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Colorado Avalanche All-Time Roster

AJ Haefele
AJ Haefele
August 5, 2015
Colorado Avalanche All-Time Roster

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AJ Haefele

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15 Comments (4 conversations)

August 5, 2015

Huge props, AJ, for including Skrastins. He was a truly underappreciated player by many, but what he did while a member of the team was remarkable considering the limits of the overall defense during much of his tenure. An absolutely excellent shutdown defenseman.

It’s tough to argue with the rest of the list. I probably would’ve gone with a traditional lineup construction route and included guys like Yelle, Ricci, Hinote and Podein, but your “top dog”/”top star” approach is well done. Especially since it really does show just how few true Top 6 right wings we’ve had.

Replying to

August 5, 2015

Thank you! Skrastins was actually the loser of a literal coin flip between him and Gusarov. I thought about doing a more traditional lineup but then I was faced with the possibility of leaving guys like Kamensky, Deadmarsh, and Drury off the list and I honestly wasn’t comfortable with making an “all-time” roster that included Stephane Yelle but not Chris Drury.

Replying to

August 5, 2015

Definitely a tough choice. Not including Goose would’ve been a mistake. The ’96 Cup and the longevity and success while paired with Foote (which Skratch also did) probably pushes Goose ahead of him if we’re looking at the impact on the Avs franchise as a whole.

In regard to Drury, he did play some wing, so you could’ve listed him instead of Svatos. Personally I think Yelle was more important to the Avs’ history than Drury, but I’m probably biased because I’m an absolutely massive Yelle (and Skrastins) fan.

Replying to

August 5, 2015

He did play wing but his biggest impact was at center so that’s where I had him.

August 5, 2015

Nice. I think I would have put Yelle in for Svatos because, well, Yeller. I keep hoping that a new guy coming up can be the next Yelle and they never seem to live up to that. He was incredibly important in his role and was, IMO, one of the best at it I’ve ever seen.

Replying to

August 5, 2015

Outside of the little Forsberg cheat, I tried to maintain as close to actual positions as I could and there just isn’t a universe where Yelle is a right wing.

The current iteration of the Avs desperately needs a Yelle-type player, though. I miss Jay McClement.

AceODale

AceODale

August 5, 2015

Hard to argue with any of the players listed. I personally was always a fan of Hinote and “Sheriff” Parker, as well.

AceODale Replying to AceODale

August 5, 2015

How could you not love Hinote? I remember the old player profiles they would do during games and they asked the players what they wanted to be when their playing days were over and Hinote said “FBI agent”. It was over for me after that.

Replying to

August 5, 2015

Hinote was fantastic. So, so much energy and so much fun to watch. I’d add Lappy to that list, too. Both were cut from the same relentless forechecking/agitating cloth.

Replying to

August 5, 2015

Lappy another guy that was so easy to root for. I miss those guys. Avs current grinders are basically John Mitchell and a bunch of guys and Mitchell isn’t your classic try hard 3/4C. Too many dangles for that

Replying to

August 5, 2015

Absolutely. I’m hoping that Bleackley and Compher can fill a similar role, although they seem to be a little closely to Ricci and Hinote, respectively.

Replying to

August 5, 2015

I think Bleacker has higher upside than that. I think Compher is the next Ryan Callahan. I love his game so much.

Sunfunbun

Sunfunbun

August 6, 2015

Nice list, especially keeping positions as close as possible. Endless possibilities, obviously. I’d put ROR and Yelle in there, somehow. I’d put Forsberg at center….Sakic/Forsberg 1-2 center punch. And Val was a great player, highly under rated. He’d be my top left winger. I’d take him over Tangs, because he was the better scorer and a more physical player. I’m probably bias, though, that first season in Denver, Kamensky totally rocked. He was great in the playoffs, and was ppg. player in four playoff years for the Avs. The other player, very short stay, but a great second/third liner, was Scott Young, also huge impression from his first season, in Denver. Not that he makes the list, but a ‘mentionable’ player who was terrific.

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