The ghost of Mike Gillis reared its ugly head again over the weekend. On Saturday night the Columbus Blue Jackets romped the Boston Bruins 6-2, their first win against the B’s since 2010. The first star of that game was former Canucks prospect defenceman Kevin Connauton.
Connauton had a goal and two assists in the victory. He now has seven points in 14 games for Columbus since being picked up off of waivers from the Dallas Stars earlier in the season.
He has made a solid impression in Columbus ever since his debut. His first goal for the Blue Jackets was an overtime winner against the Philadelphia Flyers. With his goal against the Bruins on Saturday night, he now has two game-winning goals for Columbus since his arrival.
The Canucks drafted Connauton in the third round of the 2009 NHL entry draft, the second draft under the tenure of former General Manager Mike Gillis. He would develop in their system for four seasons, until Gillis shipped Connauton away during the 2013 trade deadline.
Connauton was traded along with a second-round draft pick (Philippe Desrosiers) to the Dallas Stars for Derek Roy. The move was supposed to bolster the Canucks offence in order for them to make a post-season push.
On the surface the deal seemed like a steal for the Canucks. They traded away a draft pick and a player who had not seen any NHL action for a forward who had previously registered four straight seasons of 60+ points.
How did the deal work out for the Canucks? Roy scored six points in 12 regular season games for the Canucks. He then recorded a mere one assist in four playoff games for the Canucks as they were swept by the San Jose Sharks in the first round.
Roy’s career has gone downhill ever since. He played for the St. Louis Blues last year, before signing a one-year, $1 million contract with the Nashville Predators this season. He has scored once in 26 games for the Preds this season, and his short stint for Nashville has come to an end. After clearing waivers and being sent down to the AHL, he was dealt to the Edmonton Oilers for Marc Arcobello.
While Roy’s future remains unclear, Connanton is quietly establishing himself as a bona-fide NHL defenceman. He finally has a regular spot in an NHL line-up since joining Columbus in November.
In eight games with the Dallas Stars this season, he was averaging under 12 minutes of ice time. However since joining the Blue Jackets, he is averaging over 16 minutes per game.
General Manager Jim Nill of the Dallas Stars also deserves some criticism for giving up on the defenceman too soon, especially since Dallas has given up the second-most goals in the league. Only the Oilers have allowed more goals this season.
Kevin Connauton has three points tonight for Columbus and there’s still a period to go. Still choked that Dallas lost him for zilch
— Derek Neumeier (@Derek_N_NHL) December 28, 2014
Connauton has only played 58 games at the NHL level thus far, and may continue to taunt the two teams who undervalued him far too soon.
Come on….everyone in Vancouver at the time new Connauton had good potential. Mike Gillis did too. But Roy was what we needed to try for those playoffs. I remember saying I didn’t like giving him up but understood the gamble needed to be made for any hope at doing anything in the playoffs.
Gillis can be blamed for a lot of things but seems like everyone wants to blame him for everything. He did not “undervalue” Connauton…..he got Derek Roy for him. At the time Roy had very good offensive potential. Had Gillis not made a move that season the fan base and Vancouver media would have crucified him for doing nothing.
Hindsight is always 20/20 isn’t it?
Besides, the canucks have Corrado who will probably end up being better than Connauton. And we didn’t have to give up Tanev.
I don’t care if Connauton wins a Norris trophy…it STILL wouldn’t make it a bad trade.
Saw the box score the other night and thought “Oh Mike Gillis, you really had no clue what you were doing.” I will never forgive him for that atrocious Marco Sturm signing, which he turned into acquiring the albatross contract of David Booth.
So you are a journalism student who still doesn’t like Gillis. Time to grow up and move along, kid.
Thanks for the comment. I never said I didn’t like Gillis, just interesting to look back on the trade considering Connauton hadn’t played an NHL game at the time of the deal. It’s always a risk to trade away prospects for veterans and this particular trade is a good example of that. The Canucks could use Connauton right now with Hamhuis out of the line-up and a lack of depth on defence.