There are a lot of great things that can be said about Calle Jarnkrok’s career. He’s a solid veteran. He takes on any assignment at any position on any line and does his best to meet what the coach has asked for. In the prime of his career he was the type of player that every coach would be thrilled to have in their lineup.
Rolling the dice on Jarnkrok was understandable.
How the season went
Statistical profile
|
Category |
Production |
NHL rank |
|
Expected goals for percentage |
39.84% |
623rd out of 633 |
|
Goals for percentage |
30.77% |
626th |
|
Corsi for percentage |
40.00% |
630th |
|
Expected goals for per 60 |
1.67 |
632nd |
|
Expected goals against per 60 |
2.52 |
206th |
All stats on 5-on-5 via Natural Stat Trick, among all players with 400 minutes or greater.
Calle Jarnkrok did the one thing that you’d expect Calle Jarnkrok to do and that is keep expected goals down in a fourth line role and he did that well to an almost startling degree. Equally startling was how there was no sign of offence when he was on the ice, so much so that despite an impressive result in limited chances against, Jarnkrok was at the bottom of the league in all differentials; goals, expected goals, and shot attempts.
A lot of that is to be expected when you are tethered to Steven Lorentz for most of your ice time. That’s not a shot at Lorentz or Jarnkrok, neither of them is expected to generate offence, and Scott Laughton and Jacob Quillan aren’t the centres to help put them in scoring situations either. And while Jarnkrok’s numbers are terrible, at some point the fact that every bottom six forward or bottom pairing defenceman on the Leafs sits at the bottom of the rankings, it starts becoming more about how Brad Treliving built a bad team and Craig Berube’s system was disastrous with the personnel he had to work with.
There were some good times with Jarnkrok but as an older free agent and the Leafs in need of a retool/rebuild, there is almost zero chance that Jarnkrok will be returning to the Maple Leafs next season. I don’t think his NHL days need to come to a close but he’ll likely be on a one year league minimum deal somewhere and fighting for a depth job if he wants to stick around.
Select highlights
Jarnkrok grinds for a goal early in the season:
