Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

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  • PFellah
    Rookie
    • Oct 2011
    • 276

    #1

    Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

    The NHL Returns To Georgia. Will The Third Time Be The Charm?

    Surprising fans around the league, the NHL made a two-fold announcement. First, that the Las Vegas expansion had gone so well that the timetable for a 32nd team would be accelerated and it would be added for the 2018-2019 season. Second, perhaps more surprising... that the city of Atlanta, not Seattle, as many expected, would get to take its third shot at an NHL team.

    To accommodate the new franchise the Detroit Red Wings would be moving to the Central Division. "This realignment was about making the league make geographic sense while preserving interesting divisional rivalries. We believe Detroit fans will enjoy facing Chicago, St. Louis, and Minnesota on a regular basis, and the new Atlanta team should have some natural rivalry potential with the two Florida teams out of the gate, and the rest will build over time.

    The team announced it would be operating under the name of the Atlanta Firebirds. "We felt like this was a mix of the old and the new. It pays respects to the legacy of both the Flames and Thrashers, but combines those legacies into something completely new." The team also announced that it had reached an agreement with the Calgary Flames to use the old Atlanta Flames' logo as a secondary logo, but not as a primary.

    The team also announced it would be locating its minor-league team in Birmingham, Alabama, where it would play as the Birmingham Bandits.

    Editor's Note:
    I was originally playing around with a Seattle expansion, I had a logo I liked, but I ran into a wall where I couldn't get a team concept that felt right without being a Seahawks' re-skin.

    But then I had something of an epiphany: Flames + Thrashers = FIREBIRDS! Swap out the green and blue for a more fiery palette, and we're in business.

    Screenshots of logos/screenshots to be uploaded later: I left the USB stick at home. Oof.
  • PFellah
    Rookie
    • Oct 2011
    • 276

    #2
    Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

    SEASON CAPSULES

    2018-2019
    Key Additions (non-expansion draft): C Ryan Kesler, LW David Perron, LW Rick Nash, LW Nikolai Sbruev (#1 draft pick)
    Key Departures: NONE (inaugural season)
    Regular Season: 47-27-8, 102 points. 2nd place in Atlantic Division (Toronto 104).
    Playoffs: Lost to Tampa Bay, 4-3, in first round

    2019-2020
    Key Additions: C David Backes, RW Mikkel Boedker, LW Johnny Gaudreau, D Erik Karlsson, RW Gustav Nyquist, G Ondrej Pavelec, RW Blake Wheeler
    Key Departures: RW Jesper Fast, LW Rick Nash, C Riley Nash, D Alex Petrovic, RW Craig Smith
    Regular Season: 53-23-6, 112 points. 1st place in Atlantic, Eastern Conference, and Presidents' Trophy.
    Playoffs: Beat MTL 4-3 in first round. Lost 4-1 to Buffalo in 2nd round.
    Last edited by PFellah; 02-23-2019, 04:02 PM.

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    • PFellah
      Rookie
      • Oct 2011
      • 276

      #3
      Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

      THE FIRE BRIGADE: Inside The Firebirds' War Room

      FB: Welcome to The Fire Brigade, your fan-community news source for all things related to the Atlanta Firebirds. On the eve of the NHL Expansion Draft, we had a chance to sit down with Ian Baxter (Ed: Ian is my son, Baxter is my dog -- it's kinda become my default GM name), the Firebirds' new GM, and talk shop. Ian, our understanding is that you have protected lists submitted from the other teams. How are things looking as far as putting a roster together?

      IB: Well, it's looking interesting. There's a LOT of talent available at the defensive end of the rink. I've got NO worries that we're going to have a healthy supply of blue-liners. And we've identified some goalies that should fit our plans nicely. Our concern right now is forwards -- I don't want to disrespect any of the guys in the pool, particularly since some of those guys are going to be part of this locker room this time tomorrow, but it seems like the existing teams prioritized protecting their forwards, so the pickings at those positions... well, they just aren't as deep.

      FB: So would you see free agency being a tool there?

      IB: Based on what we're seeing from the protected lists, yes, I'd expect us to have to add a few names in free agency to bolster the offense. Or maybe make some trades in that direction. The other thing is we're going to be quite a bit under the cap, so I could see us taking on some contracts via trade if the free agents aren't there. But I would expect we're going to do something to create conditions for competition up front.

      FB: Speaking of contracts, last year, Vegas put some big veteran names and big contracts on their team; it really seemed like they were in "compete now" mode. What sort of strategy do you see playing out for the Firebirds? Win now? In for the long haul?

