12 Burning Questions: Will Kadri Crack The Squad, And What Impact Will He Have?

by on August 20, 2010 in 2010-11 Season - 165 Comments

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In part four of his 12 burning questions series, Derek Harmsworth examines whether Nazem Kadri will crack this lineup, and where he fits in with the team if and when he does.

In the summer of 2009, the Toronto Maple Leafs and their fans were still finding out first hand what type of brash, confident attitude Brian Burke was going to be bringing to the team.

On the night of the opening round of the 2009 NHL entry draft, we were treated to a birds eye view, courtesy of TSN television microphones, exactly the type of persona Brian Burke would be bringing to the front office of the organization.  After a brief exchange with Senators GM Bryan Murray that looked more like a bullying than anything, Burke took the podium, soaked up the boos from the Canadiens faithful, and made his first pick as general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The Toronto Maple Leafs, are pleased to select, from the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League, Nazem Kadri.”

Kadri, a swift skating playmaker with goal scoring capabilities, instantly became one of the Leafs organizations top building blocks, in part through default, but also for the type of player he is, and can become.

Another seemingly stellar player to come out of the growingly famous “Hunter brothers hockey factory”, Kadri appears poised to breakthrough with the Toronto Maple Leafs this upcoming season, and it appears Brian Burke, Ron Wilson, and everyone else in the Leafs coaching and management staff appears ready to give him every opportunity to do so.

After being drafted in the summer of 2009, Kadri immediately made a big impression with Leafs management and fans alike after a very good rookie orientation camp, which he followed up with a top notch training camp, and a great showing during the pre season.  It was a hot topic among many pundits as to whether or not the Leafs should keep Kadri in the big leagues, or return him to his junior club for another season.

Of course, as we now know they did the latter, and it appears to have worked out exactly as Brian Burke had planned.

Kadri returned to the London Knights, shortly after wrapping up a preseason campaign with the Leafs in which he scored his first goal on familiar ice, the John Labatt Centre, Kadri’s hometown, and the home arena of the London Knights.  Early upon his return to the OHL he struggled, before ramping it up offensively, and becoming one of the league’s most dangerous players in the second half of the season.

He was also given opportunities to further develop by playing in the Subway Super Series, as well as the OHL All Star Game.  He made an appearance for Canada at the World Juniors in Saskatoon, and while his physical play sometimes crept over that imaginary line, he provided a few key goals for the team en route to their silver medal finish.

For the Leafs organization, it was precisely what they wanted to see out of their most recent top prospect, and Kadri delivered in spades.  As much as his stats stand out on the ice, it was the things being done off of the ice that many fans, and Leafs management, certainly took note of.

While many can still argue that Kadri has a lot of maturation to do be on, and off the ice (although I for one can certainly refute the claims of his substance abuse) it was in the gym where Kadri began to shape himself, and position himself for a legitimate shot at making the Maple Leafs this upcoming season.

Knowing he would be given every opportunity to make the team, Kadri appears ready to seize the moment.  After a summer of dedicated working out-of which required him to be in Toronto every morning bright and early-Kadri has bulked up his previously wired frame, and while he certainly won’t be mistaken for the Incredible Hulk anytime soon, the added weight should help him while carrying the puck, and dealing with the physical play of the NHL level.

Despite all the signs pointing towards an upward projection for Kadri this season, the question still remains; will he make the team, and if so, what type of impact can we expect him to have?

It appears that the only thing going against Kadri right now in his bid to make the Maple Leafs this season would be the glutten of players who line up at the centre position.  However, both Brian Burke and Ron Wilson claim to treat all training camps as a completely open book in terms of position battles, so there should be no reason why he can’t make one of the top four centre spots.

Where he fits in, may be another question entirely.

With Tyler Bozak and Phil Kessel having seemingly instant chemistry, it appears that, barring any sort of trade, that Tyler Bozak will have the upper hand going into camp of centering the top line alongside Phil Kessel.  Add to that the fact that Burke stated the other day he expects a 60 point campaign out of Mikhail Grabovski, and it would appear that Kadri may enter camp with only the chance to lock up the third or fourth line centre spots, and the debate would question whether that would be a positive development for his game at this point.

Still, as any Leafs fan will tell you, things worked out on paper rarely work out on the 200 by 85 sheet of ice.  It is not out of the realm of possibility that an injury, or slow start with a player like Grabovski, and the Leafs could be well be calling on Kadri to take on more minutes, and more responsibility.

On the other hand, those had the chance to see Kadri in many appearances with the Knights this year (yours truly among them) know that his game is far from one dimensional, and perhaps a spin on the third line would be beneficial to Kadri, who could continue to use his speed and physical play to his advantage, while continuing to work on his two way game.

With Tyler Bozak expected to have Phil Kessel and Kris Versteeg riding shotgun, and Mikhail Grabovski to be flanked by Nikolai Kulemin and Colby Armstrong, perhaps Kadri working alongside Marcel Mueller and Luca Caputi can provide the Leafs some instant chemistry similar to the “frat pack” line, while at the same time being a third line with some offensive pop.

Of course a Kadri, Kulemin and Armstrong combination could be lethal as well, and perhaps Jerry D’Amigo surprises everybody and makes this roster out of camp.  Thus proving that all of this is speculation, and line combinations will likely be changed 100 times before the season even starts.  What we do know for sure is that the Leafs will give Nazem Kadri every opportunity to make the team, and as far as they are concerned, the sky is the limit for what he can do once he does get the call to suit up for the blue and white.

In the meantime, Kadri will continue to do everything in his power to make the Toronto Maple Leafs for the 2010-2011 season, and the team seems more than willing to foster that youthful enthusiasm and hunger.

