Lafleurs Guy
Guuuuuuuy!
- Jul 20, 2007
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Bob has it sewn up if the Cat’s winHe will probably win the conn smythe
Bob has it sewn up if the Cat’s winHe will probably win the conn smythe
Barking has effectively shutdown almost everyone he’s matched up against. As in 0 goals against 5v5 in every round. It’s wild. I think this will be Ryan Oreilly with the Blues all over againBob has it sewn up if the Cat’s win
He played his part with the kings but he was Carbo 2.0 with the habsWatching the Kings, I think Danault’s performance was overstated a bit. He played his part, but clearly it had more to do with Carey Price and the top 4 defence.
Barkov has 21pts in 21gp. He’s PPG in the playoffs.Stopping all the big players on the other side. Barkov has a lot less points than McDavid but he's certainly has useful.
Watching the Kings, I think Danault’s performance was overstated a bit. He played his part, but clearly it had more to do with Carey Price and the top 4 defence.
Carbo was a two-way player. Danault is not a two-way player.He played his part with the kings but he was Carbo 2.0 with the habs
Barkov has 21pts in 21gp. He’s PPG in the playoffs.
Few-Points Danault had 4pts in 22gp in that Finals run, and 1 in 5 just this year.
Incomparable players and performances. Like it is impossible to talk about them in the same sentence. And yet…
McDavid has consistently set up chances. Those chances were stopped by the goalie.Barking has effectively shutdown almost everyone he’s matched up against. As in 0 goals against 5v5 in every round. It’s wild. I think this will be Ryan Oreilly with the Blues all over again
Danault doesn’t elevate his game. He’s significantly worse in the playoffs — 4pts in 22gp is very bad for a top6 C and contributed to the Habs losing the Finals. No one scored. Danault couldn’t shut down the Bolts either. Totally incapable of stepping up.You are making a point I wasn't making yet again. Love to waste your time don't you.
The argument was about players who are more valuable during the playoffs vs. regular season. Danault is one. Lafreniere always elevates.
It’s a nonsense argument — your inability to justify or support your argument proves it.The point was made that there is no such thing as players who play better under pressure.
Sam Reinhart is another.
Barkov has 21pts in 21gp. He’s PPG in the playoffs.
Few-Points Danault had 4pts in 22gp in that Finals run, and 1 in 5 just this year.
Incomparable players and performances. Like it is impossible to talk about them in the same sentence. And yet…
I do not see it... Connelly has showed more.Bold take: Trevor Connelly is the Josh Ho Sang of this draft
Watching the Kings, I think Danault’s performance was overstated a bit. He played his part, but clearly it had more to do with Carey Price and the top 4 defence.
As far as I followed, the conversation was about playoff performance and how it relates to regular season performance. SOLR alleged some players *play better* in the playoffs (which is a preposterous argument if you think about it) and then cited Philip Danault, a player who underproduces and significantly declines in his two way game in the playoffs.Wasn't the conversation about shutdown ability? Not all around game and offense provided? Danault was that good for us in that run. I wouldn't get all twisted on comparing the D side between the two.
We needed Danault to step up and he failed to do so. 4pts in 22gp, brutal, simply brutal. If only he had an even below average two-way game.I think it all goes hand and hand. Price, Top 4D, Danault. They all needed each other. Of course Price was the best piece but he needed both that top 4D and Danault.
When someone like MacKinnon talks about Danault's impact on D, you don't ignore it or try to undersell it because we had Price
"Danault. Such a good centreman, it's hard to get space on him. I don't know if he's in Selke talks but he should be, hopefully he wins one. Good vs everyone not just me." - Nate, from latest Spittin’ Chiclets episode.
Dickinson might not even be the best left blueliner in the draft….
Again, I get it it’s for Levshunov. But it’s not happening for a LD.
We needed Danault to step up and he failed to do so. 4pts in 22gp, brutal, simply brutal. If only he had an even below average two-way game.
It’s cool he can shut players down but he didn’t do that in the Finals either. Maybe he was injured. God knows.
Could you please not post draft information in the draft thread as it's currently being used to discuss tired, old playoff performances. Thanks in advance, HF board managementScott Wheeler just did a scout/players poll too
Here's some excerpts relevant to the topic and our pick.
Wheeler - I settled on this: “Which of the big six D in the class (Artyom Levshunov, Zeev Buium, Zayne Parekh, Sam Dickinson, Anton Silayev and Carter Yakemchuk) do you like the best and least?”