      IB: I mean, it would be wonderful if we could even approach the success Vegas had, but you also have to recognize that's not the norm for expansion franchises. They caught lightning in a bottle. We're going to build for the long-term -- that means we want to be young, and I'd personally prefer to be fast. But like I said, that doesn't preclude adding some veteran presence, whether it's to bring leadership to the locker room and set the tone for the younger guys, or even just to make sure we're in compliance with the salary floor. I don't think the fans or the players' union would be happy if we rolled into Opening Day with a roster that was entirely unproven prospects.

      FB: I know Vegas pre-arranged some deals prior to their expansion draft where they arranged to take a different player. Working on anything like that?

      IB: It's an option we're pursuing. Vegas showed that if you get creative, the list of available players aren't the only assets up for grabs. I don't want to give away too much, but with all these defensemen we're likely to have, maybe that's another way we can get some forward help, or even just build some assets for the future.

      (Ed: House rule -- during the draft, I'll allow "give-back" trades where I can trade a guy back to his original team, but that's it.)

      FB: Any thoughts on the Amateur Draft?

      IB: Oh, good heavens... one thing at a time, eh? I mean, we've started to look at the pool, but I fully admit that's an area where we're playing catch-up. Our front office is still unpacking boxes, and we've been hiring scouts on the fly, but we haven't been able to scout as deeply as the other teams. So at least this year, we may have to rely a little more on central scouting reports than I'd like, but we'll still be able to identify some solid players. The way I look at it, the only one who really ever gets to know in advance what they're doing is the team with the #1 overall, and that's Buffalo, not us.

      (Ed: I was glad Buffalo got the #1 overall so they could -- presumably -- still take Rasmus Dahlin. Beyond that, I'm OK with entropy taking command.)

      FB: Anything else our fans should know about you?

      IB: Well, I grew up on the Mario-era Penguins, so if our roster starts to look like Pittsburgh South, I apologize in advance. Then again, those guys have made some pretty deep Cup runs the last few years, so maybe that's a good thing to emulate, right?

      FB: Sure. You gonna emulate us a Malkin and Crosby in the next two drafts?

      IB: Damn. Walked right into that. No pressure, right?

      FB: And on that note, that's about all we have time for today. Good luck in the Expansion Draft tomorrow.

      IB: Thanks! It's going to be a long journey, but hopefully it'll be the beginning of something special.
      Last edited by PFellah; 11-27-2018, 10:19 AM.

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      • PFellah
        Rookie
        • Oct 2011
        • 276

        #4
        Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

        2018 Expansion Draft

        Results with a little bit of "thought process" where appropriate, though some of the choices were fairly obvious. I mostly went in order, though I did have to go back and re-tweak a few picks since I actually reached a point where I had too many defensemen (hereafter: TMD) and had to swap a few out for forwards.

        Anaheim: LW Andrew Cogliano. 94 SPD one of the fastest guys I've seen. Manson would've been a good choice except for TMD.
        Arizona: C Marcus Kruger. Was originally going to be Jason Demers, but this was one of the "official" TMD swaps (i.e. where the CPU actually warned me about not having enough forwards).
        Boston: C Riley Nash. Obvious pick, given the pool's general weakness at forward.
        Buffalo: G Linus Ullmark. Will probably be the starter in the minors so he gets reps.
        Calgary: RW Curtis Lazar. I thought about Giordano -- he's Elite, I have room under the cap -- but the age combined with the 4 years left on his deal scared me off. Being stuck with a 3rd-pair 37-year-old at almost $7M in 2021 scares me. Michael Stone was also a brief consideration, but he's in that tweener land where he's not a Top 4 talent, but he's also too old to improve.
        Carolina: LW Jordan Martinook. Coin flip between Martinook and Brock McGinn. McGinn is younger but Martinook has a speed edge.
        Colorado: G Philipp Grubauer. All the cool kids are doing it. I assume he'll be my starter.
        Columbus: G Joonas Korpisalo. Not sure if he's the backup or whether I can work out a 1A/1B thing. I have a personal soft spot for Jack Johnson; Letestu is low ceiling but would have been positionally useful since I have weak centers.
        Dallas: RW Tyler Pitlick. Best of a mediocre batch.
        Detroit: LW Matt Puempel. It was him or Darren Helm. Helm got a look because he felt more versatile -- with a 80-some faceoff rating, you could turn him into a halfway-decent center if you had to.
        Edmonton: D Adam Larsson. Young. Top 4 talent. One of the easiest picks of the draft.
        Florida: D Alex Petrovic. Another fairly easy choice.
        Los Angeles: D Alec Martinez. It was either Martinez or Tobias Rieder. I think this is the first time I made a pick with a give-back trade explicitly in mind.
        Minnesota: D Gustav Olofsson. Young. Room to improve. You'll notice a theme.
        Montreal: C Byron Froese. Montreal's choices were crap. Originally the pick was going to be Jordie Benn, but this was another "official" TMD Switch.
        Nashville: D Mattias Ekholm. This was probably one of the toughest calls. Ekholm is a great player, Bonino would have been my best center, I've always kinda liked Jarnkrok, and there's other good stuff on the roster too. I went Ekholm for now, but we may come back to this in a give-back deal.
        New Jersey: D Mirco Mueller. Jersey was another team without a lot to choose from, so... young cheap defenseman. There you go.
        New York Islanders: D Adam Pelech. We can almost do a crowd chant now... YOUNG... CHEAP... DEFENSEMAN.
        New York Rangers: RW Jesper Fast. He's... well... fast.
        Ottawa: C Tom Pyatt. Ottawa's choices were painful, so... live body at center. Moving along.
        Philadelphia: LW Taylor Leier. Since Gritty wasn't available, YOUNG... CHEAP... WING... waitwut?
        Pittsburgh: LW Carl Hagelin. Now we've got dreamy hockey hair covered as well.
        San Jose: D Dylan DeMelo. You down with YCD? Yeah, you know me.
        St. Louis: RW Beau Bennett. I always liked this guy as a Pen; he could just never stay healthy. We'll take a flyer on him.
        Tampa Bay: D Anton Stralman. Another give-back candidate -- TB feels like they might have other stuff worth trading for.
        Toronto: RW Josh Leivo. Not a lot of memorable choices here.
        Vancouver: D Michael Del Zotto. Possible trade-back candidate, since Vancouver has some decent centers (Sam Gagner, Brandon Sutter).
        Washington: D Christian Djoos. YCD, and the son of Per Djoos, one of the best hockey names of all time.
        Winnipeg: C Adam Lowry. Solid center. In a different scenario, I might have taken Tyler Myers, but Too Many Defensemen.

