafted in the actual 1983 NHL Entry Draft, for reference.

Top 30 Players Available at 1983 NHL Entry Draft

Rank	Player		Pos	League	PGVT+	Drafted
1	Dale Derkatch	F	WHL	11.6	140
2	Pat LaFontaine	F	QMJHL	11.2	3
3	Petr Klima	F	Cze	11.2	86
4	Bruce Cassidy	D	OHL	10.3	18
5	Lane Lambert	F	WHL	9.1	25
6	Raimo Helminen	F	Fin	9.1	-
7	Brian Bradley	F	OHL	8.8	51
8	Randy Heath	F	WHL	8.7	33
9	Dan Quinn	F	OHL	8.3	13
10	Peter Andersson	D	Swe	8.2	73
11	Esa Keskinen	F	Fin	8.2	-
12	Steve Yzerman	F	OHL	7.9	4
13	Cam Neely	F	WHL	7.9	9
14	Sylvain Turgeon	F	QMJHL	7.9	2
15	Shawn Evans	D	OHL	7.9	24
16	Vesa Salo	D	Fin	7.9	49
17	Petr Rosol	F	Cze	7.7	-
18	Esa Tikkanen	F	Fin	7.4	80
19	Jari Torkki	F	Fin	7.3	115
20	Andrew McBain	F	OHL	7.0	8
21	Alfie Turcotte	F	WHL	6.8	17
22	Wayne Groulx	F	OHL	6.6	172
23	Iiro Jarvi	F	Fin	6.6	54
24	Adam Creighton	F	OHL	6.5	11
25	John Tucker	F	OHL	6.4	31
26	Dan Hodgson	F	WHL	6.4	83
27	Normand Rochefort	F	ECAC	6.2	10
28	Patrick Emond	F	QMJHL	6.1	103
29	Gerald Diduck	D	WHL	6.0	16
30	Tommy Albelin	D	Swe	6.0	158
31	Mikko Makela	F	Fin	6.0	65

It's clear now that at this point in time, NHL teams were still either reluctant to draft European players, or were not investing sufficient resources into scouting them. As such, the Westerns end up with a significant European flavor in their draft results. In particular, there may be a large amount of Finnish spoken in the Saskatoon dressing room in the coming years, with four Finns drafted in 1983.

Saskatoon Westerns 1983 Entry Draft Picks

Pick	Player		Pos	League	PGVT+
33	Dale Derkatch	F	WHL	11.6
43	Petr Klima	F	Cze	11.2
46	Raimo Helminen	F	Fin	9.1
48	Brian Bradley	F	OHL	8.8
54	Peter Andersson	D	Swe	8.2
56	Esa Keskinen	F	Fin	8.2
62	Petr Rosol	F	Cze	7.7
69	Esa Tikkanen	F	Fin	7.4
90	Jari Torkki	F	Fin	7.3
111	Wayne Groulx	F	OHL	6.6
132	Tommy Albelin	D	Swe	6.0
153	Mark Jooris	F	ECAC	5.2
174	Claude Gosselin	F	QMJHL	4.4
195	Steve Pepin	F	QMJHL	3.9
216	Mike Bishop	G	OHL	3.7
237	Marc Damphousse	F	QMJHL	3.4

Despite not having a pick until halfway through the second round, Ekrub was able to draft the first-, third-, sixth-, seventh-, tenth-, eleventh-, seventeenth-, eighteenth- and nineteenth-best players available, according to the Project-a-Tron. Obviously not all of these players will pan out to meet their expectations, but this is a very clear illustration of the differences between the projections and the scouts.

The Saskatoon management is overjoyed with its crop at the 1983 NHL Entry Draft. "At the very least, this will be a great test of the system", Ekrub was heard to say. "The more players we can draft that other teams aren't interested in, the bigger sample we have to judge our results. And at best, we've just drafted the core of a team that will be very good for a long time."

One thing many NHL fans probably don't think much about is roster and Reserve List management. To document this evaluation of objective drafting, we need to be as realistic as possible. As such, the team's list of available players is very important, and must follow the rules.

