Saturday
Oct092010

Can You Feel It ?

Hello readers! My name is Scott and I was lucky enough to be selected to run the Winnipeg Winterhawks here at Icethetics in the IceHL.

Let me tell you this is very exciting just knowing the dedication level of all the GM's is going to make this a wonderful experience. Throughout the course of the reason I'll be letting you guys know just what's going on with the Winter hawks. It's the readers who keep this site as popular as it is and you guys deserved to be filled in!

All the teams were drafted on Oct. 3 at 5 AM EST. Auto drafts can be hit and miss at times and the Winterhawks were hit with some good and some bad.

The good: In goal the team is extremely solid. Roberto Luongo and Kipper from Vancouver and Calgary respectively is one hell of a draw and I'm very excited to have those two elite goalies between the pipes here in the peg.

The bad: We have injury issues. Most notably Marc Savard and Mark Streit. This is going to present some challenges I'm sure, and I will be monitoring the situations of those players closely as we move forward.

I hope you guys following us are as excited as we all are to get this going. The league is setup for public view so take a look at the full roster and leave some comments telling me what you think, and where I can improve the team!

GO HAWKS GO!

Thursday
Oct072010

IceHL Premiere & Player Pool Problems

(Don’t count on me checking in every day, but I had to talk a bit about the first day of the season!)

Good start so far to the season for the Wave. You should have heard me when I saw Claude Giroux’s shorty to start my season. Based on the giant sample size of today, the Wave, Salt Lake City Scorpions and Houston Hellcats should have a pretty exciting race in the Robbins Division.

The Wave have come to an agreement with the Calgary Cavalry to trade Steve Mason in exchange for Nathan Horton. Horton had a pretty good year last year on a pretty bad team in Florida. With the quality of players around him improving in Boston, I figured I’d be willing to trade my high risk/high reward 3rd goalie.

In other news, please welcome the other new addition to the Wave: Cal Clutterbuck. He steps in as Maxim Afinogenov steps out. Btw, I’d like to thank the Cavalry for pointing out my stupidity about picking up Maxim Afinogenov. (Btw, thank you, Milwaukee, for making the same mistake as I did. Now I don’t feel quite as dumb. ;] )

That brings me to my big gripe of the day: ESPN’s player pool. It’d be nice if they took out the players who went to the KHL in the off-season like Afinogenov. Or those who retired like Scott Niedermayer or Phillipe Boucher. I mean seriously? Phillipe Boucher? How long ago did he retire? Listen ESPN, there’s a very good chance we’ll be looking at picking up players at crazy hours of the night.  Please don’t tease us with players who aren’t in the league anymore.

As always, keep it real. Keep it fresh. And keep it real fresh.

Thursday
Oct072010

On Guard!

Hey all ... Simon here, GM of the IceHL's Washington Sentinels. A born-and-bred Torontonian, I bleed Maple Leaf blue (from mostly self-inflicted wounds), but after almost five years in the DC area, I've succumbed to allowing a soft spot for the Caps.

Huge thanks to Chris for giving me the chance to participate in this league. It's been a long time since I was involved in an active, well-run fantasy hockey league, and I'm really looking forward to it.

There's been a fair amount of buzz (and probably a few raised eyebrows) about my team post-draft, so I wanted to start my time here by giving a little bit of insight into my drafting strategy and how it sets us up for the rest of the season.

After I got set up, the first thing I did was examine the structure of the league -- its rosters and scoring system. I learned (the hard way) from a fantasy football league a few years ago that deep, "non-traditional" fantasy setups can often provide some unique opportunities and encourage different approaches.

The first thing I noticed: positional scarcity. With 20 teams in the league, and two "starting" goalie slots each, that means on any given night, there are only 40 goalies with the ability to earn points ... but there will never be more than 30 NHL starting goalies at a time. So 10 slots are *always* going to be backups, or otherwise not earning points at all. I figured that if I could snag two or three high-quality goalies early, that would give me an advantage, not only in keeping up the point production, but in terms of keeping some of the better point producing goalies away from the other teams in the league. 

Of course, doing so would require me to forfeit most of the elite scoring talent that would go in the early rounds. That's bound to hurt, right? Maybe ... but maybe not.

The second thing I noticed is that the scoring system gave a lot of weight to goalies. There are no categories, like you traditionally see in roto-based or other H2H leagues. Rather, every stat is converted to a point value, and total points wins the match -- it doesn't matter what player, position, or category they come from. The name of the game is points. Period. And goalies (the good ones, anyway), have the potential to earn a *lot* of them.

