2012 Fantasy Baseball Rankings, Advice & Analysis
 
The start of hockey season couldn’t come at a better time.  My fantasy football team, which at first glance appeared to be a “dream team,” has stumbled out of the gate to an 0-2 nightmare.  But all the months of football chatter, analysis, and draft preparation is finally behind us, and it is time to turn our attention to the frozen pond.  

I spent last month bashing the overkill given to Crosby and Ovechkin.  Now, as fantasy drafts get underway, it is time to revere them.  But rather than talk about what we already know, that these two top God’s fantasy wish list, I prefer to discuss something more fun.  This is my top ten list of guys that could be a bust, but could help your team reap the rewards, if they can overcome the risk.  
Picture
Martin Brodeur
Martin Brodeur | G | New Jersey Devils

I figured I’d start with an attention-grabber, since you’re probably saying I’m crazy for including him on this list.  After all, we’re talking about the greatest goalie in hockey history, who also happens to be listed no lower than 15th in most fantasy ranking lists.  So here it goes.   

First of all, he’ll be 39 years old before the end of the season.  Even the Great One Wayne Gretzky, Brett Favre, Lance Armstrong, and Michael Jordan had to take off the cape eventually.  And for a goalie, who plays the entire game, hitting the ice and jumping back up while toting 50 pounds of equipment, that 39 looms even larger.  

Take into account that he has played at least 77 (out of 82) games, in three out of the past four seasons (which are numbers not typically seen in goalies in their 20’s, let alone late 30’s,) and I predict that this will be the year that all that work catches up with him, and he finally becomes human.  This could either mean another serious injury, or allowing more and more soft goals that have not been associated with him until recent years.  I should add that he earned at least 44 wins in each of those years.  But again, I believe this season will show us a serious decline in his play.  

The Devils also lost Paul Martin, unarguably their best defenseman, which will dramatically increase the amount of shots that make it through to him.  However, with Johan Hedberg backing him up, expect Martin to start another 70-plus games this season.   And since he is in fact Martin Brodeur, combined with the New Jersey Devils track record of putting an above average team in front of him, and Ilya Kovalchuk and Zach Parise lighting it up, expect those 70-75 starts to reap some fantasy rewards.


Picture
Tim Connolly
Tim Connolly | C | Buffalo Sabres

While having never completely lived up to his potential, nobody doubts Connolly has the ability to be a good play-maker.  What is doubted, however, is his ability to stay healthy.  

A rookie in 1999-2000, he played in at least 80 games in each of his first four seasons, notching 40-plus assists in two of them.  But ever since the lockout, he has been hampered by injuries, including several concussions, which have been notorious for ending professional careers in all sports.  He played in only 48 games in back-to-back seasons, and 2006-2007 was completely lost.  He did manage to play in 73 games last season in which he had 48 assists and 65 points, but he finished the regular season and playoffs hampered by an injury that considerably hindered his play, and was a big factor in the Northeast Division-winning Sabres’ disappointing first round playoff exit.  The good news is, over the past five seasons, he is averaging just under a point per game.  So if he does stay healthy, you do the math.

Picture
Marian Gaborik
Marian Gaborik | RW | New York Rangers

Gaborik’s skills with the puck and ability to find the back of the net are incredible.  We in Blueshirt Nation certainly enjoyed watching him score 42 goals with 44 assists last season and know that a goal is possible every time he steps on the ice.  

The risk factor here is how many times will he actually step on the ice.  Last season, we held our breath every time he got hit, because he has a habit of playing 50-65 percent of the games each season.  While production wasn’t a problem, he played in 65 games in consecutive seasons, 48 games in 2006-07, and only 17 games in 2008-2009 before Minnesota decided to cut ties. 

Picture
Alex Frolov
Alexander Frolov | LW | New York Rangers

The Rangers signing of Frolov as a free-agent this summer was met with mixed emotions.  His talent is unquestionable, as in seven NHL seasons he hit 30 goals twice, and 20 goals in three others.  

Los Angeles opted not to resign him after a 19 goal, 51-point underachievement.  Ranger fans and media are hoping he does not become this year’s Nikolai Zherdev.  The comparison comes from both players being cut from the same cloth of Russian players with all skill but questionable work ethic.  They can be hard to coach and even harder to mold into a team’s system. Apparently in the Russian alphabet, there is in fact an “I” in team (just see their disappointing 6th place finish at the 2010 Winter Olympics.)  

I believe Frolov is worth the risk.  He signed a one-year contract for far less than he was hoping for.  He knows that this may be his last shot to impress and show that he can be one of the league’s elite players and earn the money that goes with it.  So basically, this season is an audition for next year’s contract.  Add the fact that he is expected to be linemates with Marian Gaborik, and he could very well be on the finishing end of 30-40 of assists plus an equal amount of goals.

