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Alexander Semin’s agent might not be selling his client so well

Washington Capitals v Boston Bruins - Game Seven

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 25: Alexander Semin #28 of the Washington Capitals takes a shot as Andrew Ference #21 of the Boston Bruins defends in Game Seven of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals during the 2012 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs at TD Garden on April 25, 2012 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

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Alexander Semin’s agent Mark Gandler has already made a name for himself this offseason by saying Semin’s career in Washington is likely over with. While he’s tried to clarify his initial statements, he seems to be going about selling his client in odd ways.

Gandler spoke with Grant Paulsen and Sky Kerstein on DC radio station 106.7 The Fan FM and managed to make Semin’s case to be signed in the offseason a bit more difficult (audio). The highlights of Gandler’s thoughts are grumpy and confusing when getting critical of Semin’s season in Washington.

---- Time-on-ice statistics are wrong and Semin isn’t playing as much as the final stats say.

---- Troy Brouwer gets more minutes than Semin does.

---- Semin has become a role player, something he didn’t bank on.

---- Semin plays fewer minutes because the team changed direction for how they wanted to play. (Finally, a salient point)

---- Semin wants to play on the penalty kill and more situations but isn’t allowed to.

---- Being benched after taking a few penalties is bad because the bench is close to the ice and it’s cold.

---- Semin’s plus/minus is his most underrated statistic.

Give the interview a listen because trying to sum up how baffling it all comes together isn’t doing it justice. If Gandler is looking to sell Semin to another team, the price is probably going to drop unless hockey stops being played on ice to help with that whole cold issue.