An NHL team is permitted a Reserve List of 80 players, which includes players under contract and players who have been drafted but not yet signed. Of these 80, at most 50 can be under professional contracts. North American players must be signed within two years of being drafted, or else they are able to re-enter the draft (if young enough) or become free agents. European players are not subject to this restriction. Once a European is drafted, he remains on the team's Reserve List until he is released or his rights are traded.

Since his team started out with such a thin roster, Ekrub won't have to worry about a real Reserve List crunch for several years. Even after adding 16 draft choices, the Saskatoon Westerns have only 61 players on their list, 19 less than the maximum allowed. The table below lists all players on the Saskatoon Reserve List, with age provided and a (k) beside a player's name indicating that he is under contract with the team.

Saskatoon Westerns 1983-84 Reserve List

Pos	Name			Age (1983-84) 
G	Beaupre, Don (k)	21
G	Bishop, Mike		18
G	Heinz, Rick (k)		28
G	Parro, Dave (k)		26
G	Skidmore, Paul (k)	27
D	Albelin, Tommy		19
D	Andersson, Peter	18
D	Brownschidle, Jack (k)	27
D	Delorme, Gilbert (k)	20
D	Dore, Andre (k)		25
D	Giles, Curt (k)		24
D	Hagglund, Roger		21
D	Julien, Claude (k)	23
D	McCrimmon, Brad (k)	24
D	McKay, Darren (k)	21
D	McTaggart, Jim (k)	23
D	Norwood, Lee (k)	23
D	Posavad, Mike (k)	19
D	Ruff, Marty (k)		20
D	Smyth, John (k)		21
D	Stewart, Bill (k)	25
D	Wilson, Rik (k)		21
C	Bradley, Brian		18
C	Brooke, Bob		21
C	Callander, Jock (k)	21
C	Derkatch, Dale		18
C	Federko, Bernie (k)	27
C	Galarneau, Michel (k)	22
C	Gilmour, Doug (k)	20
C	Groulx, Wayne		18
C	Helminen, Raimo		19
C	Jooris, Mark		19
C	Keskinen, Esa		18
C	Klassen, Ralph (k)	28
C	Lemieux, Alain (k)	22
C	Pepin, Steve		18
C	Tookey, Tim (k)		22
C	Tudor, Rob (k)		27
C	Wickenheiser, Doug (k)	22
LW	Anderson, Perry (k)	21
LW	Eades, Cary (k)		21
LW	Damphousse, Marc	18
LW	Fenton, Paul (k)	22
LW	Gosselin, Claude	18
LW	Pettersson, Jorgen (k)	27
LW	Propp, Brian (k)	24
LW	Rabbitt, Pat (k)	21
LW	Tikkanen, Esa		18
LW	Torkki, Jari		18
LW	Skjodt, Charlie (k)	27
RW	Crawford, Bob (k)	23
RW	Ganchar, Perry (k)	19
RW	Graham, Dirk (k)	23
RW	Klima, Petr		18
RW	Markell, John (k)	27
RW	Michayluk, Dave (k)	21
RW	Mullen, Joe (k)		26
RW	Paslawski, Greg (k)	22
RW	Reeds, Mark (k)		23
RW	Rosol, Petr		19
RW	Zemlak, Richard (k)	20

Players on Reserve List (Maximum 80): 61
Players Under Contract (Maximum 50): 43

Before the season starts, the league moves the Winnipeg Jets to the Norris Division, and Saskatoon enters the Smythe Division to match the geography of the western teams as best as possible. It's a shame that the Kings couldn't have shifted instead of the Jets, which would have made the Smythe a truly Western Canadian division. But that's just not realistic—Los Angeles is just too far from any other team in the league at this time to make that workable. So the Westerns begin their NHL life in the same division as the dominant Edmonton Oilers, which will certainly make getting out of the division in the playoffs—assuming the playoffs are even made—quite the challenge.

