blueper
Registered User
- Mar 29, 2012
- 330
- 279
Some good points for sure. However, I still think DH should be given a better opportunity right out of the gate preferably on the 3rd line. He just played 25 playoff games which I think shows that Edmonton thought he could handle pressure. He's a year and half older than Bolduc. Bolduc scored 8 goals in 50 AHL games last year compared to DH's 17 in his last 30 in the AHL. Bolduc is being prepped to play top 6, but DH needs to play 4th line? I think Bolduc is rightfully going to get a look in the top 6, but I think DH should get a top 9 spot at the least.Sounds great in theory, but could blow up in a coaches face later in the season.
He is new and cool and there was a lot of drama around his acquisition. I get wanting to give the guy a ton of minutes to get his sea legs underneath him, but there is probably some sports psychology at play here.
The way I see it, there are two ways to go about this...
Option 1: Sink or Swim
Say Holloway gets throw into the deep end and the put him in the top six playing tough minutes throughout the game. He just uprooted his life and moved from a system he's been in for the last four years. Coaches, teammates, trainers, facilities, and expectations are all novel and nuanced.
He's basically already a household name...one that is known for, by many people, as being overpaid for where he is at in his development as a 23 year old 2020 first round draft pick. If he doesn't come out the gates to open the season like he's being shot out of a cannon, it could mess with his confidence dramatically if/when Bannister has to sit him out or drop him down in the lineup.
Now, look at from the other side.
Option 2: Compound Interest Investment
We got him locked down for two years. We literally cannot trade him or send him down to the minors for the first year. He's an investment. Start him out slow. Get him used to playing BLUES hockey. It's like Oiler hockey, but instead of "give the puck to that one guy", it emphasizes the importance of defensive reliability in all three zones. (lolol hold the snide comments. I'm talking about what we're historically known for. Not what we're recently known for).
Once he's mastering the basics and is executing flawlessly on the fundamentals, that's your cornerstone in the foundation. Then we slowly ramp up the intensity, give him assignments that put him in a place to succeed, and build his confidence over time. Any hiccups he might have along the way are viewed as learning opportunities and aren't highlighted with a spotlight. If he's already playing sheltered minutes on the 3rd and 4th line, it's okay if there are speedbumps for a while. It's better to give him sheltered minutes for a longer period of time than it would be to move him up and down the line up every time he messes up.
Phase I: Show us you can handle the fourth line defensive assignments
Phase II: Move to the third line, stay defensive and see if you can contribute offensively here
Phase III: Training wheels are off. Here's top 6 mins. Don't mess up, bc we're counting on you
Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
Edit: I probably could have saved the 30 minutes it took for me to write this and just added a link to this article that was published a couple days ago where Army basically says the same thing. It's a marathon, not a sprint. We're in it for the long haul.
I don't think either one is going to be shaken up long term if they don't have success right away.