Sunday, February 28, 2016

CCHL Final Awards by Silvio!

CCHL Season Awards – one GM’s view

Hello back sports fans, this is final edition of the CCHL Season Awards.  It has been a great year with lots of wonderful stories!  Congratulations to all of the playoff teams and good luck to all of the non-playoff teams in working towards building a better team in the offseason.  Let's take a look at the top 3 candidates for each award, as conceived by this writer!

President's Trophy

Dayton Musicmen – Was there any doubt?  The Musicmen were the class act of the season, with one of the best seasons in CCHL history.  The surprise is the #2 team which is…

Reykjavic Puffin – The Puffin were the hottest team in the last quarter of the season, winning an amazing 19 in a row.  GM Wolter has a scary offense which will strike fear into their opponents

Calgary Chinook – The Chinook were tied for the second best record with the Puffin and had the second best defense behind Dayton.  Wonderful story in Calgary.  Can that defense make noise in the playoffs?

Hart Trophy

Jason Spezza (DAY) – Jason led the league in points, while leading Musicmen to the Presidents Trophy!
Carey Price (CGY) – Carey was a very close second in the voting, putting up some of the best numbers for a goalie in a while!
PK Subban (REK) – It’s amazing to think about the offense of the Puffin and it’s quarterbacked by the best dman in the CCHL.

Norris Trophy

PK Subban (REK) – PK cemented his status as the best defenseman while rocketing up the charts in the second half of the season, having scored 11 more points than…
John Carlson (DAY) – With so much offense in Dayton, it’s hard to have enough to go around but John was the sparkplug in that engine.
Justin Faulk (MIN) - the young blueliner had a very strong year for the Minnesota and helped them maintain their standing after veterans Parise and Carter were traded.

Vezina Trophy

Carey Price (CGY) – While Dubnyk had a lower GAA, he split the goaltending duties with Andrew Hammond.  Carey Price was an absolute workhorse, playing in a mind boggling 80 games!
Devan Dubnyk (DAY) – Dubnyk had an amazing year and one has to wonder if some of his amazing numbers were due to playing behind a stacked team.  Either way, what a great season for Dubnyk.
Craig Anderson (FOR) – Craig was a key acquisition for the Falcons, as he backstopped them to a playoff run.

Jennings Trophy

Devan Dubnyk (DAY)
Andrew Hammond (DAY)
Carey Price (CLG)

Calder Trophy (not on last year's disk)

Andrew Hammond (DAY) - the young netminder had an amazing GAA of 1.61!  What an awesome season.
Johnny Gaudreau (CLG) - the young sniper ended the year with a glimpse of the amazing future for the Flames.  Johnny had 47 points in 82 games.
Aaron Ekblad (HAM) – Unfortunately, Ekblad could not hold on to his early lead for this trophy, struggling in the second half of the season with only 12 points in the last 33 games.  I’m sure we will see much more from young Aaron!

Selke Trophy

Jason Spezza (DAY) - this high scoring center led all forwards with a phenomenal +82 rating!
Tomas Tatar (DAY) – the youngster rocketed up the charts and had an amazing +76 rating.
Tyler Seguin (DAY) – Tyler completes the sweep of this category by the Musicmen

Art Ross Trophy

Jason Spezza (DAY) – The Hart Trophy winner led the league with 115 points!
Tyler Johnson (DAY) – In any other year, Tyler would have won this with 110 points, but this was an ultra-talented Dayton team.
Vladimir Tarasenko (REK) – I think we are just starting to see the tip of the iceberg with this talented youngster, finishing with 109 points!

Rocket Richard Trophy

Corey Perry (GEO) – Corey “team MVP” Perry barely beat out the hot Tarasenko with 59 goals!
Vladimir Tarasenko (REK) – Vlad was a force to be reckoned with in the second half of the year, finishing with 58 goals.
Tyler Seguin (DAY) – Tyler cemented the “Taylor or Tyler” debate with his best season, scoring 52 goals.

