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Canucks 2004 draft review
Written by: Sukhwinder Pandher on 07/01/2004
Entering the 2004 Entry Draft, the Vancouver Canucks had just one pick in the first three rounds, but by dealing a 2005 pick they were able acquire another pick this year. In total they selected seven players: three wingers, two defensemen, and two goalies and in doing this the Canucks were able to increase depth in positions that were lacking. They made the draft historic by selecting their first goaltender in the opening round and selecting a player from Denmark for the first time. They also broke a few hearts by selecting a mystery defenseman from the desolate region of Northern Sweden.
Corey
Schneider,
G
1st round,
26th overall, Phillips Andover (USHSE)
6’2” 195 (3/18/86)
The Canucks made
history with their first pick, selecting the first goalie ever in the first
round by the team. Schneider was the
seventh position for the mid-term and final CSS rankings.
The 18-year-old
American attends Phillips Andover Academy where he has tended goal for the past
three years. Although the scouts had
questioned Schneider's talent because of the low level of competition he faced
in high school, he proved himself a capable goalie at the World Under 18
tournament in Minsk, where he led the U.S. team to a silver medal. Earlier in the fall of 2003 he had backstopped
an American squad to the gold medal at an Under 18 Challenge tournament in
Piestany.
Although he went
prestigious prep school, Schneider is actually a blue collar type player who
displays a good work ethic and is admired for his leadership skills as he was
elected team captain in his senior season.
His most impressive trait is the amount of composure he displays when
the competition and pressure intensifies especially at the under 18
championships. When asked at the draft
what he had learned about goaltending playing for USA he said, “it was more the
mental aspect, learning how to hold the lead late in the game and learning how
to win those games.”
Schneider possesses
great athleticism, which is displayed in his good lateral movement and his
ability to recover after going down to make the save. He has an above average glove hand and uses his large frame to
full advantage. Asked which current
goalie he patterns his style after, he said, “I like Raycroft out of
Boston. We’ve worked with the same goalie
coach (Brian Daccord) before so he’s learning the same things I am.”
Despite being able to move laterally very well, Schneider could use work on his positional play and his ability to control the rebounds. While his athletic ability has helped him survive at the high school level, players in the NHL are much faster and can capitalize on second chances with deadly accuracy. Fortunately both these deficiencies are teachable and as the young goalie enters the next level, he should be able to correct these problems.
Although Schneider
was scheduled to play in the USHL with Green Bay next year before entering
college, he impressed Boston College with his play and was told by BC head
coach Gerry York “that the job is open right now.”
Because Schneider played
his draft year in high school, he is considered a project by some scouts. However, with Schneider possessing the
skills that can’t be taught, being weak in areas that can be corrected and his
stellar play at the international level, he is one of the safer projects
available in this draft.
Projection: No. 1
Goalie
|
YEAR |
TEAM |
GP |
W |
L |
T |
GAA |
SVPCT |
SO |
|
2002-03 |
Phillips Andover |
23 |
13 |
7 |
3 |
1.80 |
0.950 |
4 |
|
2003-04 |
U.S. U18 team |
9 |
8 |
1 |
0 |
1.69 |
0.924 |
1 |
|
2003-04 |
Phillips Andover |
24 |
17 |
5 |
2 |
1.42 |
0.960 |
4 |
Alexander
Edler,
D
3rd round,
91st overall, Jamtland (SWE II)
6’3” 198 (04/21/86)
Dave Nonis was able
to out maneuver a few teams to select Alexander Edler, a relatively unknown
Swedish defenseman in the third round.
Earlier in the year, Head European scout Thomas Gardin received a phone
call from a friend in Northern Sweden about a young player that was playing
well beyond his years. Gardin traveled
to the remote part of Sweden where he instantly fell in love with Edler’s
offensive skills and open ice hitting.
There were a few
other teams that were watching Edler as well, one rumored to be Detroit and
famed Euro scout Hakan Andersson.
Despite Edler not being ranked by Central Scouting, he came to Raleigh
because of at least one team promising him that he would be selected. Nonis was able to trade a 2005 third round
draft pick to Dallas for pick 91 just ahead of Detroit and Philadelphia,
another one of those rumored teams.