        IN SUMMARY
        Centers (5): Froese, Kruger, Lowry, Nash, Pyatt
        Left Wing (5): Cogliano, Hagelin, Leier, Martinook, Puempel
        Right Wing (5): Bennett, Fast, Lazar, Leivo, Pitlick
        Defense (12): Del Zotto, DeMelo, Djoos, Ekholm, Larsson, Martinez, Mueller, Murphy, Olofsson, Pelech, Petrovic, Stralman
        Goalies (3): Grubauer, Korpisalo, Ullmark

        In case it needs to be said, that's alphabetical, not organized by lines or anything.

        As predicted, the forwards are pretty uninspiring, but I've got tons of defensive talent, so I should be able to play around a little with trades and free agency to try to balance things out a little better.
        Last edited by PFellah; 11-27-2018, 10:35 PM.

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        • PFellah
          Rookie
          • Oct 2011
          • 276

          #5
          Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

          2018 Amateur Draft

          GIVE-BACK TRADES
          I ended up working on five, executing on three.

          FAILED DEALS
          • Del Zotto to Vancouver. They just didn't want him back and I didn't feel like forcing the issue.
          • Petrovic to Florida. Interest was there, but I just couldn't find a return -- no player leapt out and the best pick I could get was a 3rd, and that wasn't really floating my boat. Figure I'll hold on and see what opens up later.


          COMPLETED DEALS
          • Stralman returned to Tampa Bay for RW Taylor Raddysh and Tampa's 2nd round pick (2-29-61). Nothing particular about Raddysh; Tampa just had him as "looking to move" and he made the trade work.
          • Martinez returned to LA for their first-round draft pick (1-21-21). Tried to make it work for a player, but nothing really balanced properly, so in the end I just took a pick straight-up.
          • Ekholm returned to Nashville for RW Craig Smith and their 2nd round pick in 2019. Figured I'd take on a little salary to make the deal more palatable and get a true starting forward in the return.


          Didn't get the center I wanted, but it's progress.

          2018 DRAFT PICKS
          1-5-5 - LW Nikolai Sbruev. Central Scouting had him #2 overall. We'll see.
          1-21-21 (from LA) - C Manuel Greffe - general playmaker-y guy.
          2-4-35 - D Ryan Merkley - seemed to have decent offensive skills
          2-29-61 (from TB) - C Filip Hallander - "elite" speed caught my eye
          3-3-67 - D Xavier Bernard - tie goes to a guy named "Xavier". Prepare for lots of X-Men jokes if it pans out.
          The remainder of the draft can be summarized by "scouting is iffy, but it's at least reporting a chance of Elite ceiling"
          4-3-99 - RW Ray Finley
          5-3-131 - G Austin Quincey - possible over-reach on a goalie, but I wanted to grab at least one
          6-3-163 - RW Jared Olsen
          7-3-195 - C Krystof Hrabik - exception to previous statement: his ceiling was only Top 6 Forward, but he had a little firmer scouting.

          Next up... FREE AGENCY.
          Last edited by PFellah; 11-28-2018, 06:14 AM.

