What to Expect in 2010-11: Brett Lebda

by on August 12, 2010 in 2010-11 Season - 590 Comments

What to Expect in 2010-11: Brett Lebda
The newest addition to a strong Leafs blueline
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Brett Lebda

The newest addition to a strong Leafs blueline

Brett Lebda has barely registered on the radar for Leafs fans and with good reason. This offseason is yet again centered solely on Tomas Kaberle, while Lebda toils away on the bottom pairing in many fans’ minds. Expectations are understandably low for Lebda, so it now becomes important to gauge proper expectations. All stats not specifically referenced are found on BehindtheNet.ca.

Lebda primarily played with two people in 2009-10. Those players are Jonathan Ericsson and Brad Stuart (courtesy of DobberHockey.com). Lebda registered the fewest points in the trio at 8, with Ericsson amassing 13 and Stuart putting up 20. Lebda’s -2 rating is by no means a good stat to have, but it is significantly better than Stuart’s -12 and Ericsson’s -15. So in looking at these basic stats, we find that Lebda is average defensively and sub-par offensively. However, do advanced statistics shed any more light on his overall play? Let’s find out.

We’ll start by taking a look at +/-OFF/60 and +/-ON/60. These stats track the +/- of a player when he’s off the ice per 60 minutes and when he’s on the ice per 60 minutes. Lebda’s +/-OFF/60 is a -0.09, which means his team is scored on a little more than they score when he’s off the ice. This is better than both of his frequent linemates, with Ericsson at 0.14 and Stuart at 0.25. Lebda’s +/-ON/60 is also not bad at 0.13. Stuart (-0.58) and Ericsson (-1.09) are both substantially worse. Overall this is a passing grade for Lebda in the +/- department, considering the limited minutes he plays and his frequent linemates.

The important question to ask at this point is how Lebda’s +/- stats are so much better compared to his linemates when he had so few points. The answer is hidden in the zone start stat. Zone starts measure the place at which a player starts their shifts. This is tracked in the offensive zone shift start percentage, which is shortened to OPCT. If a player gets the majority of their starts in the offensive zone and still has a poor +/-, it is indicative of poor defensive play. Lebda’s OPCT is a very high 53.2%, which is third highest among defensemen and eighth overall on Detroit among players that played 25 games. Stuart (50.3%) and Ericsson (50.1%) both have much lower percentages.

What this means is that Lebda was being sheltered. Detroit was attempting to make up for his defensive play by starting him in the offensive zone. By contrast, Stuart and Ericsson’s +/- stats are a bit easier to understand now. However, this by no means indicates that Lebda is a bad player. It means he’s not a top player, which no one was accusing him of being anyways. Next up are Corsi ratings and their related stats.

Corsi tracks the amount of shots directed at the opposition’s net versus those directed at their own net when one player is on or off the ice. Lebda’s on ice Corsi rating for 09-10 comes out to 4.78, which is higher than Stuart (4.60) but lower than Ericsson (5.90). Among players with 25 games played, only Kirk Maltby and Brad May had negative Corsi ratings. This is obviously an indicator of the strength of Detroit as a team. Where things go awry for our three amigos is in their off ice Corsi ratings. Lebda’s is the best at 9.71, with Stuart at 11.30 and Ericsson at 14.09. Offense was generated much more when these three players were off the ice, which is not unexpected when dealing with a bottom pairing defenseman.

Blocked shots also factor in heavily to Corsi ratings. Because of the fact that Corsi is a possession stat, blocked shots count against your Corsi rating. While it is good that you blocked a shot, it also indicates that you currently do not have possession and thus the offensive chances are granted to your opponent. So a comparatively low Corsi value may be overlooked somewhat if you are a decent shot blocker. This is an area that all three of these players are decent at. Lebda and Ericsson both finished the season with 39 blocked shots while Stuart led the team with 94. It is by no means the strongest ability that Lebda has, but it is helpful to have a bottom pairing defenseman that has a knack for putting himself in front of the puck.