GM of the Year

Bill Corfield (DAY) – It’s hard to argue with success and GM Corfield had a lot of it this year.  His shrewd trades positioned the Musicmen with the talent to have one of the best seasons in CCHL history!  Can they finish it off with a title?
Chris Wolter (REK) – GM Wolter deserves second place for how he has built this team and made smart moves to improve his team’s defensive abilities to go along with his juggernaut offense!
Eugene Yip (CGY) – GM Yip built one of the best defenses in the league all while having a strong crop of youngsters ready to step in!  Could this be the beginning of a potential dynasty for Calgary if they win the Cup?

Halifax Year End Review



General Manager Rob Williams addresses the media and season ticket holders...

It's been a tough year for fans of the Hammerheads too say the least , but with five 1st round draft picks and two 2nd round draft picks and the emergence of a young defense and a couple prospects that will step into the line-up next season , things will improve . With a defense that has Cody Ceci, Ollie Maatta, B.Dillon, Damon Severson, Simon Despres and Alex Petrovic (average age 23 ). Three good young goalies in Kinkaid, Hutton and Bernier with Demko in the minors things look promising in goal. 

Up front Williams will try to up-grade the scoring ( thru draft picks and trades ). Ribeiro will be a Hammerhead for another year to help bring the kids along. Huberdeau , Killorn , Perron and Wilson should all see a bigger role next season. Youngsters Panarin and Virtanen should step in and help with the offense. Prust , Holland and Z.Smith  will all be back playing 3rd and 4th line minutes . The future of this team rest with the scouts as this is a big draft year . GM Williams promises a very good draft as our scouts have covered every league you could think of .

Stay tune and get ready for the draft .

First Round Playoff Preview...

CCHL Playoff Preview:  Round 1 Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep

The regular season in the CCHL has come and gone, and with apologies to the Christmas season, the most wonderful time of year is upon us!  I’m talking CCHL playoff hockey baby!  We all want to know what’s going to happen and unfortunately since I couldn’t get TSN’s Maggie the Monkey to tell us (apparently she’s retired from hockey prognosticating), I’ll do my best to give you an idea of what to expect.

We’ll start in the Canosa Conference where the defending champions find themselves in an unexpected first round appearance.

Long Island (41-33-8) vs. Minnesota (53-24-5)

It’s hard to imagine Minnesota would have finished with over 50 wins having dealt Carter and Parise, but this team still had enough offensive ability to score 330 goals, good for third in the league.
While Minnesota scored a whopping 67 more goals than the Long Island Express, defensively they are relatively close with Minnesota only seven goals better on the defensive side of the puck.  This Norseman team likes to deploy the offense, so Long Island will need to avoid getting into a run and gun type of series with the Norsemen.

Voracek and Kessel both did more than anyone thought possible of them this season, and posted career high numbers in the CCHL.  Voracek’s 94 points and 131 penalty minutes made him the big power forward many expected him to be when he was drafted.  Justin Faulk has been outstanding as well, chipping in 76 points and was second on the team in plus minus.

Robert Luongo has a bit of a bounce back season for Minnesota, but his .913 save percentage must be better in this series if he is going to take on Henrik Lundqvist and out play him in goal.  Lundqvist had a rather pedestrian .915 save percentage this season, by his standards at least, but will be a significant factor in determining what happens in this series.  It is quite possible that he could win this series by himself for Long Island if he gets hot and turns into a wall in front of the Express net.
The big challenge for Long Island in this series will be whether or not they can score enough to get past the Norsemen.  Aside from the big Tavares, Landeskog and Callahan line, the scoring drops off dramatically from there.  Tavares set a career high in points this season with 99, and led the team in goals.  Although Tavares led the Express into round two last season, he is still relatively unproven and critics will still question his ability to elevate his game unless Long Island have a long playoff run.