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          • PFellah
            Rookie
            • Oct 2011
            • 276

            #6
            Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

            Interrupt to introduce the unis! (Home, road, alt... respectively...)

            Last edited by PFellah; 11-27-2018, 09:55 PM.

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            • PFellah
              Rookie
              • Oct 2011
              • 276

              #7
              Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

              Firebirds Make Their Mark In Free Agency, Trade Market

              The bad news: the free agent market wasn't quite as strong as I hoped it would be -- not a lot of game-changing players on the move.

              The good news: the Firebirds were able to get creative and give their roster an overhaul with 11 free agent signings, and 5 trades.

              Let's get right to it...

              FREE AGENCY

              General goals for free agency were as follows:
              • Improve the top lines in general
              • Depth signings on defense -- I have solid defensemen at the NHL level, but the minors are pretty empty. They don't have to be stars; mostly just warm bodies. If they happen to have some upside... cool.
              • At least one veteran "swing" defenseman who won't suffer from not playing a lot.
              • A veteran backup goalie who won't mind sitting the bench.


              In order of signings, here's who came into the fold (parens are years/salary).
              • LW Rick Nash (1/3.05M). Full disclosure, at least 30% of the reason I went after him is to have Rick Nash and Riley Nash playing on a line together. That's just how I roll. That said, a 1-year commitment works well.
              • G Jaroslav Halak (2/1.525). Veteran keeper. Seemed good to have one.
              • Brief "The One That Got Away" detour -- James Van Riemsdyk. I offered him 4 years at $6M per, but he decided he wanted to play for a better team and took less money to sign a 1-year deal to return to Toronto. Ah well. At which point I shifted my attentions to David Perron.
              • D Erik Gustafsson (1/950k). Depth signing.
              • D Slater Koekkoek (1/1.3M). Depth with a little room to grow. Since he was an RFA, I had to wait and see if Tampa would match, but they didn't, so he eventually joined the fold. At 1.3, he didn't even cost me a draft pick.
              • D Kevin Bieksa (1/1.7M). Veteran swing guy. Originally offered around 1.4 or 1.5 but he turned it down, landed him at 1.7.
              • C Mark Letestu (2/2.4M). Also turned down the first offer at 2.2ish, signed for 2.4. Moderate upgrade to the 3rd or 4th line.
              • LW David Perron (4/5.5). Comes in a little cheaper than I was offering on JVR; I assume he's headed for the top line.
              • C Dominik Simon (1/850k). Surprised to find him available. Seems like he's got some upside.
              • A few more "warm body" depth signings: D Niko Mikkola (2/650k), LW Brandon Pirri (1/850k), G Niklas Rubin (2/700k)


              And for the record, I'm still more than $13M under the cap, so I still have more room to take on salary if any good deals come up as the season progresses.

              TRADES
              Five deals in total. A mix of executing the plan, responding to CPU offers, and chasing the occasional fetish item. All picks are 2019 picks.

              Firebirds trade C Tom Pyatt, RW Josh Leivo, and their 4th round pick to Winnipeg for Winnipeg's 2nd round and 7th round picks. Offered by the CPU. Leivo and Pyatt had been pushed pretty far down my depth chart, so it was two guys of marginal value for a chance to move up.

              Firebirds trade RW Taylor Raddysh to Anaheim for C Ryan Kesler. BEHOLD the big fish! Anaheim was looking to clear cap space, offering both Kesler and Henrique, but Henrique was expiring whereas Kesler sticks around a while. OK, Kesler scares me in the same way Giordano did -- I could be paying $7M for a 4th-line C at the tail end of this -- but for today, it gives me a #1 center. Raddysh? Might be good some day, but he was a throw-in when I first got him, so easy come, easy go.

              Firebirds trade G Joonas Korpisalo to Colorado for RW Nail Yakupov and a 3rd round pick previously obtained from Ottawa. Full disclosure: Yakupov is a bit of a fetish item, so I might have overpaid for him a little. On the other hand, you can only put one guy in net at a time -- Grubauer and Ullmark already give me two decent guys, so what the heck.

              Firebirds trade C Marcus Kruger to Montreal for their 4th round pick. Offered by CPU. With Kesler and Letestu in the fold, Kruger wasn't really doing much for me, so I went ahead and pulled the trigger. I'm having a twinge of second-guessing because his $3M salary wasn't really hurting me and maybe I could've gotten more waiting until the deadline, but it's done now.

