The Denver Post

Colorado offense goes downhill at wrong time

FLYERS 2, AVALANCHE 1

- By Mike Chambers

Offensivel­y, the Avalanche has found itself in an untimely slump.

With third-string goalie Andrew Hammond in net Wednesday, the rested Avalanche couldn’t produce more than one goal for the third consecutiv­e game in regulation or overtime and lost ground in the Western Conference playoff race against a team that lost in overtime Tuesday at Dallas.

Colorado’s top line of Nathan MacKinnon and wingers

BUFFALO, N.Y.» Jack Eichel has difficulty accepting the sorry state of the Buffalo Sabres, who haven’t had a sniff at the playoffs in the three years since his celebrated arrival.

“When I got drafted, if you would’ve said we’d be in this position, I probably would’ve told you to give your head a shake,” Eichel said.

Instead, it’s the 21-year-old shaking his head in disbelief over a franchise that’s finished no better than 14th in the Eastern Conference since 2013 and in jeopardy of finishing last in the overall standings for the third time in five years.

This isn’t what anyone — from since-fired GM Tim Murray to Sabres fans encouragin­g the team to tank — were anticipati­ng during the 2014-15 season. That’s when Buffalo was in a race to the bottom for the right to draft one of the two touted, generation­al prospects: Eichel and Connor McDavid, who was selected first overall by Edmonton.

What’s worse for Eichel is seeing other teams jumping ahead of Buffalo in the rebuilding process.

“You look at Colorado and some of these teams, New Jersey, that make a quick turnaround and all of a sudden they’re in the playoff hunt,” he said.

If misery likes company, the Sabres aren’t the only ones stuck in a rut.

Whatever watershed moment the 2015 draft was supposed to represent by infusing gamechangi­ng talent to the NHL’s neediest teams, it has yet to make more than a ripple in the standings.

Eichel hasn’t made a dent in the Sabres’ fortunes despite averaging nearly a point a game.

For all of McDavid’s offensive exploits and earning NHL MVP honors last season, the Oilers will miss the playoffs for the second time in his three years.

Instead, the 2015 draft serves as a cautionary example of how bottoming out doesn’t guarantee instant turnaround­s.

With the exception of Toronto, three of the teams, including Arizona, with top-five selections in 2015 have already been eliminated from this year’s playoffs, and a fourth, Carolina, could join them soon.

So much for the tanking tenet held by several NHL executives, who thought the best way to build a champion was to start by losing big.

Pittsburgh did that in building its three most recent Stanley Cup champion teams with two No. 1 draft picks (Sidney Crosby and goalie Marc-Andre Fleury) and a No. 2 (Evgeni Malkin). Chicago’s three most recent Cup winners followed the Blackhawks selecting Jonathan Toews with the No. 3 pick in 2006 and Patrick Kane No. 1 the following year.

And yet, there are exceptions. Detroit won four titles from 1997 to 2008 despite not drafting higher than No. 19 from 1992 to 2013.

Boston has had a top-10 pick just twice in 10 years.

Just look at the NHL expansion Vegas Golden Knights, who have clinched a playoff berth and are leading the Pacific Division with a team cobbled together from scratch.

“A lot of teams have a lot of good hockey players, but there’s not many Malkins and Crosbys in the NHL. No, we don’t have them,” Vegas coach Gerard Gallant said. “It’s all about being a team. And we’ve been a team since Day 1.”

Having a wealth of high picks is no guarantee.

 ?? Jeffrey T. Barnes, The Associated Press ?? Buffalo Sabres Jack Eichel, a celebrated draft pick, can only shake his head in disbelief over a franchise that has finished no better than 14th in the Eastern Conference since 2013.
Jeffrey T. Barnes, The Associated Press Buffalo Sabres Jack Eichel, a celebrated draft pick, can only shake his head in disbelief over a franchise that has finished no better than 14th in the Eastern Conference since 2013.

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