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Burns turned 38 in March, but that didn't stop him from providing 18 goals and 61 points in 82 contests in 2022-23 with the Hurricanes. That marked the eighth time in the span of nine campaigns that Burns has recorded over 40 points, which is an unreal level of productivity and consistency for any defenseman, let alone one in the back half of his career. It helps that he's been a model of health, going into this campaign with an active 761-game iron man streak. He's also still in an ideal position, with Carolina projected to deploy him on their top pairing and first power-play unit. It's fair to regard Burns as being a higher risk pick than in years past, but still pencil him in for a 50-plus point campaign.
Burns will be 38 by the time this 2022-23 season ends, but he again remained healthy in 2021-22, playing in all 82 of San Jose's regular-season games, posting 10 goals and 54 points. Both are exceptional totals for any rearguard and even more impressive when you take Burns' age into account. He was his usual productive self with the man advantage, posting 18 points. Embracing the rebuild that probably should have happened a couple years earlier, the Sharks dealt Burns to Carolina in July. It should give the veteran the chance to serve as the power-play quarterback for one of the best teams in the NHL, making Burns a highly valuable and potentially underrated fantasy option heading into the 2022-23 campaign.
It appears Father Time has closed in on Burns, as he had just 29 points on 138 shots on goal in 56 games last season. The Sharks' rebuild is not doing the veteran defenseman any favors as the quality of the team around him diminishes, but he's now two years removed from his career-high 83 point campaign. He's still capable of eating a ton of minutes defensively, as evidenced by his 26:08 average ice time last year, but that no longer translates into beastly performances. He's also not likely to get much help from a defense corps that hasn't seen an upgrade in a couple of years. The 36-year-old Burns should be expected to notch 40-45 points with 100 blocked shots and a negative plus-minus rating in 2021-22, although there may be some fantasy managers who are willing to grab him early on name recognition alone.
Burns, who will turn 36 in March, scored 12 goals and 45 points in 70 games in 2019-20, his lowest total in seven seasons. It was only a matter of time before Father Time caught up with the seemingly ageless Sharks, who have mortgaged much of their future in order to make the playoffs in seven of Burns' nine seasons in San Jose. The Sharks' lack of quality depth on the back end - which wasn't addressed this offseason - meant Burns had to skate 25 minutes a night last year. He also saw significantly fewer offensive-zone starts, and as a result, for the first time in five seasons, didn't register at least 300 shots. Still, the free-wheeling defender was just one of 19 defensemen to score double-digit goals last season. Burns still has double-digit goal and 60-point upside over the course of a full campaign, making him a top-10 fantasy option among defensemen.
One of the most recognizable names in hockey, Burns topped the loftiest of expectations by racking up career highs in assists (67) and points (83) last season, while erasing any doubts about his ability to coexist with Senators castoff Erik Karlsson. Since joining the Sharks eight years ago, the bearded one has compiled 143 goals and 323 assists, with just over 35 percent of that total taking place on the power play. The perennial NHL All-Star won the Norris Trophy in 2017, and all eyes are on Burns to see if he's appointed the role of team captain ahead of the 2019-20 campaign. Blessed with a lethal combination of size and skill, the durable 6-foot-5, 230-pound skater from Barrie, Ontario will take aim at his fifth season of recording at least 300 shots. He's the total package for owners to consider drafting as an anchor of any fantasy squad.
Surprisingly, Burns had a relatively disappointing season in 2017-18, notching 12 goals and 67 points after racking up 27 goals and 75 points in 2015-16 and 29 goals and 76 points in 2016-17. Burns' point total last campaign is obviously nothing to sneeze at, but his lackluster goal total definitely left something to desire. However, his decrease in scoring can largely be attributed to the disastrous 3.6 shooting percentage he registered on a whopping 332 shots, which is a huge fall off from the 7.1 shooting percentage he's acquired during his 14-year career. With a little bit of puck luck and a return to form, the 6-foot-5 blueliner should easily eclipse the 20-goal mark for the fourth time in his career in 2018-19. Burns is one of the NHL's elite offensive defenseman and should be one of the first players at his position selected in fantasy drafts this year.