              Firebirds trade LW Matt Puempel to Detroit for LW Darren Helm. A lesser fetish item; I've always kinda liked Helm, and Puempel didn't pan out as well as he scouted, even if he's still got some room to grow. Detroit is another team that seems to be in salary dump mode, so they had a bunch of old, expensive guys on the block. I kept trying to squeeze an extra draft pick out of the deal, but eventually settled for a one-up just to get the deal in the books. It was a little frustrating that at one point I had Puempel and... Froese, I think?... for Helm and a 2nd, the reds and greens looked right, the bars looked even, and Detroit still said I was way off.

              The "One That Got Away" here was Daniel Sprong of the Pens. I probably offered 15 or 20 different permutations of "young defenseman + cheap forward" that looked like it made the bars happy, but never got them to budge. (Olofsson/Puempel was probably the closest to succeeding). If the Pens are contenders, maybe I'll take another run at it as the season progresses.
              Last edited by PFellah; 11-28-2018, 08:17 AM.

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              • SeattleBattleCat
                Pro
                • Nov 2017
                • 710

                #8
                Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                Formed a nice team there. Looking forward to seeing how the Firebirds progress. Good Luck!

                Picking up Kesler is a good move in my book, he'll be solid enough for a few years to give the Franchise a good start. I've always had a bit of a soft spot for Daniel Sprong after NHL 15, I think I drafted him by memory....

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                • PFellah
                  Rookie
                  • Oct 2011
                  • 276

                  #9
                  Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                  Fire Brigade: Postcards From Training Camp

                  Whether it's the general optimism of a new season, or whether Vegas raised the bar for what an expansion team might be able to accomplish in its first season, there's a sense of optimism and fun in the Atlanta locker room as training camp begins.

                  As expected, newcomers... yeah, they're all newcomers but you know what we mean... Ryan Kesler and David Perron have been working together with RW Jesper Fast on what is shaping up as the #1 line, and early indications are that Kesler will be wearing the captain's C when the season starts. We asked Kesler how he felt about accepting the mantle of "face of the franchise".

                  "I think that's something that's more for you guys to debate about than anything else. We've got a room full of professionals who have been around this game; it's not like being the captain or being the guy they brought in via trade means these other guys don't know their roles or how to get themselves ready for games. As far as 'face of the franchise'... if that's a thing coming from the fans... I mean, who doesn't like fans wearing your sweater or asking for an autograph? If it's about lists and rankings and stuff... I'm just here to play hockey and try to help this team compete."

                  The second line is shaping up as LW Rick Nash, C Riley Nash (teammates are already beginning to dub them as "Big Nacho" and "Little Nacho"), and RW Craig Smith. Smith, not wanting to be the odd Nash out, has been leaning into situation with aplomb, showing up to an early practice as "Reggie Nash", complete with a fake mustache, Hanson Brothers glasses, and a self-made stick-tape nameplate.

                  The third line will be a bit of a speed line, with Mark Letestu centering for Andrew Cogliano and Darren Helm (playing out of position on the right wing). "We're a little older, but we can still skate with the kids. Maybe teach 'em a few things", said Helm.

                  This would seem to leave Carl Hagelin, Adam Lowry, and Tyler Pitlick as the 4th line for now.

                  On defense, Petrovic and Larsson have been working together as a pair, as have Del Zotto and Connor Murphy. This has left veteran Kevin Bieksa working round-robin with the younger guys -- Christian Djoos, Gustav Olofsson, and Adam Pelech. The latter situation has led to the creation of a makeshift shrine outside Bieksa's stall, with the younger blue-liners leaving "offerings" for dispensation of his hockey wisdom -- on the day we were there, it held a Red Bull, a pack of gum, a keychain with the Atlanta Braves' logo, and (somewhat inexplicably) a Taylor Swift CD.

                  Between the pipes, Philipp Grubauer has been all but named the starter. The real question is whether Linus Ullmark will stay in Atlanta and get some starts in a 1A/1B fashion, or whether he'll go down to the minors to see action every day, in which case Jaroslav Halak would back up Grubauer.

                  The other excitement in camp was getting a first look at top pick Nikolai Sbruev, and early indications are he's going to be a good one (Ed: not fully scouted, but showing as Elite and already a 77 overall). Sbruev has been working a line with C Dominik Simon and RW Nail Yakupov. We asked Yakupov if he felt like his experience as a former #1 overall gave him some insights that would allow him to mentor Sbruev.

                  "It's not quite the same situation, #1 overall is a bigger thing, a bigger stage. But maybe there are some things I can share about adjusting to NHL life that would be useful. I think the biggest thing will be to bring out the best in each other on the ice, and the other stuff will take care of itself."

                  Center Manuel Greffe (1-21-21) and defenseman Ryan Merkley (2-4-35) have also been drawing rave reviews; neither is ready-to-go as Sbruev, but both may end up making their stays in Birmingham short ones. We're also hearing some decent early buzz about 4th-round pick Ray Finley (4-3-99). On the other hand, we've been hearing some disappointment with 2nd-round pick Filip Hallander (2-29-61) -- an unnamed source in the organization characterized it as "not a total flameout, he'll probably still make an NHL roster at some point, but maybe not the difference-maker we hoped he'd be". (Ed: Hallander's ceiling has dropped to Bottom 6 as we've scouted him better).

                  Comment

                  • PFellah
                    Rookie
                    • Oct 2011
                    • 276

                    #10
                    Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                    2018 Pre-Season Results

                    9/25 vs Florida -- L, 6-4
                    Quiet first two periods; fireworks erupt in the 3rd, turning a 2-1 snore into a shootout. Finley, Yakupov, Leier, and Lowry tally in the losing effort; Hoffman gets a hat trick for the Panthers.

                    9/27 @ Boston -- L, 3-2 (SO)
                    Perron and Lowry stake the Firebirds to a 2-0 lead, but the wheels come off in the 3rd, and the coup de grace is applied in the shootout.

                    9/30 vs Toronto -- L, 5-2
                    Close game early, but Toronto pulls away late. Sbruev and Kesler score in the losing effort.

                    10/2 @ Tampa Bay -- L, 2-0
                    Atlanta gets nothing going on offense (not just goal-less -- only 22 shots), while Tampa puts a pair up on Halak.

                    10/3 @ Buffalo -- W, 4-1
                    The first pre-season win comes as Atlanta fires off four unanswered goals in the 3rd period. Pirri and Letestu score in the first two minutes of the 3rd to erase a 1-0 deficit; Helm and Letestu (again) add insurance later on.

                    10/6 vs Montreal -- W, 5-4 (SO)
                    Another big 3rd period by the 'Birds forces OT, and Beau Bennett buries the winner in the shootout. In regulation, Kesler notched a pair; Bennett and Hagelin scored the other two.

                    10/8 - vs Ottawa -- L, 3-1

                    The preseason ends on a down note, as a scoreless first slowly slips away. Letestu briefly gives the home team the lead early in the 2nd, but Duchene and Smith answer back later in the period, and Gaborik adds an insurance tally in the final minute of play.

                    FINAL PRE-SEASON RECORD: 2-4-1
                    Last edited by PFellah; 11-29-2018, 09:14 AM.

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                    • PFellah
                      Rookie
                      • Oct 2011
                      • 276

                      #11
                      Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                      The Future Is Now: Sbruev Makes Opening Day Roster
                      Firebirds announce starting roster and captains



                      SBRUEV GETS THE CALL
                      In a bit of a surprise move, Nikolai Sbruev, the team's top draft choice, survived final training camp cuts to make the Opening Day roster. Even more surprising, Sbruev was seen working on right wing on the #1 line with David Perron and Ryan Kesler.

                      "The first question was whether the kid had the skills to play at this level, and he showed in training camp that he does," said GM Ian Baxter. "Once we decided he was ready for the big stage, we felt it would be best to put him in a position to succeed, and that meant letting him work with players who can bring out the best in him and vice versa."

                      To accomodate Sbruev on the #1 line, Jesper Fast appears to now be skating with the 3rd line with Cogliano and Letestu, bumping veteran Darren Helm to more of a utility role to start the season. "One of the reasons we went back to Detroit and took another look at Darren is we felt he was the sort of guy who could plug in anywhere on the depth chart. We still expect him to see the ice a fair amount, even in this new role."

                      The two remaining training camp lines (Nash-Nash-Smith and Hagelin-Lowry-Pitlick) remain undisturbed to start the season.

                      KESLER NAMED CAPTAIN, PERRON AND SMITH ALTERNATES

                      As was widely rumored, center Ryan Kesler was designated the team captain. RW Craig Smith and LW David Perron were named as the two alternates. "These guys represent veteran leadership and deep experience to a team that's a little on the young side. That doesn't mean other guys might not play a leadership role as the season progresses, but we expect them to set the tone for us out of the gate.

                      MUELLER LEAPFROGS INTO STARTING SIX ON D

                      Mirco Mueller had flown a little under the radar in training camp, as other guys seemed to be getting the bulk of the work with the starters while Mueller often paired with guys pegged for the minors. But when the team released its depth chart for the opener, Mueller was listed on the second defense pair with Connor Murphy, hopping over Olofsson and Pelech, who ended up headed for Birgmingham. Alex Petrovic and Adam Larsson stay together on the first pair, and Michael Del Zotto is now paired with Christian Djoos, putting Kevin Bieksa into the 7th defense role people assumed he was signed to fill.

                      NO GOALIE TIME-SHARE; ULLMARK TO MINORS

                      Some of the early reports were that the Firebirds might try to open up the competition in net, or at least create a 1A/1B situation with Philipp Grubauer. However, in a move that was obvious in hindsight, the team recalled Jaroslav Halak to serve as backup and sent Linus Ullmark to the minors so he could see more regular action.