Levshunov received the majority of votes as the best D in the class and Yakemchuk received the majority of votes as the sixth D in the group. But it wasn’t unanimous, with Parekh and Silayev also receiving votes at No. 1, and Dickinson also receiving votes at No. 6. Buium was the only D not to garner a vote in either of the two categories, a testament to the view that while he may not be seen as the top prospect in the group, scouts are high on him.
Scout 5: I only know Parekh and Dickinson best. I’ve seen video on Buium, Levshunov and Yakemchuk. Buium looks well-rounded. Levshunov like his physical play. Yakemchuk like his skill.
Parekh or Dickinson?
Parekh.
Why?
(Dickinson’s) not going to be as offensive at the next level but he has that shot that will be used on the PP. Solid defensively. High floor, don’t think his ceiling is as high. He’ll be a 3-4 while others will be 1-2. But it won’t surprise me if he goes ahead of Parekh. Among his peers, Dickinson is more highly thought of than Parekh.
Scout 7: It’s a spicy question as I’m really high on all six. But ironically I’d rank them in the exact order you laid out: Levshunov, Buium, Parekh, Dickinson, Silayev, Yakemchuk.
Scout 8: Best: Parekh. Least: Yakemchuk.
Scout 9: Top I’d have Silayev and bottom would be Dickinson.
Scout 10: Most: Parekh and Silayev. Least: Dickinson. I (also) like Solberg very much.
Scout 16: Best: Dickinson. Least: Yakemchuk.
Scout 17: Best: Levshunov. Least: Dickinson.
All are exceptional talents. Lev took big strides and was able to change his game from start to end of season. Feels like he’s still a long ways from his potential.
Dickinson not based on ability, just in his potential to be a star seems less likely than the others.
Though the scout’s survey changes with each class, I’ve been asking the players the same question in their survey for years: “Who is the most talented non-teammate you’ve played against in this class? Not necessarily the best player, but strictly the most talented.”
1. Macklin Celebrini (23)
2. Berkly Catton (12)
3. Beckett Sennecke (8)
4. Cole Eiserman (5)
T5. Michael Hage, Trevor Connelly (4)
T7. Tij Iginla, Zayne Parekh, Konsta Helenius, Carter Yakemchuk (3)
T11. Ivan Demidov, Cayden Lindstrom, Artyom Levshunov, Zeev Buium, Sam Dickinson, Jett Luchanko (2)
T17. Maxim Massé, Alexander Zetterberg, Emil Hemming, Mac Swanson, Lucas Pettersson, Dominik Badinka, Kevin He (1)
Sam Dickinson on former Toronto Marlboros teammate and current OHL opponent Beckett Sennecke: “The thing for Beckett is he’s just wickedly creative. When he’s got the puck on his stick, you never really know what he can do but he can basically pull off any move in the book. You’ve got to play him tight and play him hard because you know that if you give him that inch of space he’ll make you pay and he’s going to put it into the back of the net or make you look silly.”
Former Toronto Marlboros head coach Justin Donati on Sennecke: “He has always been an offensive player. He can be a high-end guy in the NHL. And he’s still growing into his body. He was 5-foot-9 in his OHL draft year, he was 6 feet last year, and he’s 6-3 now. So in two years, he’s put on six inches. But he’s got high-end skill.”
OHL coach on Sennecke: “Sigh. He definitely has the potential. There are some special, special qualities about him and it’s just can he break some of the habits that he continues to do? Just so much straight-up one-on-one play. And I’m not opposed to one-on-one but it can’t be straight up, you’ve got to be attacking on angles and not trying to beat a guy with straight stick skills.”
OHL GM on Dickinson: “Dickinson will fall off. His IQ is questionable and he gets the London bump. Protected with the quality of team.”
Carbo was a two-way player. Danault is not a two-way player.
This is now the 2024 Danault thread. The passengers have mutinied and now have control of the short bus that is hfhabs.
Danault doesn’t elevate his game. He’s significantly worse in the playoffs — 4pts in 22gp is very bad for a top6 C and contributed to the Habs losing the Finals. No one scored. Danault couldn’t shut down the Bolts either. Totally incapable of stepping up.
It’s a nonsense argument — your inability to justify or support your argument proves it.
I never said some players don't elevate their games in the POs. I made the point these players don't answer to an archetype.You are making a point I wasn't making yet again. Love to waste your time don't you.
