Given Hakstol’s consistent pattern of influencing point shots, it feels a bit naive to consider this trend a coincidence. I reached out to
Charlie O’Connor,
The Athletic’s Flyers beat writer, to ask him why Hakstol’s teams have always played like this. He floated out a few theories:
- He isn’t super opposed to point shots and didn’t actively preach against it.
- He’s absolutely a defensive-minded coach more so than an offensive one, and he likely felt that point shots were less likely to result in transition chances against.
- The Radko Gudas Effect.
- He thought the Flyers forward corps was best served trying to score lots of dirty goals.
Those first two theories sound the strongest to me, especially now that we’ve seen Gudas’ shot attempts from the blue line drop considerably this season under Todd Reirden in Washington. With respect to the fourth point, I can’t imagine anyone looking at Toronto’s roster and saying to themselves, “You know what we need more of? Low percentage shots from the blue line.”