And while the verdict is still out on whether he can make the team, and if he does in what capacity or role it will be, it’s hard to deny the excitement for Leafs fans as Kadri enters camp with that aforementioned youthful enthusiasm and hunger to succeed not only in the National Hockey League, but in a Toronto Maple Leafs uniform.

In fact, it could well become the slogan, or war cry, for the entire 2010-2011 season as far as the Maple Leafs are concerned.  A team full of youth, excitement, and hunger to prove pundits wrong.  And from what we can gather, Nazem Kadri is all too happy to be the poster child for the campaign.

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  • flappypaddle

    peterbleafs wrote:

    Will Kadri crack the lineup? YES What impact will he make? 15G, 22A, -2, 32PIM.

    I am thinking he may end up with more like 65 pims he will be willing to fight to show he can do it all…

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  • Scotchy
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  • Gary Shields
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  • http://cartika.com Andrew R

    Grabovski will be the 2nd line center. I can only see Kadri sticking as a 2B center if the Leafs decide to go with a #1 line and a number 2 A and B line where he can play decent minutes, surrounded and protected by someone like Armstrong – and can also pick up extra minutes as a PP specialist on the wing and Shoot Out specialist. This is a possibility, other then that, expect a brief stint in the NHL and then a good chunk of the season in the AHL. This is simply how Burke develops prospects – and is one thing I think he does very well and should continue to do with Kadri.

    The possibility exists however that Kadri really steps up and makes it impossible to demote him, which could lead to a trade involving Grabovski. 60 points for Grabovski this season is a very attainable objective if he stays healthy – this kid is way undervalued by the average Toronto fan…

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  • flappypaddle
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  • Scotchy

    @ flappypaddle:

    Thank you, good examples! Remember folks BB inherited a lemon and if you believe that then what did Wilson get?..

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  • 4evrb1lue

    caper7 wrote:

    Is it time for us as Leaf fans to start reading between the lines?

    when have we, as leafs nation, NOT read between the lines. every little thing about the team is analyzed to death

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  • peterbleafs
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  • Scotchy

    I don’t make line predictions but unless Grabs has a terrible camp the 2nd line centre is his to loose. And I would guess the same could be said about the top line winger that plays with Bozak and Kessel.

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  • Cameron

    @ peterbleafs:
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    I agree with all of that except who the pressure will be on. In my opinion, the pressure is on Versteeg, Kessel, Kulemin, Grabovski and Armstrong. All will be expected to play up to their potential this year. That means solid defenisve play from Armstrong, and 20 goals. That means 40 goals and 30 assists from Kessel. That means, as Burke himself said, at least 60 points from Grabovski – he needs to be a playmaking machine. That means Kulemin hits 20 goals, and continues his excellent defensive play, and continues to use his body. That means 25-30 goals from Versteeg, and leadership on and off the ice.
    -
    Bozak, Kadri and Caputi will have expectations too, but should they fail, they won’t be tarred and feathered. Oh, and another guy with immense pressure this year – John Mitchell. It’s time for Mitchell to prove his worth at this point.

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  • 4evrb1lue
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  • leafs_17

    so whose the best coach AVAILABLE to coach the leafs if Wilson was to be let go before the season? any thoughts

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  • Taihaku

    D’Amigo – Kadri – ___ will be a line in the near future.

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  • Cameron

    @ leafs_17:
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    I would want Dale Hunter. Andy Murray would be a good interim guy, as he runs a system that would work very well with the team we have currently.

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  • Irishfanman

    Never did agree with the ranking of centers on our team. We do not have a no. 1,2 or 3 center,. We have three centers they are developing and they will all rotate minutes in different roles as they develop. Which is exactly why Kadri stays up all year, to develop him in various roles properly. The pressure will be more on Bozak/Kessel/Versteeg than anyone else so its a freebie year.

    I agree with the above and I think you can extend it to all the forwards…we have a top 7 in Bozak Kessel Versteeg Kulemin Grabbo Kadri (if he earns it) Armstrong, and all other than Kessel could be line 1, 2 or 3 players and will rotate according to need for grit, speed, scoring, 2 way play etc.

    and a bottom 5 of Shoes Mitchell Hanson Orr Brown, and the prospects who are line 3/4 players at this time in their development.

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  • Scotchy

    Cameron wrote:

    @ leafs_17:
    -
    I would want Dale Hunter. Andy Murray would be a good interim guy, as he runs a system that would work very well with the team we have currently.

    Can they finesse the media the way Maurice did though? That seems to be an issue to some.

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  • leafs_17

    the media always seems to be an excuse

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  • leafs_17

    Dale Hunter i like as for Andy Murray i’m not so sure about him mostly cause i would like to see a coach step in for the long term

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  • Pazuzu

    I think the Kaberle thing holds some water. I believe he likes Toronto and would love to finish his career there, but I think RW’s approach is one that the younger players on the team will accept more than an established vet like Kabs. It will be interesting to see if RW reduces his role and maybe make things a little uncomfortable for Kabby, that would be the tell tale sign, eh? I think he would wave for any of the NY teams,NJ, BUF(Vanek or Hecht), DET(Hudler maybe) or CHI.

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  • TuckerThomas

    I’ve always thought of BB as a genius. Perhaps he’s so much so that he’s convinced me he’s made a huge blunder only to come out looking like a fucking genius again. Haha!

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  • TuckerThomas

    The question now becomes….
    Where does Kabs wanna play besides TO?
    Anyone have any clue?
    And who or what can we get in return from said team?
    Besides my $50 return from Jordan.

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