This should be an interesting series but at the end of the day, I just don’t see Long Island having enough offense to get past Minnesota.  King Henrik will play good but he can’t score the goals.

Prediction:  Minnesota in 5 games.  

Victoria (46-25-11) vs. Copenhagen (52-23-7)

This could a wild series.  Victoria and Copenhagen could be the best fourth and fifth seeds we’ll ever see a series; both could easily have been teams that receive a first round bye most years.  This year however is not most years; and they will meet in a battle of really good teams in the first round.
Victoria is one of the best road teams in the league (25-12-4) so being on the road to start, likely won’t both the Ronin a whole lot.

Sidney Crosby, Jamie Benn, Rick Nash and Wayne Simmonds all light it up offensively for Victoria this season.  Crosby was fifth in league scoring while both Simmonds and Nash dented the twine forty plus times for GM Paul Canosa’s team. Victoria is also solid defensively with Myers, Suter and Hamonic eating up the majority of the minutes for the Ronin.  This group is pretty underrated defensively, as they surrendered fewer goals against than Copenhagen despite the star studded group the Crusaders boast.

It’s hard to believe a group with Weber, Keith, Seabrook, Bouwmeester and Hedman would be tied for sixth best in goals against, however goaltender Semyon Varlamov had a save percentage of just .912 this season. Copenhagen are still solid up front, with a veteran forward group that was bolstered by the additions of Datsyuk and Parise in mid-season trades.  This is a group that already had Kopitar, Stamkos, Getzlaf and Iginla – a group of winners.

The key to the series in my eyes is the special team’s battle that could take place.  Copenhagen was third best on the powerplay this season at 23.3%, while Victoria struggled all season on the penalty kill finishing 14th in the league in that category.  At 81.5% on the penalty kill, Victoria were allowing one goal against every five penalties given to them, and that could make this a very tough series to win against the defending champs.

I’m going to say that’s the biggest factor in this series, and along with the playoff experiences of the champion Crusaders, I’ll take them to win this series.  It’ll be a tough series, but I think Copenhagen will be just a little bit too much for the Ronin this season.

Prediction:  Copenhagen in 6 games.  

Now we’ll move over to the Corfield Conference and look at the first round series’ in that group.

Seattle (43-35-4) vs. Niagara (48-24-10)

This is an interesting series and one that sees the physical Niagara club take on team based on smarts and skill in Seattle.

Niagara is a team built for the playoffs.  They are good defensively and have one of the game’s best leaders in Jonathan Toews up front.  They also have players like Hossa, Backes, Couture and leading scorer Nick Foligno who are all very physical players that are defensively responsible.  When you add in Dustin Byfuglien and Drew Doughty on the back end, this is a team that nobody wants to face in the playoffs given how physical they are as a group. Pekka Rinne is the man between the pipes for Niagara, with an impressive .917 save percentage this season for the Thunder. Rinne is a giant of a man in net, and could easily win this series along for Niagara if he were to get hot as well.

On the other side of the coin, Seattle are a disciplined team and do not take a lot of penalties.  This discipline will be put to the test in this series, as the Reign must skate away and not retaliate against the Thunder who like to mix it up physically at all points in the game. Malkin and Bergeron will be put to the test in this series, as Niagara will likely use the last change to get Toews out as much as possible against Malkin. The secondary scoring of Seattle will need to rise to the occasion, with 30 goal scorers Zucker and Abdelkader looking to transition that regular season success into playoff success.  Both players are still relatively young, so it remains to be seen if they can duplicate that success when the hockey becomes defensively tighter.

Corey Crawford will draw the starting assignment for Seattle in this series, despite not really having a great regular season by his standards.  His 2.97goals against average and .909 save percentage are not numbers that he would be proud of, so look for Crawford to try to elevate his game in this series.
At the end of the day, Niagara will be too physically demanding to play against for the smaller Reign team.  As a result, I would expect Niagara to take this series despite spending a lot of time in the penalty box.

