EVERY NHL TEAM'S
BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENT
At the start of every NHL season every team and player has a
set of expectations they want to meet. Some, obviously, are higher than others.
Often times those expectations get exceeded and a team or player comes out of
nowhere to surprise and do better than we expected. This year that team is
probably the New York Islanders, and Calgary Flames forward Elias Lindholm
would be an example of one of the players. Sometimes, though, they do not quite
reach those expectations. This is about those players. Follow along as we take
a quick look at every NHL team's biggest disappointment so far during the
2018-19 season.
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS: JACK JOHNSON
There were a lot of contenders for this title early in the
season, ranging from Derick Brassard, to Daniel Sprong, to Carl Hagelin ... but
all of them have already been traded. That leaves their big offseason
acquisition, defenseman Jack Johnson. The Penguins front office and coaching
staff are going to great lengths to boost him up, but the on-ice results paint
an ugly picture and they still have him signed for another four seasons beyond
this one.
ANAHEIM DUCKS: RICKARD RAKELL
Everything has been a struggle for the Anaheim Ducks this
season, from major injuries, to the coaching situation, to the flawed roster.
All of it added up together has resulted in a bitterly disappointing season
that has left them near the bottom of the Western Conference standings, even
after a strong start that was almost entirely due to the play of their goalies,
John Gibson and Ryan Miller. One of the bigger disappointments up front has
probably been the production of Rickard Rakell. Coming off of back-to-back
30-goal seasons that made him one of the league's most underrated goal-scorers,
his production has fallen off substantially this season at a time when the
Ducks needed him to be better than ever. He is still a great player with an
outstanding future in the league, but this has been a tough year for him and
the Ducks.
ARIZONA COYOTES: ANTTI RAANTA
Antti Raanta has been the victim of bad luck, and that is
the disappointing thing. After years of being a backup in Chicago and New York,
Raanta finally got a chance to be a starter with the Arizona Coyotes a year ago
and was absolutely sensational when he played. The Coyotes were a different
team with him in the lineup and looked like they might even be able to be a
surprise playoff contender if he could stay healthy this season and play at
that level all year. Unfortunately, he has not been able to stay healthy and
will miss all by 12 games this season. He has a chance to be a difference-maker
for the Coyotes, but he has not been able to stay on the ice.
BOSTON BRUINS: DAVID BACKES
Given his age and the style of game he plays there was
always a risk for the Bruins in signing David Backes for five years and $30
million and this season they are starting to see why. After some steady decline
over the past few years, everything has plummeted for him this season with just
five goals and nine assists through 49 games. Maybe this isn't a disappointment
if you were critical of the signing when it originally happened, but if the
Bruins were expecting this they almost certainly wouldn't have been confident
enough to give him such a deal.
BUFFALO SABRES: TAGE THOMPSON
When the Buffalo Sabres traded Ryan O'Reilly to the St.
Louis Blues over the offseason they went for a return of quantity over quality.
Tage Thompson was probably the best long-term asset they received, and so far
he really has not stood out as anything more than just a decent prospect. That
is a problem for the Sabres. Vladimir Sobotka and Patrik Berglund were never
going to be anything more than short-term roster-filler, and the draft picks
are going to be maybe 50-50 shots to even produce an NHLer, let alone a good
one. That puts a lot of pressure on Thompson to make the trade worth it, and so
far that has not yet happened. He has flashed some potential for sure, but the
production is not yet there.
CALGARY FLAMES: MIKE SMITH
When the Calgary Flames acquired Mike Smith before the
2017-18 season they probably did not anticipate him losing playing time to
David Rittich less than two years later. But that is kind of what has happened
this season as Smith's play has deteriorated to the point where Rittich had an
opportunity to step in and seize the job. Fortunately for the Flames he has
been up to the task because they probably would not be in the position they are
in in the standings without him.
