The time has finally come. The 2018 NHL Draft officially commenced on Friday night in Dallas, with the Los Angeles Kings taking speedy center Rasmus Kupari with the 20th selection in the first round. As for the remainder of the draft, the Kings will need to address a need for speed on the wing but could also look
to further strengthen their defensive core. Regardless of which direction general manager Rob Blake chooses to go, let us hope that his selections flourish in Southern California.
What we do know is that things do not always end up in full accord with first-round picks, and the Kings franchise can definitely attest to this. On that note, what better time to take a painful walk memory lane to crown the biggest draft bust in LA Kings history than now?The Top ContendersJens Karlsson
- LW - Vastra Frolunda (SEL)
Selected 18th overall in the 2001 NHL Draft
Karlsson failed to play a single game in the NHL, let alone for the Kings. Viewed as a power forward who could easily integrate his 6-foot-3, 213-pound frame into the NHL, Karlsson did the opposite. The winger followed up a 24-goal
campaign in 1999-00 for Vastra Frolunda in the Swedish Elite League with single-digit-goal seasons the next five years in Sweden. Talk about a one-year wonder.Colten Teubert - D - Regina Pats (WHL)
Selected 13th overall in the 2008 NHL Draft
The 2008 NHL Draft was a resounding success for the Kings, as the team used the
second pick overall to select all-world defender Drew Doughty. That worked out rather well. Unfortunately, the team decided to double down on defenders (say that five times fast) in the first round and selected Teubert with its other first-round choice, 13th overall. Much like Karlsson, the ex-Regina Pat failed to make a single appearance for the Kings, but did register 24 NHL games for the Edmonton Oilers in 2011-12. Standing at 6-foot-4, Teubert was viewed as a potential shutdown defender with limited offensive ability. Well, it looks like
experts got half of that right.Teubert failed to live up to his "shutdown defender" moniker.Craig Duncanson - LW - Sudbury Wolves (OHL)
Selected ninth overall in the 1985 NHL Draft
Duncanson was a bruising winger that managed to tally an impressive 73 goals in
his first two seasons with the Sudbury Wolves of the OHL. Unfortunately, that did not exactly translate to production on the next level. He managed a paltry five NHL goals, three of which with the Kings, over the course of a highly unimpressive 11-year professional career. What was equally unimpressive was that Duncanson was not the only flop selected by the Kings in the first round that year.Dan Gratton - C - Oshawa Generals (OHL)
Selected 10th overall in the 1985 NHL Draft
The Kings decided to use their second of back-to-back picks on the talented center from the Oshawa Generals. The likely vision was to pair him and Duncanson together on the same line and dominate the league for the foreseeable
future. Sadly, Gratton only played a total of seven games for the Kings and tallied a meager one goal. Regardless, the Kings'; social media team felt the need to get nostalgic about Gratton';s storied Kings career via their Twitter account:
The Kings recently added some photos to the LA Kings Photography Collection. Here is Dan Gratton, an LA King during the 1987-88 campaign. #TBT pic.twitter.com/GTJ9bAwL63
- LAKingsPR (@LAKingsPR) December 21, 2017
Lauri Tukonen - RW - Blues (SM-liiga)
Selected 11th overall in the 2004 NHL Draft
What drew scouts to Tukonen coming out of Blues in Finland was his appetizing 6-foot-2 frame coupled with soft hands and nifty stickhandling ability. Despite
only scoring eight goals in two seasons in Finland, he was one of the youngest players in the SM-liiga and was slated to become a robust winger once he matured years down the road. Well, we are still waiting for this maturation process to come to fruition. Tukonen failed to register a single point in five career games with the Kings, and was subsequently jettisoned back to his motherland as a result.Thomas Hickey - D - Seattle Thunderbirds (WHL)
Selected fourth overall in the 2007 NHL Draft
Yes, Hickey is an active NHLer who has managed to play a total of 409 NHL games-all with the New York Islanders. Heck, he even enjoyed a very successful 2017-18 season on Long Island with a plus-20 rating, on a pretty bad team no less.
The fact of the matter is despite knocking on the Kings'; door while playing five seasons with the Manchester Monarchs, he failed to play a single game for the silver and black. Viewed as a next-level puck-moving defender with plus speed, Hickey was drafted ahead of perennial all-stars Jakub Voracek and Ryan McDonagh. It would be scary to see how good the Kings might have been with either of the aforementioned players.Hickey has revitalized his career with the
Islanders, but was a colossal bust for the Kings. (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)Aki-Petteri Berg - D - TPS Turku (SM-liiga)
Selected third overall in the 1995 NHL Draft
The 1995 NHL Draft was all about the "big three" defenders, that consisted of Bryan Berard, Wade Redden and Aki-Petteri Berg. As expected, Berard and Redden went one, two, which made Berg the logical Kings pick at third overall. Scouts became infatuated with his hulking 6-foot-4 frame and felt that he had raw offensive tools that could be cultivated into something special.
Suffice it to say, that did not materialize. He managed to play four seasons with the Kings, registering a feeble five goals. Much like Hickey, Berg did somewhat salvage his NHL career with a new change of scenery after being dealt to the Toronto Maple Leafs. The most painful aspect of the Berg draft pick is that there was a pair of future Hall-of-Fame wingers named Shane Doan and Jarome Iginla available to the Kings.Although Iginla played for the Kings in 2016-17, he could have been a King two decades earlier. (Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports)The WinnerWayne McBean - D - Medicine Hat Tigers (WHL)
Selected fourth overall in the 1987 NHL Draft
Although there are several deserving candidates, McBean takes the crown for the
biggest draft bust in Kings history in my books. With the likes of Pierre Turgeon, Brendan Shanahan, and Glen Wesley selected directly ahead of McBean, it is a colossal disappointment that the defender only managed a measly 60 games for the Kings, without registering a single goal no less.
Projected to be an elite offensive defenseman, the Medicine Hat Tiger product tallied a disappointing 10 goals in 211 career NHL games. To further rub salt in the wound, Joe Sakic was selected 15th overall in that particular draft. Ouch. McBean';s biggest claim to fame, you ask? He dated none other than Alyssa
Milano. Which, to me, is another reason to be touted as a winner.
The post Biggest Draft Bust in L.A. Kings History appeared first on The Hockey Writers.
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