Prediction:  Niagara in 6 games

Winnipeg (42-32-8) vs. Fort Erie (43-32-7) 

There isn’t much separating these teams in the standings, but they are two teams headed in very opposite directions to start the second season.

Winnipeg enter this series having won four of their past ten games, while the Falcons from Fort Erie are flying high having won eight out of ten, and six in a row to end the season. The season seemed to change for the better for the Falcons after acquiring Jeff Carter from the Minnesota Norsemen, with Carter bringing some big game scoring to the Falcons; a presence they lacked all season long up until that deal.

Fort Erie also boasts Turris and near senior citizen Jaromir Jagr, who both joined Carter in scoring over 80 points. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins appears to have taken a giant step forward this season as well, scoring over 70 points while being a plus 12.

A mid-season move by GM Matt Young also saw Dougie Hamilton added to the defensive group, and Hamilton helped the powerplay immediately upon his arrival.  His 60 points ranks him seventh in scoring amongst defensemen as well, and was a +30 for Fort Erie after his arrival from Boston.
Winnipeg are led by a solid top four forward group of Steen, Ladd, Wheeler and Mark Stone.  All of these players posted at least 70 points on the campaign, while Spurgeon led the defense with 46 points. Ladd and Wheeler both had 100 penalty minutes this season, and Winnipeg will need them to stay out of the box if they are going to advance beyond this series.  Both players are too important to have on the ice, and with them in the box, it would give Fort Erie’s much improved powerplay a chance to work against the league’s ninth best penalty kill. That could be a turning point in the series, so it will be interesting to see if Ladd and Wheeler can stay on the ice and out of the box.

In evaluating the goaltending in this series, Fort Erie appears to have the edge provided Craig Anderson stays healthy.  Anderson could be the most unheralded goaltender in the CCHL this season, with his 2.23 GAA and .926 save percentage.  Many wonder just how good Fort Erie would have been without him in their net this season. Winnipeg will likely lean on Hutchinson for the majority of this series, with his .911 save percentage and half a goal per game against better than Pavelec.
At the end of the day, this series could come down to who has home ice advantage and the last change.  With similar records at home and on the road, there isn’t much difference between these teams.  While both teams having winning road records, there is a big difference between how effective they are on the road and at home. Winnipeg is only being three games over .500 on the road, while Fort Erie are a mere four games over .500 on the road.  If there is something that could determine the series, it’s just that so I have to take the team with home ice advantage

Prediction:  Fort Erie in 7 games.

There you have it folks, my first round predictions are complete.  Hope you enjoy the first round and I’ll be back with my round two predictions as soon as the match-ups are determined.


About the author:
Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep has been a CCHL columnist since December of 2015.  When he’s not watching hockey or eating chicken wings, he can be found at local karaoke competitions performing his world famous rendition of ‘Baby Got Back’.  Dick knows what he knows and won’t stray from that.  Enjoy reading Dick’s semi-regular column here when he posts it.  


Hamilton says goodbye to players and 15-16, looks forward to future...

AP Hamilton:

The atmosphere in the bowels of Copps Coliseum is particularly sombre as the Tigers clear out their lockers.  There are a few small jokes and a couple smiles but as a whole the guys just want to go home after yet another disappointing season.  Posted on the big black board are lists of players that GM Taylor wants to speak to before they leave.

Deryk Engelland, Kyle Quincey, Steve Ott, Brendan Morrow, Travis Moen,  & Geoff Lupul troop along one by one for their hand shakes and best wishes on their future endeavors.  Taylor will of course try to trade these guys but they know they won't be back in black and gold next season.  In the case of Lupul the team will exercise their buy-out option on him.

Once that older group has departed Taylor then meets with 5 youngsters and one older player.  Matt Fraser, Mike Latta, Eric Gelinas, Brandon Gormley, Greg Pateryn & Brian Boyle are told that the team will attempt to move them to a place where their talents can shine.  There are simply too many prospects and not enough roster spots for everyone.

