Moderator: Referees
CALGARY -- Calgary Flames general manager Jay Feaster added some scoring up front Wednesday as the club continues to look for a new head coach.
Czech centre Roman Cervenka signed a one-year entry-level contract worth US$3,775,000 including bonuses.
The 26-year-old from Prague spent the last two seasons with Avangard Omsk of the KHL and will start his NHL career with the Flames. Cervenka totalled 54 goals and 46 assists in 105 games over those two seasons.
Lancer wrote:Another possible reason: more American players than before, pushing euros out? Don't have the time to do the math (at work and trying not to get busted), but maybe Per can put that on the graph.
Arachnid wrote:Per wrote:Made a graph for you:
That's very pretty, if being our CC Euro Scout doesn't work out for you you could always be a colourful advanced SPSS Analyzer


ODB wrote:Gibberish talking assholes! You ever hear those people talk? It makes no sense!

Lancer wrote:Another possible reason: more American players than before, pushing euros out? Don't have the time to do the math (at work and trying not to get busted), but maybe Per can put that on the graph.
Per wrote:In 2003/04, the last season before the lockout, there were 275 European skaters in the NHL, a whooping 30% of the player total. This season the number had fallen to a 195, or just under 22%, that means the number of Europeans playing in the NHL has fallen by nearly a third.
- - -
The number of Canadians has remained fairly stable. Roughly 54%.
481skaters in 00/01 and 480 this season, with a high of 494 (55%) in 03/04 and a low of 444 (52%) in 06/07.
Instead it's the Yanks that pick up the slack. They have increased from 133 (15%) in 00/01 to 219 (almost 25%) this season.
Per wrote:OK, so basically the league has lost 80 Euros and 1 Canadian and picked up 86 US players.
As I said, it's the Yanks that pick up the slack.
Topper wrote:It is true that the top talent still tends to choose the NHL - as does pretty much all Swedish players - but the KHL offers better rewards for rookies and mid-level talent, so I guess any effect on the NHL would mostly be seen on the third and fourth lines of teams.
Lancer wrote:Per wrote:OK, so basically the league has lost 80 Euros and 1 Canadian and picked up 86 US players.
As I said, it's the Yanks that pick up the slack.
K, my bad. Missed that part.
Topper wrote:It is true that the top talent still tends to choose the NHL - as does pretty much all Swedish players - but the KHL offers better rewards for rookies and mid-level talent, so I guess any effect on the NHL would mostly be seen on the third and fourth lines of teams.
Yeah, so much for your Martin Straka/Robert Kron/Andrei Kovalenko types in this league. Anybody miss them?
Thing is, the fact that fewer eastern euros and Russian draft picks are willing to pay their dues in the NA minors increases the risk for GMs. From a contract POV, it's not like they're burning off years before they can go UFA but because the KHL does not translate that well to the NHL game (hell, Shirokov is leading his team in scoring this year) it's hard to guage their effectiveness before signing them to the multi-million contract they would demand. Either they are a Malkin/Ovechkin type who are so once-in-a-blue-moon in that they can immediately transition to the NHL and will be your cornerstone or they're not going to invest anything more than a 3rd-round pick.
Topper wrote:Could you explain your theory about the brontosaurus?
mathonwy wrote:I think that the European quotient for NHL hockey players on the Vancouver Canucks is too high considering how Asian centric Vancouver is.
Less Euros, and more Asians!!
We need Jim Park back.
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