Using GVT, we can estimate how well the team performs based on its roster. This will never be precise, and the results must be taken with a grain of salt. The point is not to show exactly how well a team using objective drafting would perform, since an examination of the players acquired through such a drafting strategy should be enough for that. The seasonal results are more for fun, as are the playoff results in particular, since those will be determined randomly, game-by-game, using the teams' relative winning percentages.

As is turns out, the Westerns manage a fourth-place finish in the Smythe Division in 1983-84, the same that the real-life Blues had in the Norris Division that year. The biggest names acquired by Ekrub—Brian Propp, Bernie Federko and Don Beaupre—have the biggest impact on the team, but of course a heavy price was paid for those men.

Saskatoon Westerns 1983-84 NHL Season Results

GP	W	L	T	GF	GA	Pts	Finish
80	32	39	9	314	324	73	4th, Smythe Division; 13th overall

Player			Pos	GP	OGVT	DGVT	GVT
Propp, Brian		LW	79	10.4	5.5	15.9
Federko, Bernie		C	79	12.2	2.3	14.5
Mullen, Joe		RW	80	8.2	2.0	10.2
Crawford, Bob		RW	80	7.2	2.0	9.2
Pettersson, Jorgen	LW	77	5.7	2.3	8.0
Gilmour, Doug		C	80	4.0	3.3	7.3
Beaupre, Don		G	51	0.0	6.7	6.7
Dore, Andre		D	80	2.2	4.2	6.4
Wickenheiser, Doug	C	73	1.8	3.4	5.2
Wilson, Rik		D	54	1.4	3.1	4.5
McCrimmon, Brad		D	71	0.4	4.0	4.4
Giles, Curt		D	70	1.8	2.5	4.3
Stewart, Bill		D	56	1.2	1.7	2.9
Reeds, Mark		RW	65	0.8	1.6	2.4
Lemieux, Alain		LW	69	1.8	0.4	2.2
Tookey, Tim		C	66	1.3	0.4	1.7
Paslawski, Greg		RW	60	0.1	1.5	1.6
Delorme, Gilbert	D	71	-0.8	2.3	1.5
Graham, Dirk		RW	6	0.3	0.2	0.5
Norwood, Lee		D	14	0.1	0.4	0.5
Michayluk, Dave		RW	14	0.1	0.3	0.4
Brooke, Bob		C	9	0.0	0.3	0.3
Fenton, Paul		LW	8	0.2	0.0	0.2
Ganchar, Perry		RW	1	-0.1	0.1	0.0
Markell, John		RW	2	-0.1	0.0	-0.1
Tudor, Rob		C	10	-0.1	0.0	-0.1
Galarneau, Michel	LW	39	-0.3	0.1	-0.2
Brownschidle, Jack	D	64	-1.1	0.7	-0.4
Klassen, Ralph		C	5	-0.5	-0.2	-0.7
Anderson, Perry		LW	58	-1.2	0.5	-0.7
Heinz, Rick		G	10	0.0	-2.1	-2.1
Parro, Dave		G	19	0.0	-6.2	-6.2
Total				80	57.1	43.3	100.4

Federko, Propp and Joe Mullen form quite an effective first line, and the second line of Doug Gilmour with Bob Crawford and Jorgen Pettersson is decent as well. Greg Paslawski and Mark Reeds make a fairly effective checking pair, but the blue line corps needs some work yet. Their goaltender Beaupre is good, but the backups are terrible. 73 points is about as good a result as you could have hoped for—beating what the real-life Blues did this season by two points—and is enough to take the fourth playoff seed in the Smythe Division.

Playoffs - First Round

The Westerns' first playoff opponent is, as feared, the mighty Oilers. The 1984 edition of this team have the second-most points in the league, and the best goal differential in the circuit. Saskatoon gives their faithful a brief glimmer of hope by shocking Edmonton with a 6-5 win in the first game. Losses of 5-7, 5-8 and 0-2 followed, however, preventing any surprises in the round.

Summing up the season, Ardal Ekrub offers the following: "It was a good year. It was nice to see the players we acquired contributing like we hoped they would. And I was very pleased with how our first draft turned out. I think we're on our way to building a very good team. We just need some time."

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<< Previous Article
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