For example, if Ryan Miller makes 30 saves and gets a shutout win, that's 14 points. Not an "average" night for him by any means, but never completely out of the question either. A forward would have to post a 2G, 3A night, with one on the PP and a GWG to match that. Of course, goalies can *lose* points as well, where skaters cannot, but that's where the quality comes into play. The top-end goalies will be valuable simply because they'll win most of the time and grab those five points right off the bat, regardless of anything else they do that night.

To further illustrate, look at any roster and examine players' average fantasy points per game for 2010 and 2011 (projected). The elite Crosbys and Ovechkins of the world will probably average around 3-3.3 points per game. Second tier scorers around 2.2-2.5. Goalies? Between 5 and 5.5 points per game. Applying this league's scoring system to 2010 stats, Sidney Crosby scored 325 points. Ryan Miller earned 424 -- almost 33% more! And when it comes to winning fantasy games, the only thing that matters is points. This potentially valuable distinction is why I structured my draft list to stock up on elite goalies early.

So there was a method to my madness. And a small hiccup, in that I asked the draft utility to specifically stop drafting goalies after three; a request that was conveniently ignored. I ended up with Miller, Fleury, Rask, and Varlamov ... which I guess is a nice problem to have, but since there will be plenty of nights where three, or even all four, are in action (I can only play two at a time), it necessitates moving one of them for some help in my painfully thin scoring ranks.

I've been fielding offers all week, but am really not any closer to a deal at this point -- probably because I'm overthinking things, but also because I want to make sure I get decent value for whichever of the bunch I trade. Varly starting the year on IR complicates matters some as well -- both in terms of his potential value and in terms of my eagerness to move a goalie.

I'd talk about the rest of my team, but really, they're not much to speak of at the moment. I'm hoping for breakout years from Filatov (CLB) and Versteeg (TOR), but otherwise, it's strictly wait-and-see.

Thanks for reading. I promise the rest of my posts won't be this long. :)

Thursday
Oct072010

Writer/GM Added

Another IceHL blogger is joining the team here. Simon C (Sentinels) will be writing on the state of the league and his team throughout the 2010-11 campaign.

Thursday
Oct072010

Hellcats IceHL Blog #1

Hello, I'm the other James that'll be blogging about the IceHL. I'm James L, the GM of the Houston Hellcats - and for my sins I'm English! I'm an across-the-pond Rangers fan, the blame for which lies at the feet of my Red Wings-supporting school friend and his copy of NHL 99! I've been looking forward to the start of the season since the day after that underwhelming cup-clenching goal in game 6, its been a long summer!

Anyway, onto the Hellcats. The auto-draft presented me with an ok squad, but ranking 12th in the draft order meant I was never going to draft any of the superstars. Zach Parise was my first round pick, followed in the second round by Ilya Bryzgalov. Tavares, Duchene and Lidstrom were selected in the next three rounds.

The rest of my forwards were: Brian Gionta, Michael Grabner, Vaclav Prospal, Martin Havlat, Tuomu Ruutu, Marc Pouliot, Chris Drury, Jakub Voracek and Sean Avery. Not a stellar line up, but solid enough.

On D, I'm a lot more happy with my picks. Nicklas Lidstrom was joined by Andrei Markov, Niklas Kronwall, Mattias Ohlund, Andrew Ferrence, Nicklas Grossman and Matt Hunwick.

In goal, Bryzgalov is joined by Khabibulin, Mike Smith and Brian Boucher. Fairly happy with these, I'm hoping Bulin will be trying to pay back the Oilers organisation for sticking by him this summer.

The first trade offer I received was from the Winterhawks GM, Scott Kocienda. He offered Iginla and Matt Carle in exchange for Parise. I was very happy to accept the offer, picking up a player of Iginla's quality and adding a solid defenceman like Carle for a Devil! This move dropped Grossman onto waivers.

I then missed of out Marc Stall on waivers, but did manage to pick up Luke Schenn, dropping Andrew Ference in the process. Today I have claimed Erik Cole and Marek Svatos off waivers, with Grabner and Pouliot dropped from the team, just in time for the opening fixtures.

There have been several trade proposals flying about, and some that I have received have been very tempting, but no other deals so far.

All in all, I'm excited to see what this season brings. I'm not totally happy with my team, but we'll see how the season goes!

Thanks for reading this, and a big thanks to Chris for setting this up. I shall be watching the opening night's games with interest, and hope to update the blog weekly on the trials and tribulations of running the Hellcats.