New York Rangers: A key week for the lottery standings
The next week will play an important role in where the New York Rangers finish in the standings and what their draft lottery position will be.
Face it, the New York Rangers are going nowhere this season. For all of the brave talk about learning how to win and building for next season and for all of the pleasure Ranger fans can take from hard fought losses to quality teams, if adding a half dozen points to the final season total costs the Rangers a top five pick, it will be a waste.
Tanking is a dirty word, but it can manifest itself in many ways. Thursday night the Red Wings played without Dylan Larkin and Mike Green, both out with issues that are undoubtedly real, but would have been disregarded if the Wings were in a playoff battle.
The New Jersey Devils have twelve players injured going into this weekend. While they range from Taylor Hall‘s knee surgery to Miles Woods‘ fractured ankle, there are a series of injuries that could be classified as marginal.
One benefit of the Western Conference insanity is that several of the Rangers’ key rivals for lottery positioning are still in the playoff race. Edmonton, Vancouver, Chicago, Arizona and Colorado all have something to play for and will continue for at least a few more games.
The Rangers play New Jersey at the Garden on Saturday, then embark on the last long road trip of the season with games in Edmonton, Vancouver, Calgary and Minnesota. After the road trip they will have ten more games, with six of them against teams desperate for playoff positioning.
In “The Athletic’s” daily projection of the final standings, the Rangers are expected to finish seventh from the bottom, with only one point separating them from 6th place Vancouver. They project 5th place Anaheim to finish five points worse than New York. So, it looks like a finish anywhere from 6th to 8th from the bottom.
What it means
Tankathon.com tracks the odds for teams in the draft lottery. Here’s the difference in the odds of getting a top pick based on final standings.
Rangers finish 8th worst : 19% top three pick
1st pick: 6.0%
2nd pick: 6.3%
3rd pick: 6.7%
Eighth pick: 36.8%
Ninth pick: 36%
10th pick: 7.8%
11th pick: 0.4%
Rangers finish 6th worst: 23.3% top three pick
1st pick: 7.5%
2nd pick: 7.8%
3rd pick: 8.0%
Sixth pick: 16.3%
Seventh pick: 38.9%
Eighth pick: 19.4%
Ninth pick: 2.1%
But look at the odds if they can actually crack the bottom five:
Rangers finish 5th worst: 26.1% top three pick
1st pick: 8.5%
2nd pick: 8.7%
3rd pick: 8.9%
Fifth pick: 8.4%
Sixth pick: 34.5%
Seventh pick: 26.7%
Eighth pick: 4.3%
Fifth from the bottom and they have a 34.5% chance of a top five pick and history has shown that a top five pick is pretty much a guaranteed impact NHL player.
The Standings
Going into Friday’s action, the Rangers are sitting in 8th place, only one point better than both Chicago and Vancouver. Edmonton beat the Canucks 3-2 so they moved into sole possession of 9th place.
For scoreboard watchers, the disappointment of the night was the Boston-Florida game.The Bruins scored twice in the last minute of the game to steal a win from the Panthers. Florida is only two points better than New York, so that was a big game for the Rangers.
The Blackhawks took the Sabres to overtime, winning 5-4 in a shootout. That helped the Rangers as Chicago moved within a point of the Blueshirts and it kept Buffalo three points ahead of the Rangers. Even bigger was the Arizona 2-0 upset over Calgary as it moved the Coyotes five points ahead of New York, a very sizable gap that they will probably not be able to make up.
The standings (Worst is first)
Teams GP W-L-OTL PT ROW
1. Ottawa 68 23-39-6 52 23
2. Los Angeles 67 24-35-8 56 22
3. Detroit 67 24-33-10 58 21
4. New Jersey 67 25-33-9 59 24
5. Anaheim 68 26-33-9 61 23
6. Vancouver 68 28-31-9 65 25
7. Chicago 67 28-30-9 65 26
8. Rangers 67 27-28-12 66 21
9. Edmonton 67 30-30-7 67 27
10. Florida 67 28-27-12 68 25
11. Buffalo 67 30-28-9 69 26
12. Colorado 68 29-27-12 70 28
13. Arizona 67 33-29-5 71 29
14. Philadelphia 67 32-27-8 72 30
15. Columbus 67 37-27-3 77 36
Second East Wild Card Cut Line: 79 points
Second West Wild Card Cut Line: 74 points
Who to root for:
Wild @ Panthers – Florida sits only two points better than New York so a Panthers win will help the Rangers. The Wild have been hot lately (6-2-2) and are clinging to a three point margin in the last wild card spot. This will be a tough game for the Panthers, but root for them to win.
Devils @ Capitals – The Capitals are tied for first in the Metropolitan Division with the Islanders and have a lot to play for. As mentioned, the Devils are scratching players left and right. There is no way the Devils win this game.
Canadiens @ Ducks – This disastrous season for Anaheim continues. Meanwhile, Montreal needs a win to open a four point gap on the Blue Jackets. A Ducks win will move them within three points of the Rangers so root for Anaheim to get an improbable win.
Notes on the Detroit game
We didn’t do a full recap of the game versus the Red Wings so here are some thoughts. It was notable as a comeback game for Henrik Lundqvist and a continuation of the revival of Pavel Buchnevich.
If there was ever an argument for the Rangers to try to re-sign
if he is willing to take a hometown “discount” it is the effect his departure has had on the Rangers’ top line. Zibanejad is an exceptional talent, but surrounded by mediocrity, he is reduced to trying to do too much. He played much of the last two periods with
and
. With only one goal in his last nine games (eight without Zuccarello), his season is crashing to a halt and you could see the frustration in his postgame interview.
You want another argument for re-signing Mats Zuccarello? The power play has been god awful, scoreless in their last 16 chances. While an inept power play helps their lottery hopes, this is getting ridiculous.
As bad as the power play has been, the penalty kill has excelled. They have killed off their last 16 penalties and have allowed only two power play goals in their last seven games.
Pavel Buchnevich has already set a career high in goals scored with 15, but he is well off his career average in assists. In fact, this could be the first season in his professional career (KHL and NHL) that he has more goals than assists. A RFA after this season, he has a lot to play for over the last 15 games of the season.
Brendan Lemieux had a two assist game and is looking to be one of the steals of the trade deadline. He has a goal and two assists, same as Kevin Hayes.
Ponder this. The Colorado Avalanche are out of the playoffs right now, meaning that they could very possibly end up with the top two picks in the NHL Entry Draft if the ping pong balls fall their way.
So, what is more important? Is it a handful of wins to finish up the season and restore some self esteem to a battered bunch of Blueshirts or is it a top five pick who will be an NHL-ready impact player in less than a year? Don’t forget that in 2017 the difference between the 5th and 7th picks in the draft was Elias Pettersson and Lias Andersson.
Feel free to weigh in.