Next Taylor calls in Evander Kane, Jonathan Drouin, Kari Lehtonen, Nazem Kadri, Lars Eller, Nick Cousins, Quinton Howden Mark Pysyk, Curtis Lazar, Stefan Matteau, Mike Chaput, Seth Griffith, Justin Fontaine & Kevin Connauton get read the off season training riot act and are told this upcoming season will be their last chance.

Once that group is gone Taylor is left with his young core. Ryan Spooner, Kevin Hayes, Bo Horvat, Tanner Kero, Darcy Kuemper, Andrei Vasilevskiy, Nathan Beaulieu, Ryan Murray, Mark Boroweicki, Boone Jenner, Max Domi, Joe Blandisi, Darnell Nurse, Nathan MacKinnon, Joel Armia, Logan Shaw and John Marchessault.  This group which will make up most of the 16-17 starting roster also gets a lecture about off season training and is then sent off into the world.  The next few years should be very interesting for the players management and fans in tropical Hamilton Ontario.

Jenner
Spooner
MacKinnon
Domi
Horvat
Lazar
Kane
Hayes
Donskoi
Howden
Kadri
Fontaine










Murray
Lehtonen
Ekblad
Beaulieu
Vasilevskiy
Dumba
Borowiecki
Kuemper
Nurse

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Regular Season Ends, Playoffs Start Tomorrow!

The 2015-16 CCHL Regular Season has ended and the playoffs begin tomorrow. (Sunday).

A few notes..

* I don't create special playoff datafiles....playoff teams should continue to submit lines as they wish until they are eliminated or crowned champion...

*The Puffin finished with a 19 game winning streak. The last team to beat REK was Georgetown back on January 20th. That's 39 days ago... Wow! Way to heat up for the playoffs, Chris! Congrats!

*We've set ANOTHER record for the most lines submitted ever with 1057, which is 17 more than last year's record. Each team averaged 48.05 lines sent in. The top team? MIN and FOR tied for the msot profiles with 92. That's awesome as is our continued streak of seeing a higher level of involvement. Thank You!

*More thanks are extended as for the first time that I can remember, we have ZERO overuse violations!

*Remember two days are ticked off daily during the playoffs, not just one for injuries...

*Please be mindful of how many games your goalies are allowed to be used during a playoff series. That detailed info can be found in the rules, Section Q.

*The playoff links for playoff results, injuries, scoring leaders, team rankings, team stats, etc.. have been added to the league homepage, just under the datafiles link on the top left of the page.

Thanks for another fantastic season, good luck to all the playoff teams!

Bill

Sunday, February 21, 2016

Seattle Brew #5 A look at the playoff races as we head into the last week of the season...

After the games of Febraury 20th and with just 1 week remaining in the regular season all the
participants for the 2015-16 CCHL playoffs are known. Which teams will be playing which is still a
jumbled mess in one conference while things are just a little hazy in the other so here is how things
stand as the season winds down.

CANOSA Conference

REK – 109 points, 1st place, 1st Rd Bye - Games remaining (4) – Home (2) vs MTL & VIC - Road (2) at SPR & SIB

Remaining opponents winning % .380

Highest scoring and currently the hottest team are in prime position to hold on to 1 of the top 2 seeds in the Conference and both season series against Copenhagen and Minnesota.

COP - 109 points, 2nd place, 1st Rd Bye – Games remaining (3) – Home (1) vs VIC – Road (2) at HAM & GEO

Remaining opponents winning % .513

Defending champs have a tough task to guarantee a 1st Rd bye as they lose both tie-breakers in season series to Minnesota and Reykjavik so they need to win out or hope either of those other teams stumble.

MIN - 107 points, 3rd place, 1st Rd vs LIE – Games remaining (3) – Home (0) – Road (3) at ISL, SPR & MTL

Remaining opponents winning % .380

Minnesota will need to be like Mad Max as all 3 games are away from the land of 10,000 lakes. There is also a chance that they could finish in 4th place if they fail to get a couple of wins.

