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Alexander Burmistrov’s Offensive Ceiling
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Jonathan Willis
Apr 3, 2012, 13:51 EDT
Alexander Burmistrov was an interesting selection at eighth overall in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. Having now played 147 NHL games, he remains an interesting selection.
Burmistrov was the fourth forward drafted out of the OHL, behind Taylor Hall, Tyler Seguin, and Jeff Skinner, which meant that the then-Atlanta Thrashers were one spot out of the really elite OHL talent that year. Here are all the forwards taken in the first two rounds out of the OHL that year, along with goal and point projections over a hypothetical 82-game OHL season based on their production in 2009-10.
PlayerDraftedGPGAPTSPTS/82G/82
Taylor Hall
1
57
40
66
106
152
58
Tyler Seguin
2
63
48
58
106
138
62
Jeff Skinner
7
64
50
40
90
115
64
Alex Burmistrov
8
62
22
43
65
86
29
Joey Hishon
17
36
16
24
40
91
36
Austin Watson
18
52
20
34
54
85
32
Jared Knight
32
63
36
21
57
74
47
John Mcfarland
33
64
20
30
50
64
26
Dalton Smith
34
62
21
23
44
58
28
Christian Thomas
40
64
41
25
66
85
53
Devante Smith-Pelly
42
60
29
33
62
85
40
Ryan Spooner
45
47
19
35
54
94
33
Tyler Toffoli
47
65
37
42
79
100
47
Phil Lane
52
64
18
14
32
41
23
There are lots of interesting picks in that group, but overall it follows the same curve as the rest of the draft: the top talent was available early on, then there was a steep drop to a bunch of guys at around the same level of offensive talent (the exceptions to this are guys who were either a) famous prospects or b) big and gritty – John Mcfarland fitting under the former category and Phil Lane fitting under the second). Burmistrov probably deserves a bit of a bump because he’s a first-year European player in North America, but even so it’s hard to look at his draft-year offense and find a lot of gap between him and guys like Watson, Thomas and Smith-Pelly.
So far, Burmistrov has struggled to provide the offense, despite the Thrashers bizarre decision a year ago to play him in the NHL immediately.
According to hockey-reference.com, 24 players have played 100 games or more by their 20-year old season since the NHL lockout. Here’s the list, ranked by points-per-game:
PlayerGPGAPTSGC+/-SS%PTS /GM
Sidney Crosby
213
99
195
294
104
27
701
14.1
1.38
Steven Stamkos
243
119
113
232
94
-12
750
15.9
0.95
Anze Kopitar
154
52
86
138
51
-27
394
13.2
0.9
Patrick Kane
162
46
96
142
50
-7
445
10.3
0.88
Jonathan Toews
146
58
65
123
48
23
339
17.1
0.84
Matt Duchene
161
51
71
122
46
-7
382
13.4
0.76
Taylor Hall
126
49
46
95
38
-12
393
12.5
0.75
Jeff Skinner
143
51
56
107
43
-3
416
12.3
0.75
John Tavares
161
53
68
121
47
-31
429
12.4
0.75
Sam Gagner
223
44
87
131
47
-30
461
9.5
0.59
Evander Kane
210
62
62
124
50
1
640
9.7
0.59
Peter Mueller
153
35
55
90
34
-20
339
10.3
0.59
Tyler Seguin
152
38
49
87
34
28
362
10.5
0.57
Jakub Voracek
161
25
63
88
30
4
255
9.8
0.55
David Perron
143
28
49
77
28
29
229
12.2
0.54
Jordan Staal
245
63
56
119
49
16
480
13.1
0.49
Milan Lucic
149
25
44
69
25
15
185
13.5
0.46
Ryan O’Reilly
234
39
68
107
39
0
437
8.9
0.46
Josh Bailey
141
23
37
60
22
-9
186
12.4
0.43
Phil Kessel
152
30
36
66
26
-18
383
7.8
0.43
Guillaume Latendresse
153
32
24
56
24
-22
237
13.5
0.37
Magnus Paajarvi
121
17
25
42
16
-20
259
6.6
0.35
Alexander Burmistrov
147
19
29
48
18
-8
208
9.1
0.33
James Sheppard
160
9
34
43
14
-14
145
6.2
0.27
Burmistrov is second from bottom, ahead of only James Sheppard, a player who is either on the express train to Bustville or has already pulled into the station (Oilers fans will note Magnus Paajarvi’s location on the same list with frustration).
According to behindthenet.ca, Burmistrov is playing against middling opposition and getting lots of time in the offensive zone, and yet he’s marginally more effective offensively (on a relative to icetime basis) than Tanner Glass. The same was true last year – lousy opposition, lots of offensive zone time, 1.27 PTS/60 at even-strength. Given premium minutes, Burmistrov has responded with minimal offense.
I’m not criticizing Burmistrov’s two-way game, which is pretty good for his age. But – even with the caveat that he has lots of time and many of his peers are still playing junior hockey – I do wonder where his ceiling is offensively. I’d suggest it’s not nearly as high as draft position would dictate.