Edler is a solid
two-way defenseman that has offensive upside and can develop into a power play
quarterback down the road. He displays
good skating ability and makes that all important first pass out of the
defensive zone. Despite displaying good
strength in his hits, Edler needs to become stronger and fill in his 6’3” frame
in order to progress to the next levels.
Because of the low level of competition he played at this past year,
Edler needs to continually raise his game to meet the rising level of play.
After playing all of
last season for Jamtland of Swedish Tier II hockey, Edler was signed by top
Elite League team MoDo to play for their junior team. After developing current Canucks Markus Naslund and the Sedin
twins, the Canucks are confident that Edler will be able to remove any question
marks that surround his selection.
Projection: Two-Way
Defenseman
|
YEAR |
TEAM |
GP |
G |
A |
PTS |
+/- |
PIM |
|
2001-02 |
Jamtland |
8 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
NA |
2 |
|
2002-03 |
Jamtland |
8 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
NA |
0 |
|
2003-04 |
Jamtland |
24 |
3 |
6 |
9 |
+8 |
20 |
Andrew
Sarauer,
LW
4th round,
125th overall, Langley (BCHL)
6’4” 190 (11/17/84)
Dave Nonis and the
Vancouver Canucks continued this year’s trend of high risk/high reward players,
with the selection of Andrew Sarauer of the BCHL. A native of Saskatchewan, Sarauer is a 19-year-old who opted out
of last year’s draft hoping to be selected higher this year. The gamble seemed to pay off as despite
being ranked at 227 in the North American rankings he was selected in the
fourth round.
Playing his hockey in
the Canucks back yard, Sarauer was most likely closely scouted and viewed by
most of the staff. He has a very tall,
lanky build that will definitely need filling to play with the Canucks in the
NHL. He possesses above average skating
for a big man but is very raw in his offensive skills. The biggest knock on Sarauer is his lack of
hockey intelligence, as he is unable to read the play and is guilty of turning
the puck over on numerous occasions.
Sarauer will be
attending Northern Michigan of the CCHA, playing with fellow 2004 draftees
Darin Olver of the NY Rangers, Dustin Collins of Tampa, Mike Santorelli of
Nashville and Matt Siddall of Atlanta.
While Canucks hope Sarauer turns into a power forward with a high skill
level, this particular projection may not be realized until four or five years
down the road.
Projection: Power
Forward
|
YEAR |
TEAM |
GP |
G |
A |
PTS |
+/- |
PIM |
|
2002-03 |
Victoria |
50 |
10 |
16 |
26 |
NA |
56 |
|
2003-04 |
Langley |
57 |
43 |
32 |
75 |
NA |
71 |
Mike
Brown,
RW
5th round,
159th overall, Michigan (CCHA)
6’0” 210 (6/24/85)
The Canucks made
their safest pick in the draft when they selected of American Mike Brown out of
Michigan University. Brown was
developed in the U.S. National Team Program, helping the program to victory in
many international tournaments. He
spent this past year at Michigan as a freshman where he was relegated to third
and fourth line duty because of the deep sea of forwards in front of him. When injuries did occur he was able to fill
in on the top two lines and the team didn’t miss a beat.
His biggest role
was on the penalty kill where Coach Red Berenson was able to use Brown’s speed.
“Yeah, he doesn’t put you out for a penalty kill unless he has trust in you. I think that’s a pretty good accomplishment to be on the penalty kill. As long as I’m working hard every time I go out there, I’ll stay out there and do a great job.”
Brown said at the draft that thought he had a good year in
2003-04 because “I played my style of game. I think I went out there and played
a tough physical game. Worried about defense and the offense will come. I think
that worked out pretty good.”
Asked what he would be working on improving the most this
year, he said, “I’m trying to get better at putting more goals in the net. I’m striving for 15-20 goals next year. I
think that would be good for me.”
Brown is described as
a sparkplug type player who has good skating ability and has a tenacious
forechecking ability. Although he
drives the net very hard, he is also responsibly defensively and is a punishing
hitter. Even with these attributes, Brown’s
upside is no more than a third line checker or a fourth line agitator as his
scoring ability is very limited.
Brown will enter his
sophomore year at Michigan with a chance to play in more offensive
situations. He has also been invited to
the U.S. National Junior Team camp where he will compete with others to make
the roster for next year’s championships.