GEO - 104 points, 4th place, 1st Rd vs VIC – Games remaining (4) – Home (2) vs COP & HAM – Road (2) at SAN & MTL

Remaining opponents winning % .414

If the Millers finish strong they could find themselves with a 1st Rd Bye, although they would need to beat Copenhagen in the final game between the two and get some help. If they really struggle in the final week they may drop into 5th place and start the playoffs on the road.

VIC - 99 points, 5th place, 1st Rd at VIC – Games remaining (4) – Home (2) vs SIB & SAN – Road (2) at REK & COP

Remaining opponents winning % .522

Victoria is almost certainly going to finish in 5th place and be travelling to start the playoffs. However if 4th place Georgetown sputters in their final quartet of games Victoria could slip into 4th and host the Millers in the 1st Rd. Victoria won the season series against Georgetown (3-1-2).

ISL – 84 points, 6th place, 1st Rd at MIN.

The Express are locked in as the 6th seed but they are invited to the big dance but in which city they will be on night 1 of the playoffs is not quite set. They may still not know where to book their flight to until the last day of the season.

SAN, MTL, SPR, SIB & HAM have all booked their tee times and have begun planning their moves for the 2016-17 CCHL season

CORFIELD Conference

DAY – 130 points, 1st place, 1st Rd Bye.

The Musicmen will rest up and await their 2nd Rd opponent knowing they have home ice throughout the playoffs as they have clinched 1st overall in the CCHL

CGY – 110 points, 2nd place, 1st Rd Bye – Games remaining (4) – Home (2) vs WPG & BOS – Road (2) at DAY & POR

Remaining opponents winning % .490

The Chinook only need 1 point in their final 4 games or Niagara Falls to lose or tie one of their remaining games to clinch the 1st Rd Bye that finishing in 2nd place grants. Will the Day 148 matchup against Dayton be a preview of the Corfield Final?

NIA – 102 points, 3rd place, 1st Rd vs FOR – Games remaining (4) – Home (2) vs WIS & DAY – Road (2) at SEA & HAL

Remaining opponents winning % .510

The Thunder are almost locked into the 3rd place spot with just an infinitesimal chance to move up to 2nd place. Who they host in the 1st Round is not quite known yet so they will have to play a wait and see game and maybe rest a few players.

WPG – 90 points, 4th place, 1st Rd vs SEA – Games remaining (3) – Home (2) vs LNZ & DAY – Road (1) at CGY

Remaining opponents winning % .673

A big win in game 79 against Seattle provided Winnipeg with a bit of cushion over the Reign and Fort Erie. Considering how tough their final trifecta of games are having that cushion may be just what was need to hold onto 4th place and beginning the playoffs at home.

SEA – 86 points, 5th place, 1st Rd at WPG – Games remaining (4) – Home (2) vs NIA & POR – Road (2) at LNZ & FOR

Remaining opponents winning % .482

The Reign will finish somewhere from 4th to 6th however they lost the season series to Winnipeg and won the season series against Fort Erie but the Falcons host the Reign on the final day of the season and that may hold the fate of the playoff seedings of 3 teams.

FOR – 85 points, 6th place, 1st Rd at NIA – Games remaining (4) – Home (2) vs POR & SEA – Road (2) at BOS & HAL

Remaining opponents winning % .342

The Falcons are looking to move up a ranking or 2 for the 1st round of the playoffs and the schedule is a favorable one. If the Ferrets struggle and Fort Erie find themselves within striking distance of Winnipeg and Seattle their final home game against the Reign may be the springboard for the Falcons to make another long playoff run.

LNZ, WIS, BOS, POR & HAL are preparing to pack up their lockers at the end of the week as the teams will look forward to making strides towards the playoffs in the 2016-17 CCHL season.