CAROLINA HURRICANES: DOUGIE HAMILTON
After the season he had a year ago in Calgary I feel like
more was expected out of him arriving in Carolina. Make no mistake: He has been
good. His possession numbers are still among the best in the league, he is
still a top-pairing defender, but the production has slipped a bit and he is
probably not going to match what he did a year ago. Still think this is going
to work out in Carolina, but he may have been victim of some unreachable
expectations based on what he did a year ago.
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS: CHRIS KUNITZ
He didn't cost them much, but the Chicago Blackhawks were
obviously hoping to squeeze something out of Chris Kunitz as a veteran addition
to their lineup. A four-time Stanley Cup champion that had scored 13 goals and
recorded 29 points for the Tampa Bay Lightning a year ago, he has tallied just
a single goal and three assists in his first 36 games this season.
COLORADO AVALANCHE: PHILIPP GRUBAUER
Not even one year ago Philipp Grubauer entered the Stanley
Cup Playoffs as the Game 1 starting goalie for the eventual Stanley Cup
champion Washington Capitals. Obviously he ended up losing that spot to
long-time starter Braden Holtby, but it showed just how far he had come in his
development and what the team thought of him. The Colorado Avalanche had big
plans for him, too, when they traded for him and signed him to a new contract
to hopefully be their long-term solution in net, but he has been one of the
least productive goalies in the league this season and has seen his play badly
regress. Projecting goalies is an exercise in failure, and the Avalanche are
finding out just how difficult that can be.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS: SERGEI BOBROVSKY
Sergei Bobrovsky is a two-time Vezina Trophy winner, has
been one of the best goalies in the league since joining the Columbus Blue
Jackets, and was entering a huge year for himself in trying to prove his worth
in a contract season. All he has done this season is put together one of the
worst single season performances of his career at what is perhaps the worst
possible time. His play is one of the reasons an otherwise strong Blue Jackets
team is on the playoff bubble instead of firmly in a postseason position. Given
his age there is a huge risk in giving him a long-term contract after this
season, but you can bet that somebody is going to do it.
DALLAS STARS: VALERI NICHUSHKIN
Before he departed for the KHL a few years ago Valeri
Nichushkin looked like he had a chance to be a pretty solid NHL forward. The
potential was certainly there for it, anyway. His return to the NHL and the
Dallas Stars has, well, not been encouraging. In his first 42 games this season
he has managed just seven assists and zero goals while getting just a little
more than 12 minutes of ice-time per night. He is on the books for nearly $3
million both this season and next season.
DETROIT RED WINGS: JUSTIN ABDELKADER
Justin Abdelkader is three years into a seven-year contract
that contains a no-trade clause and has scored just five goals in 61 games this
season. The shocking thing about the Detroit Red Wings' situation is they were
one of the worst teams in the league but still have one of the oldest rosters
and, for now, one of the worst salary cap outlooks. It has been an impressive
run of mismanagement to get them in this position and contracts like the one
given to Abelkader are a prime example of where things went wrong in recent
years. Fortunately they have finally started to turn the page on a rebuild, but
still have a long way to go with it before they can become a factor in the
Stanley Cup discussion again.
EDMONTON OILERS: JESSE PULJUJARVI
Pick a player that isn't Connor McDavid, Leon Drasaitl, or
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins. Any player. Any of them could fit here. It has been a
terrible season for an Oilers franchise that is headed for another non-playoff
year despite having the best player in the world, has already fired another
head coach, another general manager, and seems to have no short-term hope of
building anything meaningful around McDavid. Cam Talbot could have been the
option here, but he was already traded. Jesse Puljujarvi looks to be the latest
top draft pick this team is going to ruin, so that puts him in the
disappointment spot, even if I'm not entirely sure it is his fault. They have
had no idea how to use him or any concrete plan for his development. Just a bad
situation for everybody involved.
