Navigation: Jump to content areas:


Pro Quality. Fan Perspective.
Login-facebook
Around SBN: The Most Dangerous Division in Sports

Top 25 Under 25, no. 25: Jim O'Brien

It was a bit of a strange play. Nick Foligno threw a long wrist shot on goal that was batted down to the side of the net and onto the stick of Jim O'Brien. O'Brien was left with a split-second decision to make: he could either try and work the puck in from a completely covered and awkward angle, or he could... do something else. O'Brien chose the latter, catching Jose Theodore, the Florida Panthers defenders, radio announcer Randy Moller, the dozens of fans in attendance, and all of us at home completely off guard. He powered around the back of the net to the opposite post, and neatly tucked the puck past the thin red line for his first National Hockey League goal. It was not top shelf, where you may come across Mrs. Moller's jar of peanut butter, but it was a significant landmark in O'Brien's professional hockey career, one that many had begun to doubt he would reach.

For fans of the Ottawa Senators, if there is one defining means of judging a General Manager's ability, it is through the draft. Exhibit A, John Muckler, was bad at it. He stocked the prospect pantry poorly, yet still managed to raid it intermittently, mostly in the pursuit of faded stars. When given the chance, he was unlikely to replace what he took away, flipping a second round pick for Oleg 'Freakin'' Saprykin. That trade wasn't all that bad, as common wisdom maintains he likely would have spoiled the pick anyhow. Exhibit B, Bryan Murray, is considered to be quite good at the practice of drafting. Jim O'Brien could be considered as a pick from a period of transition. Weeks removed from the Stanley Cup Finals, in which he had been the coach, Bryan Murray and his draft team selected Jim O'Brien from the US National Team Development Program.

Unlike some other picks understandably bemoaned by Sens fans, Jim O'Brien was not surrounded by star-calibre talent. Good players were taken later, but Jim O'Brien has seen the second most NHL action of any picks between 28 and 39--trailing TJ Brennan of the Buffalo Sabres, a real mainstay with eight games played.

Star-divide

Junior Career:
O'Brien had committed to the University of Minnesota the season before the Senators picked him, and entered college hockey while still only 17, making him the youngest player in US College Hockey (thanks a bunch, Wikipedia!). The young recruit left the university as a freshman to play for the Seattle Thunderbirds of the WHL. Such a step is fairly common--once a player steps onto the ice in the CHL, they cannot play college. In his second year, the Thunderbirds' postseason push lasted for no more than 300 minutes of hockey, and the overager made the transition to professional puck play. Year one did not go quite as planned, neither for O'Brien nor the B-Sens as a whole, missing the playoffs and eking out a (barely) plus-.500 record. Woo mediocrity!

O'Briens professional career turned last season. After a harsh wake-up call in his rookie season's exit interview, O'Brien earned a prominent spot on Coach Kurt Kleinendorst's roster and recorded 39 points more than the previous season--tripling the number of goals he scored and all of it in two less games played. Add an overtime winner against the Houston Aeros that brought the eventual Calder Cup winning Binghamton Senators back up from a 1-0 deficit in the finals, and it becomes evident that 2010-2011 was a dramatic turnaround of a year for the third-year pro. This season, playing on a beleaguered Binghamton squad, O'Brien has not put up compulsory figures, but has been contributing. At the moment, nobody is griping about his offensive punch in Binghamton because we're far too busy heaping praise for his impact in the NHL.

Future:
"The Future" is a time O'Brien is probably not spending too much of his time thinking about. For the time being, he is playing in the NHL for a surprisingly competitive Senators team. So, enjoy it, keep skating, and don't cut your hair. Moreover, this is not an example of an instance where a player is given playing time for lack of other options. O'Brien's play, intelligent and fairly skilled, has earned him a spot over Zenon Konopka (the big man's press box attendance will only increase the number of times we'll hear about how much he earned per faceoff win). What's more, O'Brien's goal celebration was obviously preempted and very NHL 2001.

Looking forward, though, O'Brien will be in it tight for a roster spot come next season. His skillset isn't exactly rare, although he's valuable because of his size, his hustle, and his faceoff abilities. It's unclear what kind of contributions he can offer an NHL team in real terms, but few would project him as more than a third-line player under the best circumstances. More likely, he'll play much of his NHL career on a fourth line, and even then it remains to be seen just how long that NHL career will be.

O'Brien, though, is earning himself points now--brownie and actual--and has the opportunity, like Erik Condra, Bobby Butler, Colin Greening, and Zack Smith last year, to get a leg up over the competition in training camp next season.

It has been a roundabout path and, for a time, it seemed like O'Brien would never be in this situation. Keep it coming, Jimbo.

Comment 13 comments  |  0 recs  | 

Do you like this story?

Comments

Display:

Great piece

Thanks! I knew virtually nothing about the guy …

by Tom Camps on Feb 21, 2012 8:18 AM EST via mobile reply actions  

This is the first in an obviously 25-part series

Hopefully everyone enjoys them! We’ll publish one every day, except on game days, until they’re all taken care of.