For Burns, capturing the Norris Trophy as the league’s best defenseman last summer was the culmination of five seasons of continuous growth. Having joined San Jose prior to the 2011-12 season, Burns began in a hybrid forward-defender role for three seasons, where his size and raw talent allowed for him to score at a pace he hadn’t previously experienced earlier in his career in Minnesota. In his last three campaigns, Burns skated exclusively as a defenseman, refining his game to become more than a 6-foot-5, 230-pound beast that could skate like the wind (though this iteration was also quite effective). Despite a reduction in ice time, Burns managed to increase his goal and point totals from 27 to 29 and 75 to 76, respectively, while also improving his plus-minus from minus-5 to plus-19. Burns will be 33 at the conclusion of 2017-18, so it’s possible that the bearded blueliner’s offensive production on a per-game basis could decline for the first time in five years. That said, this guy is a freak of nature with a rocket of a shot, and also happens anchor a power play with guys named Thornton and Pavelski. Burns is undoubtedly one of the top fantasy defensemen heading into October.
The forward-turned-defenseman went bananas in 2015-16, piling up 27 goals and 48 assists while firing an insane 353 shots on goal, second in the league only to a certain sniper named Alex Ovechkin and way more than the 248 by Erik Karlsson, the next best blueliner. The 2003 first-round pick found another gear in the playoffs, imposing his will with an additional 24 points, including four power-play goals, and 77 shots in 24 games in a marvelous Stanley Cup run that ended two wins short of the ultimate prize. Heading into this season, conventional wisdom dictates that the 31-year-old can't possibly sustain that level of production and that teams will have spent all summer brainstorming ways to shut him down. However, his large frame, strength, speed, skillset and overall physicality suggest otherwise. Depending on format, you could argue that Burns deserves to be the first defenseman off the board ahead of Karlsson, particularly based on power-play goals (seven to Karlsson's one) and shots on goal. It's also worth mentioning that Karlsson averaged over three additional minutes of ice time per game and had seven more points than Burns, while their PIM (50 and 53) and plus/minus (minus-2 and minus-5) were comparable. Regardless, the Sharks' most dynamic player is a treat to watch and appears poised to continue to dazzle come October.
As it turned out, Burns' return to the blue line last year was accompanied by the biggest offensive output of his career, a 60-point boosted by a career-high 24 power-play points. After a campaign like that, you'd have to be insane to move him back to forward, and new coach Pete DeBoer has said he will indeed keep Burns on D. So, where do we go from here? Burns may have a tough time replicating last year's 43 assists, but a goal total in the mid-teens is almost guaranteed when you shoot the puck as much as he does, and he's sure to be a major cog on the Sharks' top power-play unit. The scary thought for the rest of the Pacific Division: He may be 30 years old now, but he could actually still get better.
As far as fantasy goes, Burns had a breakout year last season. But assessing his potential value for the 2014-15 season is tricky. Burns will be moving back to defense, so that makes his stats from last year -- a career-high 26 goals and 48 points in 69 games -- a bit useless, since he was a top-line winger last season. Burns is certainly an offensive-minded defenseman; he tallied 17 goals in a defense-only season for the Wild in 2010-11. He's a strong pick and is expected to replace Dan Boyle's production, especially on the power play. And he may even find himself playing forward as things shift for the "rebuilding" Sharks. There's a lot of upside with Burns, but you could get burned if you go after him too early in the draft. Someone will reach for him based on those numbers we told you to dismiss. He'll be good for a defenseman, but not as good as he was as a top-line wing.