Picture
Nikolai Zherdev
Nikolai Zherdev | RW | Philadelphia Flyers:  

Who better to be this year’s Nikolai Zherdev than Zherdev himself.  As I mentioned above, the Rangers signed him as a free agent for the 2008-2009 season.  His 23 goals and 58 points were considered an underachievement for his talent.  Then Ranger coach Tom Renney had problems motivating him, and he was often visibly sluggish on the ice.  

The Flyers, fresh off a Cinderella Stanley Cup Finals run, picked him up this year, and he may be a perfect fit for Peter Laviolette’s system.  Look for Zherdev to be a top-six forward with playmakers like Jeff Carter and Danny Briere, protectors like Dan Carcillo and Scott Hartnell, and the motivation from the Philadelphia crowd.

Picture
Daniel Alfredsson
Daniel Alfredsson | RW | Ottawa Senators

Coming up on 38 years old, the Senators’ journeyman has not notched less than 70 points in a season since 2000, and should join the NHL’s top-70 all-time point scorers by the New Year.  (He enters the season with 992 points, and Dale Hunter holds the #70 spot with 1,020).  

His numbers have steadily declined over the past three years, from 89 down to 71 in 2010.  While seventy-one points is not exactly a bad season, with age comes the natural decline and the future hall-of-famer is no exception.  I would not be surprised to see his numbers dip into the low 60’s this season as age sets in again.  Of course this is far from a low enough total to make him undraftable, but I wouldn’t expect him to be a top-three fantasy forward this year. 

Picture
Travis Zajac
Travis Zajac | C | New Jersey Devils

He may fit better in the “sleeper” category, unless you consider any of your draft picks or roster spots a risk.  

Next to Devils’ fans and Ilya Kovalchuk’s accountant, Zajac may be the happiest person on the planet at the massive Kovalchuk deal.  He will now play center on the Devils’ first line with Kovalchuk on one wing and Zach Parise on the other.  That could mean about 30 goals and 120 assists for him.  

While I don’t seriously expect him to notch vintage 1980’s Gretzky numbers, any pass that connects with either winger, or any puck sent toward the net is a potential assist with these two electrifying finishers making anything and everything happen.

Zajac has played in no less than 80 games is each of his first four seasons, and has seen his points total steadily increase over the past three–culminating with a career-high 67, with 42 assists last season.  With two 40-goal wingers to pass to now for an entire season, I would take him in the third or fourth round and expect him to have 50-60 assists.

Picture
Alex Tanguay
Alex Tanguay | LW | Calgary Flames

Alex may be the poster-boy for this list.  He missed 32 games in 2008-2009 due to a torn ACL in his knee, but did manage to score 41 points, just 17 points shy of his previous season’s total in which he played in 78 games.  

He has had three seasons of 70-plus points, and a career-high 81 in 2006-2007.  Since then he has been an enigma.  He has failed to eclipse the 60 point mark in each of his past three seasons even though he was healthy for two of them, and scored a career low 37 last year, playing in all but two games.  

The Flames are coming off a season in which they just narrowly missed the playoffs in the always brutally competitive Western Conference.   Look for Alex to rebound this season and return to form with a performance almost double that of last season.

Picture
Michael Ryder
Michael Ryder | RW | Boston Bruins

It is impressive to score 63 points in your rookie season.  It is not impressive that five seasons later, 63 points remains his career high.  He followed up the rookie performance with seasons of 55 and 58 points, but was a minus 5 and minus 25 respectively, in those two seasons.  A minus 25 just about wipes out any fantasy help you would get from those 58 points.  He scored in the low 30’s in two of his last three seasons, coming off a 33-point performance in which he scored just 18 goals on 191 shots.  

While we know he has the potential to put up numbers, but will he?  Look for Ryder to rebound on a good Bruins team that is undoubtedly out for blood after blowing a 3-0 series lead to the Flyers, becoming only the fourth professional sports team to blow a 3-0 lead in games in a best of seven series (1942 Red Wings, 1975 Penguins, and 2004 Yankees.)  Not to mention, nobody likes losing to Philadelphia in anything.

Picture
Mike Modano
Mike Modano | C | Detroit Red Wings

The greatest American born player in hockey history has seen his numbers steadily decline over the past three seasons, down to a modest 30 points in only 59 games in 2010, his lowest points total since 1995.  