You’ll never guess who number one is…

by Peter Raaymakers on Feb 21, 2012 8:34 AM EST up reply actions  

Is it Rundblad?

Drew Brees- the REAL MVP.

by Alex Swift on Feb 21, 2012 8:53 AM EST up reply actions  

NO BUT RUNDBLAD WILL BE JUST AS GOOD AS HIM!

I love soft players (especially Europeans) that play on the perimeter. Enigmas are awesome. Grit and heart-and-soul are red flags.

Erik Karlsson is better than your favourite player.
Twitter: @sens_adnan

by Adnan on Feb 21, 2012 10:14 AM EST up reply actions  

OOOOOH

So it’s Ilya Zubov?

Drew Brees- the REAL MVP.

by Alex Swift on Feb 21, 2012 10:45 AM EST up reply actions  

For the record

We do still hold his NHL rights, should he ever want to come back

Drew Brees- the REAL MVP.

by Alex Swift on Feb 21, 2012 10:47 AM EST up reply actions  

I don’t know man, I am only writing the Swedish hockey players.

I love soft players (especially Europeans) that play on the perimeter. Enigmas are awesome. Grit and heart-and-soul are red flags.

Erik Karlsson is better than your favourite player.
Twitter: @sens_adnan

by Adnan on Feb 21, 2012 10:57 AM EST up reply actions  

YAY for JOB

JOB is yet another reason why we need to stay the course on the rebuild and not give away any of our prospects for antiques or over-priced and underperforming players we don’t need.

I am glad to hear what Melnyk said yesterday. There is plenty of time to improve this team in the off season when the prices for players aren’t so inflated.

by Marvellous on Feb 21, 2012 8:42 AM EST reply actions  

Crazy eh

I can’t believe how much Dallas, Tampa and Montreal got for their old defencemen. Can you imagine how much a top six forward would cost? Ridiculous

by I Still Miss Hossa!!! on Feb 21, 2012 9:14 AM EST up reply actions  

something that feels like it needs to be addressed though

is we have a bit of an age gap in our d-corps. Lee is the only one we have who is neither very young nor playing in his twilight yrs. Put another way, we don’t have a good distribution of yrs of NHL experience on our back-end. while it doesn’t seem like it should matter, it means that we may be forced to keep guys like Gonchar and Phillips over-long so we have some road-tested leadership. I think we should seriously consider packaging something to bring in someone a la Campoli (i never wanted to let him go), Wisnewski (if he was cheaper), etc. And i think with Carkner having played himself out of hte line-up, i’d feel better if we had another body back there. Kuba and Gonchar have both had their recent injury issues, a boo-boo to one of those guys along the stretch here could spell trouble.

by west-sider on Feb 21, 2012 11:36 AM EST up reply actions  

From Jim O'Lost to Jim O'Turnaround

Just before his call up I was begining to think he is done – I was about to write him off.
At one point it seems as if he woke up and realized that Daugavins and Petersson were being rewarded for great play in Bingo and he could do the same – why not before that? Yep, Bingo is done now, no way they make playoffs, but it is good to see that some of the young guys there still have something to play for and Jim got his chance.
However I agree, his future is uncertain as we have a ton of 3rd-4th line players (and good for us), but with Foligno on 3rd line, Zibanajad, Silfverberg and others comming in, you know Jim O’Brien will be fighting a losing battle from the first day of campus. He will not shy away from 4th line minutes or underperfom there like the likes of Nikita FIlatov, Bobby Buttler, Stephane da Costa and so many others… he may have a future here. Go Jim’o!!!

I know that, that doesn't matter, I know you Mr. Rainey, that's what matters. You stole my story.

by TaBu on Feb 21, 2012 10:13 AM EST reply actions  

maybe there's another side to him being called up

could be BMurr and co. see things similar to you and are trying to showcase JOB…

by west-sider on Feb 21, 2012 11:27 AM EST up reply actions  

Wow

Good job, except Jim O’Brien scored his first goal off Scott Clemmensen, not Jose Theodore.

by Alexander Calloway on Feb 22, 2012 2:46 AM EST reply actions  

Comments For This Post Are Closed


User Tools

The unofficial Ottawa Senators blog

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recent FanPosts

Sens_small
Signing our own free agent?
Karlsson_small
Targeting Del Zotto
Nhl_entry_draft_portraits_8_xtv5um7c5l_small
A look at senators depth: Defensemen Addition
Small
Clouston Fired yet again
Small
BM's summer vacation
Nhl_entry_draft_portraits_8_xtv5um7c5l_small
A look at senators depth: Center Addition
Marv_facebook_small
Our style won't win us any playoff series
Karlssonpoint_small
Playoffs prediction competition: round three
Small
Sens sign D Fredrik Claesson to three-year entry-level deal.
Sb_small
Alfie: "The kids want me to continue."

+ New FanPost All FanPosts >


Managers

Heritage_small Peter Raaymakers

Hutz_small DarrenM

Editors

Sens_small Mark Parisi

Sens-suicidebooth_small Ryan Classic

Authors

Small DaveYoung

Karlssonpoint_small Adnan

Small Varada

Bobby__small bobbykelly

Bosch_small Amelia L