Canucks’ Jensen, Corrado No Longer Young Stars

So the Vancouver Canucks are sending a couple NHL players to their upcoming Young Stars prospects tournament.

They must really want to win this not-so-coveted trophy in front of a scattering of fans in Penticton. That, or they aren’t big believers in Nicklas Jensen and Frankie Corrado’s potential to play in the big league this season.

Technically, they are both still eligible for this showcase because they have played fewer than 100 regular-season games as a professional. That doesn’t mean they necessarily belong there.

Jensen finished last season on Vancouver’s top line with the Sedins, for crying out loud.

And Corrado was good enough to be in the lineup for 4 playoff games two years ago when the Canucks were still considered an elite team and Stanley Cup contenders.

These guys have no business playing in a tournament typically reserved for recently drafted prospects with little or no pro experience.

http://youtu.be/XInoB_YjwLA?t=43s

A first-round pick in the 2011 draft, Jensen has played no fewer than 99 regular-season games and has suited up for two playoff games to boot, bringing his pro total to 101. That includes 19 NHL games, 17 of them coming this past spring alongside Henrik and Daniel.

Corrado has even more NHL games on his resume, a combined 22 from the previous regime under former coaches Alain Vigneault and John Tortorella, including 15 regular-season games in 2013-14. He’s played 84 regular-season games plus six playoff contests for a grand pro total of 90 after being selected in the fifth round of the 2011 draft.

Despite only being 21 years old, they both made their pro debuts back in 2011-12 and have both played in two prior Young Stars tournaments. This would actually be their fourth if the lockout hadn’t cancelled the 2012 edition.

They will most likely be the only two players in this year’s tournament with both those distinctions. About a dozen others spread over four rosters will also be appearing in their third Young Stars, but they didn’t make their pro debuts until more recently and the majority have yet to play in the NHL.

Jensen should be in a league of his own, a man among boys in Penticton.

No forwards there will boast near his level of credentials.

The Calgary Flames aren’t sending Sven Baertschi, a soon-to-be 22-year-old with 51 games of NHL experience but only 26 last year.

The Winnipeg Jets won’t be dressing Eric O’Dell, a 24-year-old who made his NHL debut this past season by playing in 30 games.

The Edmonton Oilers will be without Tyler Pitlick, who is turning 23 in November and also got his feet wet with 10 NHL games in 2013-14.

Those guys have all outgrown the Young Stars.

(Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA TODAY Sports) Frankie Corrado will be the most experienced defenceman and have played the most NHL games of any prospect in this year's Young Stars tournament.
(Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA TODAY Sports)
Frankie Corrado will be the most experienced defenceman, having played the most NHL games of any prospect in this year’s Young Stars tournament.

As for Corrado, the two closest comparables in terms of defencemen attending this year’s tournament will likely be Calgary’s Tyler Wotherspoon (21 with 14 games) and Edmonton’s Oscar Klefbom (21 with 17 games). They are the same age as Corrado, and Wotherspoon has also played in every tournament dating to 2011, but they are both coming off their first season of professional hockey (in North America with regards to Klefbom).

In contrast, Corrado has been around the pro game for three seasons already, getting his first taste by playing 6 AHL games in 2011-12, followed by 7 NHL games, including the aforementioned 4 playoff contests, and 3 additional AHL games in 2012-13 after graduating from the OHL.

He’s essentially a veteran, along the lines of Edmonton’s Martin Marincin, who is 22 with 44 NHL games, all from 2013-14.

Imagine the outrage if the Oilers were to send an established pro like that to dominate against primarily junior players. Or if Calgary sent Baertschi to put on a scoring clinic.

So why should Corrado and Jensen get free passes? They shouldn’t, and the Canucks should be scrutinized for this decision. Whoever asked these guys to lace them up — reports indicate they didn’t volunteer — should face criticism, defended by a technicality or not.

Vancouver will justify it as an evaluation tool following an off-season full of off-ice changes. This tournament will give the new staff members — most notably, president Trevor Linden, general manager Jim Benning and head coach Willie Desjardins — a first-hand look at two of the franchise’s most seasoned prospects, but Penticton isn’t the place for that.

They have nothing left to prove at the Young Stars, and there would have been plenty of opportunity to observe their development in training camp and pre-season games against fellow pros for the most part.

Another theory is that Jensen was asked to play because Jake Virtanen, this year’s sixth overall pick with a similar skill-set, is expected to miss the tournament while still recovering from shoulder surgery.

Jensen more than fills that void and should light it up playing with another trio of first-round forwards in Bo Horvat (9th in 2013), Hunter Shinkaruk (24th in 2013) and Jared McCann (24th in 2014).

Corrado’s inclusion might have something to do with positional depth, as the Canucks are noticeably thin on the back end. But it’s not the competition’s fault that the Canucks are lacking in good defence prospects and would appear weak without Corrado on the roster.

Now he’ll probably end up being a tournament “all-star” and Vancouver fans will come away claiming Corrado’s better than Darnell Nurse (Edmonton) or Josh Morrissey (Winnipeg Jets), a pair of 19-year-olds with much higher upside albeit not as polished at this point in their careers.

Funny thing is, Corrado probably won’t stand out over somebody like Brenden Kichton (Winnipeg), a 22-year-old blue-liner who put up solid AHL numbers during his pro debut last year. Or possibly Dillon Simpson (Edmonton), a 21-year-old NCAA grad out of the University of North Dakota.

Corrado could also have his hands full with the opposing forwards.

Calgary projects to be the most dangerous with Johnny Gaudreau, Sam Bennett and Morgan Klimchuk. Winnipeg has weapons such as Nikolaj Ehlers, Nic Petan and Scott Kosmachuk. Edmonton might bring up the rear again this year, but Leon Draisaitl, Bogdan Yakimov and Greg Chase are expected to lead the way up front.

Vancouver’s forwards will be no slouch and getting those guys the puck, while also quarterbacking the power play, will be Corrado — rightly or wrongly.

If this tournament was held outside British Columbia, it’s fair to wonder whether Jensen and Corrado would still be involved. Are they going to Penticton to sell tickets and help put butts in the seats? Perhaps.

However, if the reasoning for their presence has more to do with winning, then that’s just wrong.

Larry Fisher is a sports reporter for The Daily Courier in Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada. Follow him on Twitter: @LarryFisher_KDC.

32 Comments
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J Tanna
J Tanna
10 years ago

I don’t believe Canuck Fans have any desire to point anything out to you Larry.
You wrote your article, which was full of very minor stats and a fair amount of personal opinion.

This tournament is not a tournament, it’s simply a showcase in reality. Whether Jensen and Corrado, barely meet the requirements or don’t actually meet requirements to attend, has no affect on how the Vancouver Canucks will perform this season.
You listed, in your own article, several legitimate reasons as to why they have been included, Injuries to Virtanen, tickets for Penticton, filling holes on a lacking prospect pool for D. But still went on to question and complain about the decision.

WHO CARES? I read this article thinking something worth reading would be found regarding the prospects, instead I found very poor opinionated writing. With you answering your own complaining questions.. (So then… why write it?).
I, just like most Oilers/Flames/Jets/Canucks fans, see no issue in these players being here…. Jensen, or Marincin, Klefbom… hell even if Baertschi was included, WOULD NOT CARE. THE RESULTS HAVE NO IMPACT ON ANYTHING THAT MATTERS TO ANYONE.
We wish to see how they perform on the ice, I personally wish to Jensen play along side Horvat, and how those two would mesh (which we are getting a chance to see).
If Benning decided NOT to include Jensen, and I did NOT get to see how they play together… I dont think I would need to complain about something rather miniscule.

