December 17,
2007
Flashes of Promise
By Darryl Dobbs, TheFourthPeriod.com
Their win percentage is better
than that of the defending Stanley Cup Champions, yet everyone
– fans and media alike – have already written them off.
This is because the Phoenix Coyotes are approximately one-year
into a full-blown rebuilding plan and their team consists of
Shane Doan, Ed Jovanovski and a whole bunch of kids.
But given the way the 'Yotes
have played since the acquisition of goaltender Ilya Bryzgalov
and how those wet-behind-the-ears kids have performed, perhaps
they should be taken a little more seriously.
For the last several years,
keeper-league owners have shifted their philosophy towards
treating Phoenix players like the plague. And why not? The
last time the team had a player reach the 70-point mark it was
the 2000-01 season when Jeremy Roenick led the squad with 76.
Since then, only once has a player tallied more than 63 and
that was when Shane Doan had 68 a few years back.
Much like a lab rat is trained to push a certain button to
score a wafer, poolies have been trained to ignore Phoenix
players when they appear next on their draft list. It's hard
to undo that.
This will be yet another campaign in which not one Phoenix
player will reach the 70-point mark, which makes it six
seasons in a row. Mark my words though – it will be the last.
The team has finally put a solid GM in office with a true,
full-out rebuilding plan – not one of those "half-assed" ones
that you've seen in the past. Don Maloney is continuing what
Mike Barnett finally started prior to his being fired. The
philosophy is simple: Doan stays and the kids play.
The centerpiece of the team – Kyle Turris – has yet to join
them, but likely will next season or at the very latest in two
years. Another U.S. college stalwart, Blake Wheeler, will join
him. The two of them will be the finishing pieces to a puzzle
that already includes Peter Mueller and Martin Hanzal.
In Mueller, Turris and Hanzal, the 'Yotes will boast the three
centers with the best combination of size, skill and youth
this side of Pittsburgh. Turris projects to be a Steve Yzerman-type
capable of posting 100-point seasons. Mueller still looks on
target to become a big 90-point power center. Hanzal is
pushing his stock ever upwards and is now looking as if a
point-per-game is not out of the question one day. In fact,
the team will have to move him to the wing, because he is far
too good for the third line.
In the meantime, this season, the young Coyotes are
auditioning to become the other pieces of this great future
puzzle. Radim Vrbata is looking a great a compliment on the
wing, looking good for 55 points this season and 70 or more in
future seasons as the sidekick of one of these great pivots.
Daniel Carcillo, Phoenix's answer to Sean Avery, is looking
like he'll be the perfect second or third line guy as he gains
experience, and will probably put up 55 points and 200 penalty
minutes a season.
The defensemen already seem to be falling into place. While
Jovo-cop probably doesn't have a future in the organization,
the likes of Zbynek Michalek and Keith Ballard certainly do.
Ditto for rookie/prospect Keith Yandle. Prospects Chris
Summers and Nick Ross look promising as well.
Two-years ago I said to start scooping Penguins because they
will be hard to get by 2008. Last year I said start scooping
L.A. Kings because by 2009 they will be impossible. I'd like
to make my statement for this year – the Phoenix Coyotes'
players will be impossible to grab in 2010 so you'd better
stop ignoring this team before it's too late.
Meanwhile..
...Still with the Coyotes (no, they didn't pay me) Radim
Vrbata, a notorious streaky scorer, has 13 points in his last
nine games. He seriously clicked with Martin Hanzal and
Fredrik Sjostrom Saturday, as the line combined for 10 points.
All three of these guys will continue rolling for another
three games or so before cooling off.