FLORIDA PANTHERS: ROBERTO LUONGO
Perhaps age has finally caught up to him. Roberto Luongo is
a Hall of Famer (he should be, anyway) and has been one of the best goalies of
his era and until this season had still been playing at an impressively high
level for a goalie in his late 30s. But father time eventually comes for
everyone. The goaltending duo of Luongo and James Reimer has been a point of
concern for the Panthers all season and has opened the door for them to
possibly make a run at Sergei Bobrovsky this offseason. That means one of the
two goalies already under contact will have to almost certainly be on the
move.
LOS ANGELES KINGS: ILYA KOVALCHUK
The Los Angeles Kings were hoping that Ilya Kovalchuk's
return to the NHL could jumpstart a lackluster and dull offense. It has not.
The Kings are just as dull offensively as they've ever been (maybe even worse)
and the first year of Kovalchuk's three-year, $18 million contract has resulted
in only 13 goals and 28 total points through his first 50 games. Trading him
might be the best for both sides as it would allow the now-rebuilding Kings to
shed some future salary on another aging player, and it might allow Kovalchuk
to get a fresh start on a team that might play better to his strengths.
MINNESOTA WILD: VICTOR RASK
Yes, he has only been with the team for about a month, but
it's not so much about the player himself, but what the player represents. Rask
was already mired in a terrible season with the Carolina Hurricanes when the
Wild acquired him by sending Nino Neiderreiter the other way. In doing so they
sold low on a player that had been one of their best in recent years for a
player that simply does not score. All that has happened since the trade is
Niederreiter has rediscovered his scoring touch in Carolina and Rask has
continued to provide next to nothing of value on the score sheet. That one is
going to sting for a while in Minnesota.
MONTREAL CANADIENS: KARL ALZNER
It almost has to be Karl Alzner just because of the
financial commitment the Montreal Canadiens made to him and how little they
have gotten out of it. It was always a questionable signing at the time; just
due to the term and money for a player that had already started to clearly slow
down. In just the second year of the contract he has appeared in only nine
games this season at the NHL level, has been placed on waivers, and clearly has
little to no future with the team.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS: KYLE TURRIS
Kyle Turris was another one of general manager David Poile's
big trade scores and was instantly signed to a long-term contract to be a part
of the team's core. When healthy he is an outstanding player that can really
booth a contender's depth down the middle. But injuries have limited him this
season and his production has not quite been up to his normal career level when
he has been on the ice. He has another level he can get to and if the Predators
are going to get back to a Stanley Cup level they are going to need him to find
it.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS: PAVEL ZACHA
It is starting to look as if it is never going to happen for
Pavel Zacha with the New Jersey Devils. And by "it" I mean becoming
an impact player. He has already set a new career high in goals, but in more
than 193 games over parts of four seasons the Devils have just 27 goals (as of
Feb. 20) from a player they used a No. 6 overall pick on. That is not good
enough.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: ANTHONY BEAUVILLIER
Pretty much everyone on the New York Islanders has exceeded
expectations this season, but if we are looking for one young player that has
regressed a tad it might be Anthony Beauvillier. After scoring 20 goals in his
first full-time season in the NHL a year ago, when he was one of the few bright
spots on the team, his production has dropped in year two. He is still a
talented player that figures to be a part of the Islanders' future, but you can
definitely count this season as him falling victim to the sophomore slump. At
least a little bit.
NEW YORK RANGERS: KEVIN SHATTENKIRK
It seems like the entire Kevin Shattenkirk experience in New
York has been a disappointment. He was once one of the top offensive
blue-liners in the league and a tremendous all-around player. A legitimate
top-pairing defender. But his play has really declined over the past couple of
years. He is down to just 18 minutes per night this season and he only has two
goals on the season. He was at one time in his career a near lock for
double-digits every year from the blue line.
OTTAWA SENATORS: MAGNUS PAAJARVI
This is a hard one because the entire team is just
fulfilling expectations by being the worst in the league ... but the top
players have all been good and the young players have taken a big step forward.