Where to start with Burns? Sharks' general manager Doug Wilson has made it official that Burns will be starting the season as a forward. And now that he's probably listed as a forward in your fantasy league, it's time to adjust your expectations, particularly in keeper formats. If you had him last year, he was an incredible pick-up because you were judging his offensive production against defenseman in many leagues. So his nine goals in just 30 games were good to tie him for fifth overall among defenseman where he still had eligibility. Among forwards, he'd have been tied for 135th. Nonetheless, Burns finished the season with 20 points in 30 games. And those numbers look even better when you note that he had 20 points in 24 games at forward. The scoring spark was no doubt aided by being on San Jose’s top line alongside Joe Thornton, a spot he'll probably start in 2013-14. And those six games started on the blue line will give him eligibility there in many leagues, too. That’s a huge boost to Burns' fantasy potential if he stays on the first line, given that Jumbo Joe is perennially among the league leaders in assists and Burns augments Jumbo’s playmaking ability with great speed, great hands and what might be the longest stick in the NHL, Zdeno Chara aside. Drafting Burns isn’t without some risk, though. There are unknown quantities at play coming onto his first full season at forward in the NHL (he played forward prior to his NHL debut in Minnesota). But with Burns able to train and prepare for the position this offseason, Burns could be a great pick-up on draft day. You might even be able to get him a little later than expected because his numbers don't jump off the page when he's listed with other forwards. But don't ever forget the injury risk -- the guy is going to miss at least a dozen games with various ouches.
Burns, the former first round pick of the Minnesota Wild, had a slow start in his first year with San Jose. However, he did experience a second half surge that resulted in leading the Sharks defense in goals with 11. The 27-year old should be coming into his prime and is thought to be the future anchor of the defense. At 6-5 and 224, he is a force on the ice and, with better conditioning, could see an increase of ice time from last year's 22 minutes-plus per game. Last season Burns lead the Sharks' defense with five power play goals, which means he'll probably see plenty of time with the first unit during the man-advantage.
Burns tallied 17 goals and 29 assists with the Wild last season, which were career bests in both categories. The key to this successful campaign was that he managed to stay healthy unlike his two seasons previous. Apparently, Sharks general manager Doug Wilson liked what he saw from the 6-foot-5, 219 pound defenseman, as he executed an offseason deal that brought Burns and a future second-round draft pick to the Bay Area in exchange for Devin Setoguchi, Charlie Coyle and the 28th overall pick of the 2011 NHL Entry Draft. He then got Burns' signature on a five-year contract extension in August. While Burns already has seven years of NHL experience at the age of 26, all of that time had been spent with one club (Minnesota), so fantasy owners will have to be patient if the big puck-moving rearguard gets off to a slow start donning a new sweater in 2011-12.
It was a lost season for Burns in 2009-10 as he missed two months with a concussion. He was supposed to be the primary beneficiary of the move from a defensive trap system to a more open attack, but he never got situated in the offense. He still scored 20 points in 47 games. He has the offensive skill set since he played wing early in his career while having the size to play defense. If he can stay healthy after two injury-plagued seasons, he could be a breakout candidate.
Two seasons ago, Burns scored 15 goals and 43 points as a blueliner. Last season injuries limited him to 59 games and 27 points. Burns is a defenseman who can score goals and plays on the power play, and if he can manage a full season this year, double digit goals should be a given. He could be the main beneficiary of Minnesota's move from a defense trap system to a much more open attack.
Burns' career plane took off earlier than most had anticipated. In 2007-08, he notched 43 points and quickly became the Wild's most important weapon on the blueline. Further entrenching his status as an emerging star, Burns earned the designation of best defender in the World Championships this past summer. Interestingly, he only began playing defense when he became a member of the Wild, having played right wing in the OHL. With Minnesota in 2007-08, he amassed 43 points in (15G 28A) with 80 PIM. The 23-year-old is playing beyond his years and is an intriguing fantasy option as a top ten defenseman.
After being moved around from the blue line to forward, Burns finally stuck at defense late last season and seemed to click. Head coach Jacques Lemaire praised him for his defense and overall play, which seemed to give him more opportunities. He scored seven points in 15 games in March with and was plus-9 after Lemaire gave him more of an opportunity. At age 22, he may have finally figured out the NHL game and he's a good deep sleeper this season as a result.
The Wild's 2003 first-round draft pick has moved back and forth from defenseman to forward and hasn't developed into a fantasy option. But before you write him off, remember he's just 21 years old.
Burns is a former first-round draft choice (20th overall in 2003) who is being moved to defenseman from forward. He could have one of the better scoring touches of the Wild defensemen, but he may need a year of development in his new role.