But articles like this, to me… it’s like a chef who has little to no experience cooking. Just throw a much spice (reasons to complain) into it as you can, and see if something worthwhile comes from it.
Its still just spiced $hit in the end.

dbaz
dbaz
10 years ago

Wow 4 playoff games, lets cry about that.
Why don’t we cry about all the players that got World Junior experience. Maybe they shouldn’t be able to play either because they had a type of experience that other players didn’t get. Booo hoo.
Lets take a look Winnipeg, Edmonton, and Vancouver’s D prospects. Notice how Winnipeg, and Edmonton have a lot of D prospects, while Vancouver doesn’t?
Trymakin
Forsling
Hutton
Mcnally
These are really the only other prospects the Canucks have on D.
If you were a good reporter and could good do some research, you would realize your real complaint should be with the plug Jeramie Blain. 101 PRO gp, and still attending. If you want to complain, figure that one out you hack.

B
B
10 years ago

Who cares? Talk about looking for a reason to complain about something.

Ryan
Ryan
10 years ago

instead of listing a bunch of players that are not eligible to play in the tourney from the other teams, why don’t you list a player from each that that IS eligible but the team is purposely holding back because that org feels they are too good…

Oh, that’s right, there are NONE.

B
B
10 years ago

Wow, lots of Canucks fans on here.

That being said…that math…wow.

B
B
10 years ago
Reply to  Larry Fisher

I read the article. I also read the subsequent comments. The issue is that you did in fact get the math horrendously wrong with this lone statement:

“No forwards there will boast near his level of credentials.”

Given the credentials to enter the tournament (pro games), this is patently false.

jesse
jesse
10 years ago

Sven Baertschi has played 124 pro regular season games between the nhl and ahl according to hockey db.

“The Calgary Flames aren’t sending Sven Baertschi, a soon-to-be 22-year-old with 51 games of NHL experience but only 26 last year.”

You even used Sven as an example as to why Vancouver shouldn’t send Jensen and Corrado

Sven’s games played renderil him ineligible by the rules created for this tournament. Rules that you clearly dont agree with. Why not debate the rules instead of the team following them?

Some research you’ve done.

Ryan
Ryan
10 years ago

so just because they are the 2 players with the most experience they shouldn’t play? that makes no sense whatsoever. you know full well that if those other players you mentioned were eligible their teams would have sent them. SOMEONE is always going to be the most experienced, you can’t just keep cutting the top 2 experienced players or else you’ll have a “team” made up of current junior players with no professional experience (a max of 14 players if a team drafted solely from the CHL.) this is a ridiculous notion you are presenting, and defending.

dbaz
dbaz
10 years ago

So you are upset that the Canucks are sending eligible players. Great.
Lets look at your arguements. First lets look at the fact that Baertschi, O’dell, and Pitlick aren’t going because their teams didn’t seem to send them. But maybe the reality of it is that the GM of those teams can do math. Here let me help you.
Baertschi: 73 AHL gp + 51 NHL gp = 124 PRO gp
O’Dell: 142 AHL gp + 30 NHL gp = 172 PRO gp.
Pitlick:145 AHL gp + 10 NHL gp = 152 PRO gp
Well, it really seems the reason that they didn’t get sent is because they are ineligible!
Oh wait! You threw in Hopkins too, because he’s born the same year as Jensen!
Well.. Hopkins: 19AHLgp + 120 NHL gp = 139 PRO gp!
Dam, math is hard!