So we’ll put this one on the All-Martin Brodeur team.  Meaning, he’s 39; a first-ballot hall-of-famer; his jersey is going to the rafters by his long time team; and yet still seeks more glory and another engraving on the Stanley Cup.  The only difference, is that Modano had to part ways with Dallas and find a new team, while Brodeur will play with New Jersey until they fit a Rascal Scooter with blades.  Luckily for him, the team that took him in just happens to be the Detroit Red Wings.  

While he will most likely be relocated to a third or gasp or even the fourth line, he will play against an equal line, and being on the Wings (also known as the New York Yankees, Duke Blue Devils, or Chinese men’s gymnastics team of hockey) clearly means that he will be on a great team.  

Defensemen Brian Rafalski and Nicklas Lidstrom will give him opportunities, which he can still surely cash in on.  I see him improving on last season’s 30 points, which would have been ninth on the Wings in scoring last year.  

Happy hunting, 

Mr. Ice Guy, Scott Blander


Written by Scott Blander aka Mr. Ice Guy exclusively for TheFantasyFix.com. 

Who are some high risk/high reward players you will be drafting this year?
What do are your opinions on Mr. Ice Guy's list? 
Let us know by leaving a comment or replying to us on twitter @TheFantasyFix

Tags: The Fantasy Fix, Fantasy Sports Advice, Fantasy Hockey, NHL, Draft, High Risk High Reward, Scott Blander, Mr. Ice Guy, Martin Brodeur, New Jersey Devils, Tim Connolly, Buffalo Sabres, Marian Gaborik, New York Rangers, Alexander Frolov, Nikolai Zherdev, Philadelphia Flyers, Daniel Alfredsson, Ottawa Senators, Travis Zajac, Alex Tanguay, Calgary Flames, Michael Ryder, Boston Bruins, Mike Modano, Detroit Red Wings
 
 
Picture
Ok, obviously I’m not talking about fantasy hockey selections.  These two score 100 points like it’s going out of style (which it is.)  You’d be crazy not to build your team around these guys.  Sure they represent the top of the next generation of stars, and the two most marketable names.  But what I’m saying is,  can there be too much of a good thing?

It’s no secret the NHL lags behind the big three in ratings.  While in my heart, I would love to see hockey surpass baseball in American popularity, my head tells me I have a better chance of seeing the Rangers win another Stanley Cup.  (And that quickly, the truth about me comes out.)  But don’t kid yourself America, the NBA is well within reach.  Which is exactly my point.  I do not want to see the NHL make the same mistakes the NBA has with the way it markets its stars.  

I represent the average American sports fan (with a slight bias towards hockey.)  I love football, baseball, NASCAR crashes, and my basketball preference leans towards college.  It’s not that I’m anti-NBA, it’s just that as a late-1990’s graduate of the University of Maryland, I just value an ACC battle of top-10’s (or any conference,) as entertainingly superior.  

Because I’m more of a hockey fan than average, the NHL doesn’t need to sell me.  I’ll watch the Winter Classic, the playoffs, the regular season, or preseason games in Finland.  But more importantly, I don’t need to see Crosby, Ovechkin, or both to know the possibility of a great game exists.  Unfortunately, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman has not gotten that message.  

The NBA and NHL have always been leagues whose popularity have been dominated by its stars.  In the NBA, Jordan, Magic, Bird, Malone, Barkley, and Ewing have given way to the likes of LeBron, Kobe, Wade, Carmelo, Nash, and Duncan.  The NHL doesn’t quite have it that easy.  Household names are a little harder to come by on the ice.  Gretzky, Lemieux, Messier, Lindros, Jagr, and Roenick, have given way to Crosby, Ovechkin, and… sure I could mention Henrik Sedin, Marion Gaborik and Patrick Marleau, but could you?  And therein lies the problem.  

Jeremy Roenick, it should be noted, gained nationwide prominence when Vince Vaughn led his Sega Genesis, NHL-93 avatar, to knocking Wayne Gretzky’s out into a twitching pool of blood, before leading Jeremy’s avatar to the game-winning goal in a heated game in 1996’s ultimate guy movie, Swingers.  (Vaughn gave the credit where it was rightfully due.)  “It’s not so much me as it is Roenick.  He’s good.”  That may be the biggest understatement since, “Houston we have a problem.”   Anyone above the age of 30 can attest that Roenick and his NHL-93 Blackhawks may have given the 2010 Blackhawks a serious run.  

