| Power Forward Prospects | Tweet |
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| Written by Stu McDonald | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Saturday, 03 September 2011 11:33 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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You can choose as many stats as you want for fantasy pools, but I've found that there are six categories that consistently come up and they include: goals, assists, plus/minus, penalty minutes, power play points and shots on goal. Shooting the puck is important because points are allocated for shots on goal and goals. If you get lots of both you're going to be on the power play and get power play points. Penalty minutes also count, so ideally you're looking for someone that can score goals and get penalty minutes. You're essentially looking for a power forward along the lines of Rick Nash or Jarome Iginla. Today we'll take a look at a few of Dobber's top ranked power forward prospects and examine their potential for multi-stat pools.
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Comments (10)
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Stuart McDonald
said:
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... I wasn't being liberal with facts. I said Byfuglien made a name for himself in the NHL as a forward which is a fact. I also made the statement in the comments section not the article. I think you're being silly and I'm not going to comment anymore on this. |
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sentium
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... Yeah, let's keep being liberal with facts. That's a hallmark of good writing everywhere! Jesus... |
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sentium
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... Regardless of if he made a name for himself as a forward, he still started out at defense and has stated himself several times that it's his preferred position. Last season shows pretty well that he can be a lot more effective at D than as a winger. |
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Stuart McDonald
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... Yeah. While Byfuglien's natural position is defence, he still first made a name for himself as a forward in the NHL. He didn't play much defence when he first entered the league. I was the one that pointed that out to my commissioner the year he was drafted into my league. He was a forward then and I was aware he was a defenceman and made sure we settled on him as a forward before he got drafted. A 40 point forward isn't nearly as valuable as a 40 point defenseman. |
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sentium
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... Actually, Byfuglien started out as a dman in Chicago, as that is his natural and preferred position, but the Hawks needed size up front, so they moved him to the wing... |
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Stuart McDonald
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... OMG yes, Byfuglien would definitely be a power forward if he was to make the move. I would also put him up there with Bertuzzi too because he has the skill and definitely the skating to be a factor. I think he could move up at some point too because he started his NHL career up front. |
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Steffen
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I always enjoy your stuff. Thanks. Curious to read your ideas on underrated prospects in this area. And if Byfuglien gets moved to forward again because of his girth, what do you see for him as a Bertuzzi-type? (Assuming his motivation exists.) |
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Stuart McDonald
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... MacLean has the height although he's a wee bit light, but you could definitely say he has the overall size to be a power forward. He also has the goal to assist ratio of a power forward but he simply doesn't play like one. His penalty minutes are always in the 30-40 minute range and he doesn't use his size to muscle his way into scoring areas the way true power forwards do. |
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Shoeless
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... Yeah! Good stuff. You always fill in some holes for me Stu. I'm curious, I note that Brett MacLean has some size but never heard him referred to as a power forward type - what's your take on him? |
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