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The Injury Excuse
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Jonathan Willis
Apr 10, 2012, 12:35 EDTUpdated: Apr 9, 2012, 22:49 EDT
Injuries are part of hockey. Sometimes, teams suffer more injuries than the norm, or they suffer a series of unexpected injuries to vital players. Other times, they suffer fewer injuries than the norm, or their key players make it through a year virtually unscathed. Some of it has to do with personnel – there’s a reason certain teams consistently post decent totals in this regard – but there’s a big element of chance.
This year, the Oilers were not especially unlucky.
The Oilers finished the season with 241 man-games lost to injury, and as of a few weeks ago were middle-of-the-pack in that category in the NHL (of the four worst teams in the NHL, they were also the only one to finish with less than 300 man-games lost to injury).

The List

Here are the players who missed time in 2011-12:
PlayerMGLThoughts
Cam Barker
39
Wildly ineffective defenseman was no loss
Ryan Whitney
30
He was injured prior to the season
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins
18
Core player, but not projected as one in September
Taylor Hall
18
Core player with a pre-existing injury
Corey Potter
17
Unremarkable depth defenseman
Theo Peckham
17
Unremarkable depth defenseman
Ben Eager
15
Fourth-line ruffian
Darcy Hordichuk
15
Fourth-line ruffian
Ales Hemsky
13
Core player
Tom Gilbert
13
Core player
Alex Plante
9
Call-up
Andy Sutton
7
Lost more time to suspension than injury
Sam Gagner
7
Core player
Nikolai Khabibulin
5
As with 2010-11, games missed were no loss
Jordan Eberle
4
Less than five games lost
Anton Lander
3
Less than five games lost
Eric Belanger
3
Less than five games lost
Jeff Petry
3
Less than five games lost
Ladislav Smid
3
Less than five games lost
Lennart Petrell
3
Less than five games lost
Ryan O’Marra
1
Less than five games lost
Shawn Horcoff
1
Less than five games lost
A bunch of guys missed less than five games. That sort of lost time can be safely chalked up as the cost of doing business and largely dismissed.
Of the remaining games, fully 117 of them (Barker, Potter, Peckham, Eager, Hordichuk, Plante, Khabibulin) were to players whose absence was not particularly painful. In a few cases – Barker and Khabibulin in particular – those players being out of the lineup allowed superior replacements to play.
Ryan Whitney’s injury problems this season were entirely foreseeable. He was hurt last season, he was hurt over the summer, and the Oilers had plenty of time to address that weakness.
Put it all together, and 168 (69.7%) of the Oilers’ 241 man-games lost were either of the one/two game variety, entirely foreseeable, or to fringe players. Of the remaining 73 games lost, huge chunks went to a guy with another pre-existing injury (Hall), a guy who was questionable to make the team out of training camp (Nugent-Hopkins), and IR regulars Ales Hemsky and Sam Gagner.
There’s simply no argument to be made that this team had bad injury luck.