Magnus Paajarvi has probably been one of the least productive regulars on the
team with almost no offensive production, some of the worst possession numbers,
and a minus-19 mark that is worst among the team's forwards.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS: IVAN PROVOROV
Ivan Provorov hasn't necessarily been bad, but he has
probably taken a step back. At least in terms of his production. After leading
all NHL defenders in goal scored a year ago with 17, he is down to just six
through his first 61 games this season while his possession numbers have taken
a bit of a drop. He still figures to be a long-term core piece of the Flyers'
rebuild, but he took a small step back this year.
SAN JOSE SHARKS: MARTIN JONES
Martin Jones has never been one of the best goalies in the
league, but ever since arriving in San Jose he has already been solid with
moments of brilliance mixed in. None of that has been the case this season. He
is fighting through one of the worst seasons of his career and is currently the
weak link on an otherwise loaded Sharks team. They don't need him to be a
game-stealer; they just need him to be someone that doesn't lose it. Goalie
still seems to be the obvious position the Sharks should look to address at the
trade deadline.
ST. LOUIS BLUES: JAKE ALLEN
For most of the first half the St. Louis Blues, as a team,
were one of the biggest overall disappointments in the league, and at the
center of that was a black hole in net. Jake Allen was supposed to take over
the top spot after Carter Hutton left for Buffalo in free agency but struggled
mightily in the role. He has since lost the job, at least for now, to rookie
Jordan Binnington who has helped turn around the Blues' season.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING: RYAN CALLAHAN
We are really grasping at straws to find a disappointment on
the Tampa Bay Lightning. This is one of the best teams the NHL has seen in
years, at least based on their current pace, and nearly everyone is playing at
an incredibly high level. Ryan Callahan has a big contract, has missed some
time, and just has not produced much when he has been in the lineup so he is
probably the closest thing to a disappointment that there is ... even if his
production is probably about what you might expect from him at this point in
his career.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS: WILLIAM NYLANDER
Do not get used to this, because this is not going to last.
After sitting out most of the first half of the season as an unsigned
restricted free agent, William Nylander finally signed a long-term contract
with the team to remain a part of its core moving forward. It has taken him
some time to get back up to speed this season. He had a miserably slow start
that brought on a ton of criticism, but he has started to pick it up as of
late. He is too good of a player to stay down this long, but the Maple Leafs
really have not gotten much out of him this season for multiple reasons.
Imagine how good they could be when he starts to produce like he has before
this season.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS: LOUI ERIKSSON
Maybe expectations shouldn't have been very high. But the
Vancouver Canucks invested a ton of money in Loui Eriksson three years ago and
have not received much of a return on that investment. He has missed a lot of
time due to injury over the previous two years, and now that he is finally
healthy this season the production just has not been there. That is the risk
you run in free agency when you spend big money on a player that has already
played their best hockey for somebody else.
VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS: REILLY SMITH
A lot of regression was expected from this team in year two,
and it has happened on both the individual and team level. One of the most
notable examples has been the drop in production from Reilly Smith, one of the
driving forces behind their improbable Stanley Cup Final run a season ago. His
entire career has been a hot-and-cold, hit-and-miss run of seasons where he
seems to alternate great years with ordinary years. This has been one of the
ordinary years.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS: ANDRE BURAKOVSKY
After a strong postseason showing in helping the Washington
Capitals win their first ever Stanley Cup, big things were expected from Andre
Burakovsky this season. It simply has not played out that way for him or the
team. He has found himself in the dog house on more than occasion and his name
has constantly been floating around on the trade block. He is still young
enough and talented enough to make an impact at some point, but it just has not
happened yet.
WINNIPEG JETS: PATRIK LAINE
This is a bold choice because he is still on pace to score
more than 30 goals this season, maybe even make a push at 35, but this probably
is not the season the Winnipeg Jets expected from one of the game's young
stars. Through his first 60 games all of his production is down across the
board (goals, assists, and points) but there is a good sign mixed in there: His
shot numbers have actually gone up, indicating that maybe he's just been snake
bit a little this season with some bad shooting luck. Either way, this is a
player that was thought to be a contender for the goal-scoring crown this year and
he is not even anywhere near the top.
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