Frozen Lake
Registered User
- Nov 20, 2020
- 162
- 118
This is sort of how it is with Hischier. He is very methodical in his movement and decision making, and with the team around him having been poor with poor coaching.. people assume he is automatically never worthy of a top-3 pick in that draft because of his numbers thus farYeah, I think his biggest weakness if there was one is his skating, and it's not even a hindrance. One thing I've noticed in these two games is he's not doing the hot shot prospect in their first NHL games thing of just trying to dangle through the entire opposing team, he's full on just playing simple and effective hockey that you'd see from a 5+ year vet, though I have no doubt that when he's fully settled in we're going to see him do some of the silly things he's done to teams in juniors.
Stuetzle is an exciting player for sure, but I think he plays the fast reactionary style of hockey that makes people get out of their seats when they watch him, where I think Lafreniere is more measured in his approach and just thinks the game like 5 steps ahead of every one else
however when you watch Nico (like how Ive always seen Lafreniere), even when he isnt on the score sheet he is making a difference with his presence (in Nico's case defense in transition).
Lafreniere has a decent bit more scoring potential than Hischier so I dont think he will receive as much criticism. Though I find them both to be championship-pedigree players who do whatever you need every shift, while the Stuetzle and Pettersson types are good for points but then arent exactly strong in other areas (people claim Pettersson is strong defensively but I really dont see it when I watch him)