5+3 in 9 games and +6 rating this season
36 points and +9 in 55 games for Vancouver in total
What’s your take on this guy ?
He's good.
Speedy, nice shot. Underrated passer. Compliments EP nicely.
5+3 in 9 games and +6 rating this season
36 points and +9 in 55 games for Vancouver in total
What’s your take on this guy ?
Mikheyev rules.5+3 in 9 games and +6 rating this season
36 points and +9 in 55 games for Vancouver in total
What’s your take on this guy ?
It will likely take another summer before we do.Liked the signing and player. Hope we see some of his former speed soon.
Silently put up 10 goals and 17 points.
25-25 would be remarkable for him
Because pro athletes have built legs and hockey isn’t particularly stressful on your ACL (other than goalie). His knee probably felt better before the surgery than it does right now.8 assists since this was posted over 2 months ago.
Offensive contribution was definitely under the radar earlier on in the season when he was on pace for 45+ points.
Now it looks like he'll be lucky to hit 35 and is contributing nothing outside of that, as well, other than "not being a liability" which is like what you're hoping to get out of your 14th forward.
Strange how he played his best hockey as a Canuck while needing major surgery, and then played well enough early on in his recovery, but has completely fell off later in his recovery.
Let's hope he magically gets it back after a full summer of training and recovery. I know the "trade Mikheyev" train is starting to roll but with 2 years left @ 4.75M after this season, it's going to cost to dump him.
Because pro athletes have built legs and hockey isn’t particularly stressful on your ACL (other than goalie). His knee probably felt better before the surgery than it does right now.
He’s less than a year post op, he probably feels more stability but his knee definitely will feel stiffer and sore after exercise still.This doesn’t make sense. Not a doctor but my understanding is that the biggest issue with hockey players playing through an ACL tear is stability in the knee which the use of a brace helps with. Without the use of a brace the knee can easily get dislocated. The lack of power in Mik’s stride last season is a common symptom.
Surgery is suppose to fix the issue. If Mik’s knee doesn’t feel better than it did pre-surgery then something went wrong.
The main reason why the surgery should’ve happened asap. More recovery time and a quicker return to normal(or his new normal).He’s less than a year post op, he probably feels more stability but his knee definitely will feel stiffer and sore after exercise still.
I’ve torn my ACL + lateral and medial meniscus, and experienced knee dislocation while trying to play through it at a high level. His knee likely won’t feel “normal” again for another 6-12 months.
This is a horrible contract. Just another Benning Special at this point.
My guess is it was Mikheyev’s decision to play through given he could still play at a high level and the recovery sucks. He must have finally decided that he wasn’t happy with his skating ability and gave in.The main reason why the surgery should’ve happened asap. More recovery time and a quicker return to normal(or his new normal).
It is what it is. I was against the signing at the time (and said as much).This is a horrible contract. Just another Benning Special at this point.
It is what it is. I was against the signing at the time (and said as much).
But if anyone expected anything much differently, that's on them. They paid him to be a top-six player, but he was always going to disappoint with that expectation. If anyone liked the signing at the time, they should still be fine with it now, because it's gone about as expected.
Mikheyev was great on a checking line with Engvall and Kampf, in a purely checking role. But if you want him to score, he was always going to disappoint. Leafs fans knew this, certainly.Leafs fans were celebrating that it wasn't them holding that bag.
Same thing as Jets fans with Myers and Poolman.
I tend to believe rival fanbases when they aren't sad to see players leave.
He’s less than a year post op, he probably feels more stability but his knee definitely will feel stiffer and sore after exercise still.
I’ve torn my ACL + lateral and medial meniscus, and experienced knee dislocation while trying to play through it at a high level. His knee likely won’t feel “normal” again for another 6-12 months.
Last year he was on a 20+ goal /50Pt pace before being shutdown. This year he's closer to 15/40. Since he will be 30 next year, my guess is that his offensive production rate peaked last year and the injury that most say takes over a year to fully recover may have sped up the decline.
He's still fast and he's still good defensively. He would make most rosters as part of a shutdown 3rd line. I just don't think he's going to have the production that makes him a regular top 6 forward. And with that profile, $4.75M is expensive.
The reason the Canucks signed Mikheyev is that overall, they were seriously lacking in team speed. But an injury in a training camp exhibition game more than a year and a half ago, appears to have derailed that plan.
Since coming back, he just doesn't have the separation speed that he had in TO......Not sure what the Canucks can do now. I have a fear that they'd have craft another deal like the one they used to get out from under the Jason Dickinson contract--a second rounder in this year's draft.
Unfortunately Mikheyev has two years left on his contract after this one. Almost all of Allvin's UFA signings have worked out---but this one is fraying at the edges. Ironically, they might have been better of hanging on to Dickinson.