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2004 NHL Entry Draft: 5 Forgotten Picks

The 2004 NHL Entry Draft in Raleigh is notable for being the final draft before the 2004-05 NHL lockout that quashed the entire season. Despite being 15 years ago, there are still players from the draft excelling in the NHL — Alexander Ovechkin and Evgeni Malkin, picks one and two, respectively — among them.

While more than a dozen players who were chosen in the draft are still currently active NHLers a decade and a half later, and countless others had good careers and are now retired, the following five do not belong in either category. Whether they found fleeting big-league success or no success at all, here are a handful of players from the draft you likely haven’t thought about in years.

Boris Valabik: Atlanta Thrashers, 10th Overall

Boris Valabik was just another terrible pick for a franchise that was utterly incompetent at the draft table.

Chosen after a single unremarkable season with the OHL’s Kitchener Rangers, the left-handed Slovakian defenceman didn’t make his Thrashers debut until 2007-08, when he played seven games with no points and 42 penalty minutes.

Boris Valabik was tall, but that’s about all. He had a wholly underwhelming 80-game NHL career. (Credit: Ross Dettman/Chicago Wolves)

At six-foot-seven and 245 pounds, Valabik had size for sure, but that’s just about all he had. He split the 2008-09 and 2009-10 seasons between the AHL’s Chicago Wolves and the Thrashers, playing 73 NHL games while tallying seven assists, spending 168 minutes in the sin bin, and posting poor possession metrics.

“He resembled a massive pylon that was manoeuvred around by speedy Ferraris on the track,” wrote THW’s own Jeremy Wiebe back in 2014.

THW’s Jeremy Wiebe on Boris Valabik

In Feb. 2011, the Thrashers traded Valabik to the Boston Bruins along with Rich Peverley in exchange for Blake Wheeler and Mark Stuart, a rare good move for a franchise that made the playoffs just once in its mostly futile 12-season existence.

His first professional campaign, with the Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins, was promising as he recorded 53 points in 69 games. However, like many other elite juniors players, Schremp had trouble producing at the NHL level.

Shockingly, the player who lit the lamp 154 times in juniors never did so a for the Oilers. Between 2006 and 2009, he appeared in just seven games for the Alberta-based squad, tallying three assists.

The Oilers placed their seemingly can’t-miss pick on waivers in Sept. 2009 and he was picked up by the New York Islanders. He found a little success in two seasons there, tallying 25 points in 2009-10 and 22 in 2010-11 before being placed on waivers again and getting claimed by the Atlanta Thrashers in their final season before relocating to Winnipeg.

Rob Schremp New York Islanders
Schremp played 89 of his 114 games with the New York Islanders over parts of two seasons. (Photo by Mike Stobe/NHLI via Getty Images)

After not being tendered a qualifying offer by the brand-new Winnipeg Jets franchise, Schremp tried to revitalize his career in Europe. He didn’t stick around anywhere for very long across the pond, suiting up for no fewer than six teams in six different leagues before returning to North America in 2015-16 to lead the Portland Pirates in scoring with 42 points in 75 games.

Schremp returned to Europe thereafter but finally called it quits after spending the 2017-18 season with the Austrian League’s Salzburg EC.

Dave Bolland: Chicago Blackhawks, 32nd Overall

The reason Dave Bolland is on this list is not that he was never a productive NHLer. It’s because his fall from two-time Stanley Cup champion to total obscurity was incredibly swift, if not meteoric.

Bolland, a hard-nosed agitator with the unflattering nickname “The Rat,” had as many as 47 points in an NHL campaign. He, most memorably, scored the game-winning goal with just 59 seconds to go in Game 6 of the 2013 Final against the Boston Bruins that clinched their second Stanley Cup in four seasons.

Dave Bolland Chicago Blackhawks
Dave Bolland, Chicago Blackhawks, 2010 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs (Photo by John Russell/NHLI via Getty Images)

That was the centre’s career high point, as he went from Cup hero to completely out of hockey in just three seasons.

Even after a 12-point 2013-14 campaign with the Toronto Maple Leafs in which he played just 23 games due to an ankle injury, the Florida Panthers still signed him to a five-year, $27.5 million contract in July 2014. It was a terrible decision; he played just 78 games over two seasons in Sunrise before being sent down to the AHL, where he played two games.

Dave Bolland
Dave Bolland, Florida Panthers (Amy Irvin / The Hockey Writers)

In 2016, the Panthers traded Bolland to the Arizona Coyotes; that October, Bolland’s agent Anton Thun said the then 30-year-old “may never play again” due to the combination of back and ankle injuries.

Thun was right: Bolland never suited up for the Coyotes. 2018-19 was his final season on their books.

Honourable Mentions:

  • Lauri Tukonen: Los Angeles Kings, 11th Overall. He played just five NHL games for the Kings before playing in Europe — primarily in the SM-Liiga — from 2009-10 through 2018-19.
  • Lukas Kaspar: San Jose Sharks, 22nd Overall. He played sixteen games for the Sharks between 2007 and 2009; has played in Europe since 2010-11 and is currently playing the Czech Republic.
  • Kris Chucko: Calgary Flames, 24th Overall. He played just a pair of games for the Flames in 2008-09 and has been out of hockey since 2011.

Want to read about forgotten picks from other years? Check out THW’s 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006, and 2005 entries.



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Declan Schroeder

Declan Schroeder

Declan Schroeder is a 30-year-old communications specialist and freelance journalist in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He holds a diploma in Creative Communications with a major in journalism from Red River College and a bachelors in Rhetoric and Communications from the University of Winnipeg.

Deeply rooted in the city's hockey culture, the original Jets skipped town when he was two and the 2.0 version came onto the scene when he was 17.

He has been with The Hockey Writers since 2018 and serves as a copy editor in addition to a Jets writer.

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