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Backlund and Monahan are already two of the best Flames firsts (ever)
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Ryan Pike
Apr 29, 2016, 10:00 EDTUpdated: Invalid DateTime
On June 24, the Calgary Flames will head to the podium and draft in the first round for the 43rd time in their franchise’s history. (Well, presuming they don’t trade their pick again.)
Historically, the Flames have had a mixed record in the first round. A perusal of their first round picks reveals a group that includes players that never left Europe, players that faded away in minor-pro, one deceased person (albeit from a really tragic accident) and tons of missed opportunities. However, the Flames have also drafted a few really good players in the first round, including a Hall of Famer and several others that have gone on to really good careers.
The 2015-16 Flames featured three past first round selections: 2007’s Mikael Backlund, 2013’s Sean Monahan and 2014’s Sam Bennett. When you take a statistical look at Flames picks, both in terms of their time with the Flames and their overall NHL careers, Backlund and Monahan are already among the franchise’s best first rounders.
Here’s how they stack up!

BEHOLD, A TABLE

Players in bold are current Flames property. Four Flames-drafted first round goalies – Jason Muzzatti (1988), Trevor Kidd (1990), Brent Krahn (2000) and Leland Irving (2006) – aren’t listed here, but Kidd played 387 games in the NHL and was decent. The others were, um, not. Don’t draft goalies in the first round, everybody.
Career in NHL
Career with the Flames
Player
Draft
G
Pts
Player
Draft
G
Pts
Al MacInnis
1981
340
1274
MacInnis
1981
213
822
Gary Roberts
1984
438
910
Roberts
1984
257
505
Tom Lysiak
1973
292
843
Reinhart
1979
109
445
Cory Stillman
1992
278
727
Lysiak
1973
155
431
Dan Quinn
1982
266
685
Stillman
1992
109
235
Paul Reinhart
1979
133
559
Phaneuf
2003
75
228
Dion Phaneuf
2003
121
432
Quinn
1982
72
191
Derek Morris
1996
92
424
Backlund
2007
72
175
Jacques Richard
1972
160
347
Morris
1996
34
163
Chuck Kobasew
2001
110
210
Monahan
2013
80
159
Brad Marsh
1978
23
198
Richard
1972
57
103
Mikael Backlund
2007
72
175
Mulhern
1975
25
92
Sean Monahan
2013
80
159
Phillipoff
1976
26
79
Oleg Saprykin
1999
55
137
Shand
1976
14
77
Eric Nystrom
2002
75
123
Saprykin
1999
29
76
Richard Mulhern
1975
27
120
Kobasew
2001
34
71
Dave Shand
1976
19
103
Gauthier
1995
13
58
Denis Cyr
1980
41
84
Marsh
1978
3
44
Harold Phillipoff
1976
26
83
Nystrom
2002
19
39
Denis Gauthier
1995
17
77
Bennett
2014
18
37
Rico Fata
1998
27
63
Cyr
1980
14
29
Sven Baertschi
2011
25
58
Baertschi
2011
8
28
Sam Bennett
2014
18
37
Tkaczuk
1997
4
11
Chris Dingman
1994
15
34
Dingman
1994
3
6
Tim Erixon
2009
2
14
Pelech
2005
0
3
Daniel Tkaczuk
1997
4
11
Fata
1998
0
1
Matt Pelech
2005
1
4
Nemisz
2008
0
1
Greg Nemisz
2008
0
1
Poirier
2013
0
1
Emile Poirier
2013
0
1
Mercredi
1973
0
0
Vic Mercredi
1973
0
0
Sundblad
1991
0
0
Niklas Sundblad
1991
0
0
Chucko
2004
0
0
Kris Chucko
2004
0
0
Biotti
1985
Chris Biotti
1985
Pelawa
1986
George Pelawa
1986
Deasley
1987
Bryan Deasley
1987
Mattsson
1993
Jesper Mattsson
1993
Erixon
2010
Mark Jankowski
2012
Jankowski
2012

Morgan Klimchuk
2013
Klimchuk
2013


SOME CONTEXT

Let’s start at the top: MacInnis and Roberts came from the run of drafts through the 1980s where Cliff Fletcher’s scouting crew hit gold quite often. Heck, five of the top six on the “NHL career” side were selected when Fletcher was GM, and Stillman was grabbed the season after he left and largely scouted by Fletcher’s hires. Phaneuf was as can’t-miss as any Flames pick has ever been, and despite a tumultuous exit from Calgary and some trouble in Toronto he’s been a really good NHLer.
Heading to the mushy middle: in the context of NHL careers Backlund and Monahan are already pretty good first round selections. Backlund’s in his mid-20s and Monahan’s still a pup, yet they’ve already out-scored Saprykin and Nystrom and are closing in on Kobasew. Within Flames circles, they should crack the 200-point mark for their careers next season and enter the unofficial upper-echelon of Flames firsts. (When you take into account that it’s relatively rare that Flames picks crack 100 points with the team, that’s kinda sad…)
Monahan’s already the sixth-highest goal-scorer as a Flame among past first rounders and should hit 100 goals next season (and heck, he could push 30 goals again and catch Stillman and Reinhart).
And now to the very bottom: Poirier, Jankowski and Klimchuk are currently professional hockey players in the Flames organization, so it’s too early to really throw those guys onto the “no points in Calgary/NHL/bust!” pile. All three of them have two seasons remaining on their entry-level deals, so there’s still plenty of runway left for them before we throw them under the bus (so to speak).
Biotti and Deasley puttered around minor-pro and then quietly disappeared from hockey. Pelawa died in a car accident shortly after being drafted by the Flames, so that’s not exactly a development/drafting issue. Mattsson had a lengthy career in Sweden but only briefly came to North America for a two-and-a-half season sojourn before going back home.
And yes, your eyes do not deceive you: Darryl Sutter’s first round picks, aside from Phaneuf, all seem pretty bad when you see them on a list like that. If anything, the Flames’ history of uneven, sometimes disastrous drafting in the first round makes their recent successes all the more stark and impressive.