What this all adds up to is that Lebda is a bottom pairing defenseman and should be expected of nothing more. However, that’s where the problem lies. At the price of $1.45M, Lebda is vastly overpaid for the role he plays. He’ll no doubt be a good presence in the locker room while being a steady if unspectacular player on the ice. He’s another of Burke’s character guys and I do look forward to seeing what he can bring to an up-and-coming Leafs team.

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  • Burkie_s Bollocks

    @ Cameron:
    True in some cases but in the case of Logan Couture, a former 1st round pic who in his rookie season in the Ahl had 53 Points in 42 games, then was able to come in to a stacked San Jose team that needed to win and play well enough to earn second line minutes….
    Compared to Luca Caputi who in his 2nd professional season scored 47 points in 53 games in the AHL and didn’t play that well on the 2nd worst team in the league despite being given opportunities…

    I agree that as a fan base we either over-rate or denigrate players too quickly but… we’re the same people expecting Bozak to get 60 points and Kadri to be a full time 2nd line centre and Brayden Schenn to be Mark Messier part two the revenge…. so if that’s the case… and based on his previous showings, skills and experience, Couture makes the Leafs… easily…

    Just my opinion though

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  • Cameron

    @ gunner_36:
    -
    Doesn’t make much sense for us. What if Komisarek isn’t as healthy as we hope? I would rather keep Beauchemin, and trade him when his value is maximized. I think he’ll return a handsome fortune at the deadline this year (assuming we’re on the outside looking in). If we have even a marginally better year, his value will increase a great deal. Couture is a good player, but I don’t think he’s on Burke’s list of targets. I expect that if he can’t get Brayden Schenn with Tomas Kaberle, he will use the returns on Grabovski and Beauchemin over the next 12 months, in attempt to land him next summer.

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  • gunner_36

    @ grim:
    Beauchemin was a top-3 defenseman on a Cup winning team.
    Plus, he was invited to the Team Canada Olympic Team Evaluation Camp, and was considered one of the best D there.
    Were talking Keith, Doughty, Weber, Boyle, Pronger, Niedermayer, Seabrook… Green, Robidas, Staal, etc.
    You may not feel he is worth as much as some or most of those guys, but they are worth more than a first.
    Beauchemin became a scapegoat for everyone last year. He is a stellar Dman.

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  • Cameron

    @ Burkie_s Bollocks:
    -
    He makes the team, for sure, I just felt that was a little harsh for everyone else. He’s not so absurdly good that it’s not even conceivable he could be out-performed by anyone else.

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  • 2 Minutes for Looking so Guru
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  • gunner_36

    @ Cameron:
    I would like to keep Beauchemin. Our D if Kabs and Beauchare traded:

    Phaneuf-Schenn
    Gunnarsson-Komiserak
    Lebda-Finger/Aulie/Mikus
    .
    Not near as strong of a D now, eh? Strong top-4, but weak bottom 2, and little depth.

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  • Cameron

    @ 2 Minutes for Looking so Guru:
    -
    Well, he uses a TSN background and has TSN in the title, so it’s not really personal. He also told a Leaf fan to give their head a shake. That’s just bush league stuff. I wish I could go on the air and tell McKenzie to give his head a shake every time he was wrong. I wouldn’t have much time for anything else if that were the case though….

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  • mitch92

    I think Burke will get his player (someone from “THE LIST”) in a Kaberle deal BUT the deal will include other pieces, perhaps both ways. Last year Burke stated that eventually teams will make deals for cap space. This could be part of the puzzle for any number of teams that both want to improve their back end and have limited cap space which they can work with. If the Leafs can provide cap relief to a team along with Kaberle then a deal can be made for the player Burke wants.

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  • LemonHead

    I think the fact Burke stated that they haven’t ruled out a package of youth as a backup plan almost garuntees Kaberle’s departure. Going to be an interesting 2-3 days.

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  • JP

    @ flappypaddle:
    I forget where the comment where I way overvalue somebody else’s prospect, please refresh my memory….I think that if its been reported that Clowe + 1st is being offered for Kaberle then Clowe for Beauchemin might work straight up…so it then boils down to a 2nd for Couture…why would SJ trade a guy that they have seen contribute and a guy they developed for a 2nd round pick crapshoot, it doesn’t make sense…you clearly think it does.

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