Okay, so we can't beat the Coyotes, but we have the Sabres' number.
--We won the game, but the Sabres won the Dahlin Derby, or this round of it anyway.
--Alex Galchenyuk can't buy a break. He committed the mortal sin of scoring a goal when we were leading 1-0. Thus giving us the worst lead in hockey, the dreaded two-goal lead.
--I barely saw Nathan Beaulieu. Not that I was searching for him, maybe he had a steady, no-crisis game. But he's not taken the step we dreaded he might in Buffalo, where he becomes an effective puck-moving Top 4 defenceman.
I'd still take him on our team though, over Jordie Benn, Brandon Davidson, Joe Morrow, or (nearly) 6 Million Dollar Man Karl Alzner.
--Carey is going to (mess with our stuff) if he keeps this up. He'll get us a dozen or two meaningless points that will only (mess) with our draft ranking. Blast his cool, smooth, effortless goaltending style. Not a Charlie Lindgren bobble rebound. Not one instance when he swam in his crease with his back to the shooter à la Mike Condon.
--It bears repeating that Nicolas Deslauriers made a name for himself in the LHJMQ as a defenceman. He said last night on l'Antichambre that he was an offensive defenceman who never fought, it just never came up since it wasn't his role. He figured out that he'd need to fight, more often than he expected, if he was to stick in the NHL.
I first found this out on a Québec blog, from the same guy who follows the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies and who had a major man-crush on Sven Andrighetto, well before he was drafted by the Canadiens. That blogger has described Nicolas Deslauriers as a "dominant" defenceman while he played for the Huskies, which I have to believe is a stretch, a misuse of the word 'dominant', but still.
--Jakub Jerabek has looked decent so far, certainly more noteworthy than Joe Morrow or Brandon Davidson.
--Anti Niemmi should get a couple more starts, to ease Carey in, and give Al Montoya all the time he needs, and then a month beyond that. Hopefully Mr. Niemmi can show some good performances, and we can flip him down the road to another team in need of a backup for another conditional fifth or thereabouts.
--I know low-round picks have a very low chance of amounting to anything, and at the same time, we have unrealistic expectations of what a fifth-rounder can be because of Brendan Gallagher, but the secret in my mind is to have plenty of these picks. Once you get to that level, you can take a chance on players who you might have had as a Do Not Draft, since you wouldn't take that player with a second-round pick where he was slated to go. Now in the fifth-round, maybe you overlook those giant warts and take a flier on a player who has some great skill and/or upside, but is slow-footed (Mark Stone) or a coaching headache (Anthony Duclair).
I've been jealous of what Tampa has been able to do with their sackful of draft choices lately, being able to pick up Anthony Cirelli in the third round in 2015, Mathieu Joseph in the fourth round, and Bokondji Imama in the sixth, and Brayden Point in the late third in 2014.
Let's give Trevor Timmins a chance to work his magic, give him and his crew a shot at wowing us again, with a bunch of shots at the dart board where they can explore riskier options. Let's allow them to, when presented with Lukas Vejdemo or Nicolas Roy, think "Why not both?"
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