                      "You have a young guy like Linus, it's tempting to want to get him up there and see what he can do, but I think it's better for his overall development to be working regularly," said Baxter. "I hope he takes this move in the spirit intended and realize it's not a lack of confidence or a negative reflection; if anything, it's our way of saying that we're investing in his long-term growth as a player."

                      OPENING DAY ROSTER AND LINES

                      Last edited by PFellah; 12-02-2018, 07:20 PM.

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                      • PFellah
                        Rookie
                        • Oct 2011
                        • 276

                        #12
                        Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                        October 2018: 'Birds Afire To Start Season



                        All the preparation is done, it's time to take to the ice and see how this team plays in real games. Let's get right to it.

                        10/12 @ Edmonton – 3-2 W
                        It wasn’t pretty, but let the record reflect that Rick Nash scored the first goal in team history, though he got a helping hand from an Edmonton defenseman knocking a rebound into his own net. Atlanta then built a 3-0 lead on goals by Carl Hagelin and Craig Smith. But then Connor McDavid remembered he was one of the best players on the planet, scoring twice within about 4 minutes to narrow the gap to 3-2 late in the 2nd. Atlanta, however, held the Oilers in check in the 3rd, killing two penalties en route to an inaugural win.

                        On a side note: minor-league goalie Linus Ullmark immediately went down with back spasms and will be sidelined for a week or two. Don't think that has a major impact, but worth noting.


                        10/15 vs Dallas – 2-1 W
                        It’s the Firebirds’ home opener, and the kid makes his first NHL goal a huge one: Nikolai Sbruev scores the eventual game-winner about halfway home in the 3rd to break a 1-1 deadlock. A few minutes earlier, Dallas’ Devin Shore had just taken the air out of the arena by scoring right after Atlanta had killed a 5-on-3 penalty. Kesler scored the other goal for Atlanta. Grubauer stopped 35 out of 36 shots faced.

                        10/17 vs Ottawa – 4-2 W
                        Another treat for the home crowd. It was an even 2nd period, as both teams scored a pair in the middle frame (Duchene and Pageau for the visitors; Kesler and Petrovic for the home team). But Riley Nash book-ended those goals with solo tallies in the 1st and 3rd to provide the margin of victory.

                        We pause for a really quick look at the draft. It's way too early to draw any real conclusions, except our scout has determined Russian RW Viktor Kovalev is shaping up as a Franchise talent.

                        Also, while we're screwing around in the draft, Philadelphia came in with a trade offer: they're looking to acquire D Dylan DeMelo for a 2020 4th and 2020 5th. On one hand, DeMelo is sitting in the minors, so he's expendable overall. Still, I'm feeling like it's both a little early to be making deals (hot start aside, should I be a buyer or a seller?), and I’d probably want more return than that anyway.


                        10/19 vs Nashville – 3-2 L (SO)
                        It took extra time and a shootout (and backup Jaroslav Halak between the pipes – Grubauer is still unbeaten), but the Firebirds are finally handed their first loss. Ryan Johansen scored the game winner, with Pekka Rinne stoning Jesper Fast to make it stand up. In regulation, Nick Bonino and the apparently ageless Jarome Iginla scored for Nashville; Riley Nash and Kesler continued their hot streaks for the Birds.

                        10/20 at Washington – 7-5 W
                        It’s a barn-burner in the nation’s capital! Ovechkin scored the game’s first goal, but then Atlanta rattled off four straight (Li’l Nacho, Hagelin, Letestu, and Sbruev) to take the lead they would hold the rest of the way. Kesler, Hagelin’s 2nd, and Cogliano round out the goal scoring. Copley and Halak were the merciless shelling victims, with Holtby and Grubauer appearing in relief.

                        10/22 vs Toronto – 6-1 L
                        THERE’S the first “real” loss, and it’s an emphatic one. Even with Grubauer back in net, Toronto jumps out to a 2-0 lead in the 1st and pulls away with three more in the 3rd. Five different Leafs get on the board; Craig Smith scored the lone goal for the Firebirds.

                        10/24 vs Chicago – 5-2 W
                        Atlanta breaks a 1-1 tie open in the 2nd period with three unanswered goals, and then hang on in the 3rd. Kesler, Christian Djoos, and Sbruev lead the charge in the 2nd, with Craig Smith creating the initial deadlock and Kesler’s second goal providing the exclamation point.

                        Between games, Chicago offers the same basic deal Philly did – DeMelo for their 2020 4th and 5th. Still no thanks, for the same reasons.

                        10/27 vs Minnesota – 3-0 W
                        Kesler in the 1st, Kesler in the 2nd, Jesper Fast in the 3rd, and Grubauer turns away 30 Wild shots for an easy win.

