Virtual Front Porch Pages

Monday, October 19, 2020

Halfway Point

We're halfway through what's shaping up to be a fantastic season! Much like last year, the teams are closely clustered in the standings. The gap between first and worst is very narrow as our five teams fight for three playoff spots; if the playoffs started today, the Victorias, Thistles, and Comets would be in, and the Bulldogs and Millionaires would be out.

Let's take a look at some of the key storylines in Season 4.

Forward MVP
In the early going, it felt like a two-man race between the Bulldogs' Gord Roberts and the Thistles' Alf Smith. Roberts (9 G, 5 A, +4) is tied for first in goals and is second in points (one point behind high-flying defenseman Cyclone Taylor), while Smith is tied for first in goals and is tied for fourth in points (9 G, 3 A, -2). And what about two-time defending Forward MVP Frank McGee? After a painfully slow start, he's been pouring it on lately and has climbed all the way to third in the scoring race (8 G, 5 A, +1). The Bulldogs' Bruce Stuart (3 G, 9 A, +3) and the Millionaires' Jimmy Gardner (7 G, 4 A, -2) are dark horses worth watching.

Ridiculous Rookies
When the expansion Millionaires were taking the league by storm, it seemed that goaltender Hugh Lehman was a slam dunk for this trophy. Now? Not so much. The field is wide open, as all five rookies in this year's class have made significant contributions to their teams. The Vics' Harry Hyland (2 G, 5 A, -3) leads all rookies in points, but first-overall pick Jack Laviollete is really starting to impress me (2 G, 3 A, +6). As of this writing, the young blueliner is tied (with the Vics' Billy McGimsie) for first in the entire league in plus/minus!

Millionaires' Playoff Hopes
They had sole possession of first place at the one-quarter mark, but they've hit a rough patch and now are in last, albeit just one point behind the Bulldogs. There's plenty of time, of course, for them to get hot again and make a serious run for the postseason. After much deliberation about whether they should be all-in or should start focusing on the future, I elected to make one trade that helps them today and down the road: The Millies shipped Fred Whitcroft to the Thistles in exchange for Harry Westwick. Whitcroft never really got it going for the Millies, but the the Thistles will appreciate his offensive upside and ability to play defense as well as forward. In Westwick, the Millies are getting a good faceoff man (they're hands-down the worst faceoff team in the league), penalty killer, and puck-possession maestro (as rated by my informal metric that looks at three different Strat-O-Matic stats and assesses how well a given player maintains possession of the puck for his team) who will help them for the stretch run but also serve as an important long-term asset. 

La Belle Draft sans Merci
As with last year, the two teams that miss the playoffs may fall short by just a couple of points. Heartbreaking, yes, but there's an upside: Duke Keats and Frank Foyston, the two top prospects in the upcoming Season 5 entry draft. In particular, the team that finishes in last place will get the honor of adding Keats, a truly special player the like of whom we have not yet seen in the entry draft. (And I promise some sort of Keats joke in every single post that references this guy. Gotta put that English degree to use somehow, right?)

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