So the post-lockout NHL, which was (and still is) a delicate egg,  is still trying to bring Joe America back.  The league added the shootout, removed the two-line pass, started calling a ton more penalties, and added a trapezoid of uselessness behind the goal, all in an attempt to boost offense and make the game more exciting to Joe America.  With the exception of the trapezoid, all the other rule changes have been great.  Let me say right now, as a Rangers fan, and even with losing a 2010 playoff berth to the Flyers in a shootout with them, I am still wholeheartedly in favor of it, even in such a monumental situation.  Am I bitter that the Flyers took that shootout win and went onto the Stanley Cup Finals?  Absolutely.  But only because they are from Philadelphia, and not because they were one skills competition highlight better than my team.

In addition to the rule changes, the league has also been blessed with two new superstars in Sidney Crosby and Alexander Ovechkin.  As I mentioned before, there is nothing wrong with marketing them (and of course their respective teams.)  But there ARE other stars in the league.  The rivalry between the two is strong, but it is mostly engineered.  For example, they play in different divisions, and although they have both been in the league together for five seasons now, and Penguins and Capitals have only met in the playoffs once.  

I was nauseous when an NHL.com poll declared the 2009 meeting, the greatest series ever played.  Hello?  1994 Eastern Conference Finals anyone?  I agree it was entertaining, but is the greatest series ever played supposed to have its seventh game decided by four goals?  Of course not.  It should end in double overtime by a guy picked up at the trading deadline who could have had his #32 hoisted to the Madison Square Garden rafters if that was the only goal he ever scored.  (Stefan Matteau’s number has yet to be retired.) 

Sidney Crosby needs no more hyping by the league, nor does he need any more love and attention from the hockey gods.  Before his 23rd birthday, he scored the shootout winning goal in the NHL’s first ever Winter Classic (in a blinding snowstorm,) captained his team to the Stanley Cup, and scored the Olympic gold medal winning goal, in overtime of course.  In other words, he accomplished the triple crown of childhood street hockey fantasies we’ve all dreamed about while hoisting the Rubbermaid Cup in the driveway in front of a tattered, red PVC pipe goal.  What, like you haven’t?  The gold medal winner, I might add, was scored in front of the highest number of Americans salivating for hockey since that glorious afternoon in 1980, when the Cold War was fought on its most unlikely, and…coldest of battlefields in Lake Placid, New York.  Of course I believe in miracles.  I’ve already said I’ve seen the Rangers win it all.  

While Ovechkin has yet to hoist Lord Stanley’s Grail, or achieve Olympic fame, he is only five years into what is sure to be a long and successful career, in which he has scored 100+ points in four of those.  What’s more, he is a human highlight reel.  More exciting to watch, and every bit as dangerous with the puck as Gretzky ever was.  

So this article comes on the heels of the announcement of the NHL’s fourth annual goldmine, also known as the Winter Classic, which this New Years Day, will feature the Washington Capitals and Pittsburgh Penguins from Heinz Field.  Although the announcement confirmed months of internet chatter, that did not make it any less infuriating.  Sure a Crosby, Ovechkin matchup seemed inevitable, but it is not necessary.  The NHL has one game that Joe America will be watching: the Winter Classic.  (Now we just need to work on the other 81.)  This will be the fourth installment, and already Crosby’s Penguins’ second appearance.  Unfair?   Absolutely.  The ratings were just fine for the two that did not involve Sid the Kid.  And if the NHL bills the game as some kind of dream matchup (which I’m sure they will,) how will they sell Joe on the 2012 game, that won’t feature either of them?  (At least it had better not.)  If Joe becomes accustomed to seeing one or both of them in this game, he may get disappointed in tuning in one year to see neither.  Even worse, he won’t watch any indoor games that don’t involve Sid and/or Alex.  Because these two are far superior to every other player?  Of course not.  Because these are the only two that Joe is being told by the league are worth watching.   So a possible 2012 game could very well feature the Rangers and Canadiens in a classic, Original Six battle on a frozen Yankee Stadium infield.  Hockey purists and Yankee fans alike get chills at the sound of that.  Will Joe know what Original Six means? Will he be disappointed and turn the game off when he doesn’t see #87 or #8?  I fear he will if the league does not wise up and accept the fact that there are more players worth watching than Sid and Alex.  

And this is the mistake the NBA made.  Like I said, I represent Joe America.  As a child of the 80’s, I know that a Lakers, Celtics finals is as good as it gets.  But for the last two years I’ve been told that Kobe and LeBron are everything.  LeBron’s last stand in Cleveland before free agency finally hit was everything.  I was told I was getting a Los Angeles/Cleveland, Kobe/Lebron finals.  Well it didn’t happen.  I had to settle for Lakers/Celtics. 

Mr. Ice Guy, 

Scott Blander

Tags: The Fantasy Fix, Fantasy Sports Blog, Fantasy Sports Advice, Scott Blander, NHL, Fantasy Hockey, Alex Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh Penguins, Washington Capitals