Projection: Checking Forward
|
YEAR |
TEAM |
GP |
G |
A |
PTS |
+/- |
PIM |
|
2001-02 |
U.S. U17 team |
63 |
11 |
15 |
26 |
NA |
69 |
|
2002-03 |
U.S. U18 team |
50 |
5 |
6 |
11 |
NA |
76 |
|
2003-04 |
Michigan |
42 |
8 |
5 |
13 |
+12 |
51 |
Julien
Ellis-Plante, G
6th round,
189th overall, Shawinigan (QMJHL)
6-0 188 (1/27/86)
The Canucks made
their annual late round selection from the Quebec League with the drafting of
Ellis-Plante and brought a smile to his face after a grueling couple of
days. The butterfly goalie continued
his steady slide as he was ranked sixth at mid-season, dropping to tenth among
North American goalies and ended up being the 14th domestic goalie selected in
this year’s draft.
When asked whether
the wait to be drafted was the hardest thing he’d ever gone through, he said
“Yeah, sure I think. When I heard my
name it was a good feeling and I forgot the moments before.” Ellis-Plante had actually stepped outside
the arena at the start of the sixth round and was called by his agent who said
simply ‘Vancouver!’
Despite the slide,
Ellis-Plante completed a successful rookie campaign, winning the starting role
at Shawinigan and led all rookie goaltenders in the QMJHL with 32 wins. He also participated in the CHL top
prospects game where he felt his downfall occurred after allowing four goals on
14 shots. He said after being picked,
“I didn’t have a good prospects game and the scouts who saw me for the first
time had a bad picture of me.” He
wasn’t able to continue his success into the playoffs as his squad failed to
make out of the second round, losing four straight to Rimouski.
Ellis-Plante is a
classic Quebec butterfly style goaltender who displays a calm demeanor and has
shown that he can handle a heavy workload.
He also has good balance, displays quick reflexes and is satisfactory in
many of the skills needed for a goaltender.
However, scouts didn’t see the upside in Ellis-Plante’s future to become
a starting goaltender and this was the main reason for the slide. When asked who he likes to pattern himself
after Ellis-Plante said “I like Giguere in Anaheim. I worked with him two times each summer with (famed goaltending
coach) Francois Allaire.”
The Canucks hope that
Allaire will do for Ellis-Plante what he did for Giguere and his most famous
student, Patrick Roy. As Ellis-Plante
returns to the Q for at least two more seasons as the No. 1 goalie, history is
on his side as the Canucks tend to select a quality prospect from the QMJHL
every year in the later rounds.
Projection: Starting/Backup Goalie
|
YEAR |
TEAM |
GP |
W |
L |
T |
GAA |
SVPCT |
SO |
|
2002-03 |
Shawinigan |
7 |
2 |
3 |
0 |
3.45 |
0.870 |
0 |
|
2003-04 |
Shawinigan |
68 |
32 |
18 |
2 |
2.85 |
0.903 |
1 |
David
Schulz,
D
8th round,
254th overall, Swift Current (WHL)
6-3 201 (1/3/86)
There are a number of
prospects who own a number of positive attributes and every year these players
slip in the draft based on one negative trait that over shadows all the
positives. The Canucks eighth round
pick, David Schulz out of Swift Current, is one of those players this
year.
Schulz participated
in both the CHL top prospects and the World Under 18 Championships in Minsk,
Belarus. He finished the season on
Swift Current with 17 points in 70 games and most impressively at a plus/minus
rating of plus 14. Schulz and the
Broncos only lasted one round in the WHL playoffs, losing to the eventual
champs from Medicine Hat.
Schulz posses the
ideal frame for an 18-year-old defenseman at 6’3” 200 pounds and skates very
well for his size. He plays a very
simple and is reliable in the defensive zone by limiting his mistakes and not
doing too much. Along with his
potential to become a future shutdown blueliner, many scouts feel he has an
upside in his offensive game that will make him a legitimate two-way
defenseman.
Despite his large
frame, Schulz has been very inconsistent in using his size and strength to his
advantage. All agree that if he is to
progress to the NHL level, he needs to not just become stronger but actually
use his strength to over power the opposition in his zone.
He will return to
Swift Current and may receive an invitation to the Canadian Junior team
evaluation camp this summer. Canuck
management hope the steep slide of Schulz in the draft will motivate him to be
more aggressive in his play next year.
If he is able to leap over this one hurdle, Schulz could very well be an
excellent late round gem that could help the blueline.