Let’s see why Jensen is eligible. First I’ll point out that to ineligible, the player must have played less than 100 PRO games.
Jensen: 80AHL gp + 19 NHL gp = 99 PRO gp!
Well he’s at 99!(Playoff games, DO NOT COUNT! And no, I didn’t count pro games in the tallies for the others). He passed that difficult math test.
Now to your, he played with Sedins, and should be in a world of his own mention. Does playing with the Sedins as a young, inexperienced player mean that you are going to be a man in their own world? Does it mean Jensen is to be a superstar, a player so great that all of Gretzky records will be broken within a decade? No, it doesn’t! In fact, let’s look at some other young, rather inexperienced players who got a taste with the Sedins.
Jason King
Taylor Pyatt
Jesse Shultz
Steve Bernier
Let’s be honest, these players are horrible. They did alright in the AHL, they did alright at times in the NHL. But seriously, we know both know the reason he even got that many points is simply due to the fact there was injuries, and most importantly that he got a chance to play with the Sedins, like the bums above.
Why would a team not want to send an inexperienced, young player to play in games that will be near AHL level. Its conditioning, its development. It makes sense, unlike your article!
Seriously though, research is fun, and it can really help you. For a reporter, I thought research was something that most usually did before writing something. Guess you didn’t learn that part.

el
el
10 years ago

Talk about a meaningless exercise. Do you really have nothing better to do than whine about a couple of 21 year olds who had a cup of coffee in the NHL? There’s more to life than just blindly cheering for a hockey team. You should get one.

Joe M
Joe M
10 years ago

You keep bringing up Klefbom, but he really isn’t comparable, he had 3 seasons of Pro hockey under his belt before this season where he split time in the NHL 17 games, and AHL 48. Jensen played one season in the SEL before his current season of AHL hockey, and was only in the NHL because of injuries.

Much like Carrodo before this season, was only called up at the end of his Jr season and played on an injured Vancouver Blue line.

There is no comparables really not coming or coming for that matter. No one can make a great case for or against them.

Joe J
Joe J
10 years ago

So is Corrado a tournament “all star”, or is he getting turned inside out by all the other players who are so much better than him? You can’t have it both ways. If he’s getting turned inside out, obviously he’s not above the level of this competition is he?

The Canucks brass feel that this is a good chance to evaluate Jensen and Corrado against players that they likely hope are below them from a development standpoint (but obviously aren’t sure). On the other end is someone like Monahan in Calgary. Flames management feel he’s comfortably a step above this competitions level of play, so they left him home. What’s wrong with that?

Last I checked, no one cares who wins this tournament. Hell I’ve been to two of them and I can’t remember who won a single game. I go to watch single players and evaluate how good they are against competition relative to their own abilities. I could care less which team won.

It’s an evaluation tool. Let the teams evaluate their players. No fans of any team are planning the parade after this so it’s probably best to leave your personal bias’ out of this if you want to be taken seriously.

tomas
tomas
10 years ago

Imagine the outrage if the flames sent Monny. He hasn’t played 100 pro games yet but it wouldn’t be right.

Matt
Matt
10 years ago

LOL! Let’s rage over a completely meaningless tournament and about breaking rules that you invented, all the while completely ignoring that the Canucks will have the youngest team at the tournament. Perhaps you had a hard time doing any research for this article because you were having a hard time googling through your tears.

Ryan
Ryan
10 years ago

Look at the other rosters before writing suck vitriol.

1993 born players. 21 years old.

Next season will only be their second years as pro players.

There are an awful lot of players invited to this tournament who have played one year pro.

How old is flames prospect Markus Granlund or Tyler Wotherspoon or talk about pro experience 1991 born Joni ortio who played many games for the flames last year How many 1993 born or later the flames bringing? 12 by my count.

Jets are bringing 10 1993 and earlier players. Interesting you mention Kitchton and lipon. Both the same age as Corrado and Jensen.

The oilers are bringing 16 1993 and earlier prospects.

Interesting to note the Canucks are only carrying 8 players in the 1993 and older age bracket. Easily the least of any team there.

Imagine if you were interested in research as much as you are talking trash? Might make for unbiased more enjoyable reading.

yort
yort
10 years ago
Reply to  Ryan

^^^^^^^^^^^^
thanks for the laugh larry

tomas
tomas
10 years ago
Reply to  Ryan

Last season was both Ortio and Granlunds first seasons in NA. Also, Ortio didn’t play a lot for the Flames. He played 8. Also, to answer your question, Granlund is 21. But like I said, he was a rookie last year in the AHL