                        10/30 vs Anaheim – 3-2 L (OT)
                        A back-and-forth game but Hampus Lindholm sinks the Firebirds at the 2:07 mark of overtime. Nic Kerdiles and Rickard Rakell tally for the Ducks; Djoos and David Perron for the Firebirds.


                        MONTHLY SUMMARY

                        STANDINGS REPORT
                        MONTH: 6-1-2
                        YEAR-TO-DATE: 6-1-2, 14 points
                        DIVISION: Tied for 1st (with Toronto), 14 points
                        CONFERENCE: Tied for 1st (with Toronto), 14 points

                        TEAM LEADERS
                        GOALS: Kesler 8, Riley Nash 4, Hagelin 3, Smith 3, Sbruev 3
                        ASSISTS: Petrovic 6, Perron 6, Riley Nash 5, Sbruev 5, Fast 4, Kesler 4, Smith 4
                        POINTS: Kesler 12, Riley Nash 9, Sbruev 8, Perron 7, Petrovic 7, Smith 7
                        PLUS-MINUS: Riley Nash 6, Murphy 5, Larsson 4, Petrovic 4, Smith 4

                        ON THE FARM
                        The Birmingham Bandits put up a 5-4 October, with Linus Ullmark sitting for most of the month. Filling in for Ullmark, Nik Rubin went 3-3 with a .893 save percentage and a 2.88 goals against. (Non-contract roster filler Lukas Hafner also got two starts -- for some reason, our rookie Quincey never saw the ice). Jordan Martinook leads the team in both goals (5) and points (9); other top point-getters include RW Beau Bennett (7), Byron Froese (6), Matt Gilroy (non-contract filler, 6), and Nail Yakupov (6 points, all assists)

                        (Ed: I'll do "Around the League" as a separate post; I'm still playing around with formatting on it.)

                        Comment

                        • moose141
                          MVP
                          • Dec 2007
                          • 3402

                          #13
                          Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                          Really enjoying this! Articles and insights are extremely well written, and every move you make seems to have a real purpose! Great stuff so far.
                          Check out my Pitt Panthers Dynasty (NCAA Football 14)
                          Subscribe to my YouTube channel moose141DM!

                          Pittsburgh Penguins - Pittsburgh Panthers - Pittsburgh Steelers - Pittsburgh Pirates - West Ham United
                          University of Pittsburgh Ice Hockey

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                          • PFellah
                            Rookie
                            • Oct 2011
                            • 276

                            #14
                            Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                            Originally posted by moose141
                            Really enjoying this! Articles and insights are extremely well written, and every move you make seems to have a real purpose! Great stuff so far.
                            Thanks! I don't know that every move has a purpose, but I at least try to keep things somewhat sensible and call myself out when I'm doing something just because I like a guy in real life or something.

                            You'll note that I have a fondness that sometimes intrudes for Pens, ex-Pens, guys who killed the Pens memorably in the playoffs (see also: Grabner, Michael), and have a general fetish for speed -- can't go wrong having the fastest guys on the ice at any given time.

                            Comment

                            • PFellah
                              Rookie
                              • Oct 2011
                              • 276

                              #15
                              Re: Third Time's The Charm(?) - Atlanta Firebirds

                              October 2018: Around The League

                              The season begins to take shape. Washington and Vegas come out of the gates suffering Cup hangovers, joining Ottawa, Minnesota, and Philly at the bottom of the standings. Toronto, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and Los Angeles stake early claims to division leads, but it's early yet. The upstart expansion team, the Atlanta Firebirds are doing surprisingly well, tied for 1st-place in the Atlantic with Toronto.

                              STANDINGS


                              LEAGUE LEADERS


                              For goalie rate stats, I chose a minimum threshold of 180 shots as (20 X GP), since I didn't see an "official" criteria like baseball does for batting average and ERA. I've since found that hockey-reference.com uses .3125 of team's games played, so I'll switch to that for future leaderboards.

                              CALDER WATCH


                              I forgot to look, but I don't think there are any notable rookie goaltenders to keep track of. As a presentation thing, I might also add draft position for the rookies -- be cool to see if some 3rd-rounder is lapping the field.

                              MAJOR INJURIES
                              Mostly small stuff, but a couple of high-profile goalies on the shelf -- Montreal's Carey Price and Washington's Braden Holtby are both out until close to the new year. And Vegas' Marc-Andre Fleury just went down and is being evaluated. Stamkos (TB) and Giroux (PHI) are both out, but on short-duration injuries, and are due back soon.

                              (oops... these didn't sync to Box, so I'll have to get full details when I'm on my other computer)
                              Last edited by PFellah; 12-06-2018, 11:25 AM.

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