I will comment on this. I moved to South Africa when I was in my early 20s. It was rough. Especially when things weren't going my way. Not everyone has the mentality to just "get over it" and adept. It all depends on how you were brought up, what you have experienced etc. I remember going back to the Netherlands 3 years later and suffering a severe depression because I felt like I failed. I had come back to my hometown with this experience that should have been great and was expected to bring me the baggage to get ahead in life, but instead of turned into a failed experiment and I struggled to deal with the consequences of that. Facing my friends and family and having to admit I didn't succeed.
When things go your way, it's a lot easier to "keep up" because the rush of adrenaline makes you just go with the flow. When things aren't going your way, it's a lot harder to stay focused, keep up with the daily routine and stick to what you know is best. Everyone, especially kids, need positive reinforcement. If that's lacking, it's a dangerous slope
I will never judge a professional athlete on mental ability to deal with adversity. I am now 35 and a completely different person but at age 21, I really did not handle my situation the way I should have. I wish there was someone to support me. I am not saying Kravtsov is dealing with the same, but his situation has some similarities and IF this is the case, I can certainly understand. As a Rangers fan, I want him to "get over it" and start performing. But as a person, I realize it's not always that easy.
If the coach says it's a conditioning issue, I have no reason to think otherwise. I really do not want another "Zibanejad has a concussion, book it" debate. The conditioning can be caused by other factors though. Mental issues are at the very least a possible contributor to this. I don't know how he will deal with this but he is a teenager (turning 20 in 2 weeks) and expecting a teenager to just adept is short-sighted in my opinion.
What it comes down to for me is this:
- He came over oozing confidence
- Had a good camp
- Had some good moments in pre season
- Was sent down and didn't react the way we wanted
- Decided to go back to Russia which was within his rights with the EAC
- Didn't live up to expectations back in the KHL
- Now sent down to the VHL to work on his conditioning
I expected more from him, and have issues with certain things he has done off the ice. But I don't think it's as grimm as some make it out to be. It has been a rough month for him and now he has to show he can recover and come back stronger.