Projection: Two-Way
Defenseman
|
YEAR |
TEAM |
GP |
G |
A |
PTS |
+/- |
PIM |
|
2001-02 |
Pembina Valley |
44 |
4 |
20 |
24 |
NA |
42 |
|
2002-03 |
Swift Current |
48 |
1 |
6 |
7 |
+1 |
43 |
|
2004 |
CAN U18 |
6 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
4 |
|
2003-04 |
Swift Current |
70 |
3 |
14 |
17 |
+14 |
79 |
Jannik
Hansen,
W
9th round,
287th overall, (Rodovre, DEN)
6-0 176 (3/15/86)
While this regime of
the Canucks have yet to select a player from hockey power house Czech Republic,
they have now selected their first player from Denmark in Jannik Hansen. He was the second player from the up and
coming hockey country of Denmark to be selected in the 2004 draft. Hansen was one of the fastest risers in the
draft moving up to 41, at the final CSS rankings, from 98 at the mid season
rankings of European skaters.
Hansen played against
men in 35 games for the Rodovre hockey club in the Danish Elite League last
year recording 12 goals and 19 points.
What helped him rise in the rankings was a strong outing in the Under 18
Championships, in Minsk, where he recorded 3 goals and 7 points in six games in
front of many surprised scouts.
The main aspect of
Hansen’s game is his speed and above average skating, as most defenders tend to
back off at the line due to their respect for his speed. Fellow draftee and member of Canada’s Under
18 team Wes O’Neill was victimized many times by Hansen in their head to head
match up. Because of a strong wrist
shot, Hansen also has above average potential in his scoring and is very
creative with the puck.
Like most young
players, especially in Europe, the improvement in strength is the most
important key to Hansen’s chance at making a NHL roster. On the smaller North American rinks he will
have to take on mobile defensemen who can neutralize his speed with their
strength. Because Hansen is coming from
the inexperienced Danish school of hockey, he will have to improve his hockey
smarts.
Hansen’s rights are
held by Swedish Elite team Malmo and could joint the team next year or he could
return to his Danish team Rodovre to hone his skills further. Unfortunately the Denmark junior team will
not participate in the elite junior tournament, having been relegated to the
second level.
Another possible
diamond in the rough, Hansen is another draftee who has the potential to turn
this draft into a very good one for the Canucks. He could also very well prove to be another typical European
player who despite his high skill level will not meet the physical aspect of
the NHL.
Projection: Skill
Forward
|
YEAR |
TEAM |
GP |
G |
A |
PTS |
+/- |
PIM |
|
2003 |
DEN U18 |
5 |
2 |
5 |
7 |
+6 |
14 |
|
2002-03 |
Rodovre |
15 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
-1 |
0 |
|
2004 |
DEN U18 |
6 |
3 |
4 |
7 |
+3 |
32 |
|
2003-04 |
Rodovre |
35 |
12 |
7 |
19 |
-27 |
48 |
FINAL
ANALYSIS
The Canucks followed
a couple of trends in selecting players in this draft. They drafted three
players that will develop in the college ranks. They also selected a player from the QMJHL in a late round, with
the selection of Julien Ellis-Plante in the sixth. Ten years after drafting Mattias Ohlund, they went back to
Northern Sweden to select another two-way defenseman. Breaking some trends they did draft a goalie in the first round
and went to the land of Danes for the first time to draft a speedy winger.
With this draft
labeled as having very little depth and the Canucks only owning one pick in the
first three rounds, there was very little expected from the draft picks making
an immediate impact. Therefore the
Canucks and Dave Nonis as GM, used this draft to select players that were of
the high risk/high reward type in the earlier rounds. The trio of Schneider, Edler and Sarauer were all players that
competed at low levels of competition, but their athleticism and future
potential were too high too pass on.
The final three
selections on day two, Ellis-Plante, Schulz, and Hansen, are players that
possess athleticism and were rated fairly high coming into the draft but for
one reason or another slipped and were picked by the Canucks in the late
rounds. These are the type of
selections that can turn an average draft into a very positive draft for the
Canucks scouting staff.
Holly Gunning contributed to this article.
Copyright 2004 Hockey's Future. Do not duplicate without
written permission from the editorial staff.
Copyright 2004 Hockey’s Future. Do not reprint or otherwise duplicate without permission of the editorial staff.