The argument was about players who are more valuable during the playoffs vs. regular season. Danault is one. Lafreniere always elevates.
The point was made that there is no such thing as players who play better under pressure.
Sam Reinhart is another.
They're testing me with that Danault shitFunny enough, the origin of this topic was simply Mrb1p staying there is no specific player archetype that guarantees playoff success. I think he was misinterpreted, and now we've gone off the tracks.
Scott Wheeler just did a scout/players poll too
Here's some excerpts relevant to the topic and our pick.
Wheeler - I settled on this: “Which of the big six D in the class (Artyom Levshunov, Zeev Buium, Zayne Parekh, Sam Dickinson, Anton Silayev and Carter Yakemchuk) do you like the best and least?”
Levshunov received the majority of votes as the best D in the class and Yakemchuk received the majority of votes as the sixth D in the group. But it wasn’t unanimous, with Parekh and Silayev also receiving votes at No. 1, and Dickinson also receiving votes at No. 6. Buium was the only D not to garner a vote in either of the two categories, a testament to the view that while he may not be seen as the top prospect in the group, scouts are high on him.
Scout 5: I only know Parekh and Dickinson best. I’ve seen video on Buium, Levshunov and Yakemchuk. Buium looks well-rounded. Levshunov like his physical play. Yakemchuk like his skill.
Parekh or Dickinson?
Parekh.
Why?
(Dickinson’s) not going to be as offensive at the next level but he has that shot that will be used on the PP. Solid defensively. High floor, don’t think his ceiling is as high. He’ll be a 3-4 while others will be 1-2. But it won’t surprise me if he goes ahead of Parekh. Among his peers, Dickinson is more highly thought of than Parekh.
Scout 7: It’s a spicy question as I’m really high on all six. But ironically I’d rank them in the exact order you laid out: Levshunov, Buium, Parekh, Dickinson, Silayev, Yakemchuk.
Scout 8: Best: Parekh. Least: Yakemchuk.
Scout 9: Top I’d have Silayev and bottom would be Dickinson.
Scout 10: Most: Parekh and Silayev. Least: Dickinson. I (also) like Solberg very much.
Scout 16: Best: Dickinson. Least: Yakemchuk.
Scout 17: Best: Levshunov. Least: Dickinson.
All are exceptional talents. Lev took big strides and was able to change his game from start to end of season. Feels like he’s still a long ways from his potential.
Dickinson not based on ability, just in his potential to be a star seems less likely than the others.
Though the scout’s survey changes with each class, I’ve been asking the players the same question in their survey for years: “Who is the most talented non-teammate you’ve played against in this class? Not necessarily the best player, but strictly the most talented.”
1. Macklin Celebrini (23)
2. Berkly Catton (12)
3. Beckett Sennecke (8)
4. Cole Eiserman (5)
T5. Michael Hage, Trevor Connelly (4)
T7. Tij Iginla, Zayne Parekh, Konsta Helenius, Carter Yakemchuk (3)
T11. Ivan Demidov, Cayden Lindstrom, Artyom Levshunov, Zeev Buium, Sam Dickinson, Jett Luchanko (2)
T17. Maxim Massé, Alexander Zetterberg, Emil Hemming, Mac Swanson, Lucas Pettersson, Dominik Badinka, Kevin He (1)
Sam Dickinson on former Toronto Marlboros teammate and current OHL opponent Beckett Sennecke: “The thing for Beckett is he’s just wickedly creative. When he’s got the puck on his stick, you never really know what he can do but he can basically pull off any move in the book. You’ve got to play him tight and play him hard because you know that if you give him that inch of space he’ll make you pay and he’s going to put it into the back of the net or make you look silly.”
Former Toronto Marlboros head coach Justin Donati on Sennecke: “He has always been an offensive player. He can be a high-end guy in the NHL. And he’s still growing into his body. He was 5-foot-9 in his OHL draft year, he was 6 feet last year, and he’s 6-3 now. So in two years, he’s put on six inches. But he’s got high-end skill.”
OHL coach on Sennecke: “Sigh. He definitely has the potential. There are some special, special qualities about him and it’s just can he break some of the habits that he continues to do? Just so much straight-up one-on-one play. And I’m not opposed to one-on-one but it can’t be straight up, you’ve got to be attacking on angles and not trying to beat a guy with straight stick skills.”
OHL GM on Dickinson: “Dickinson will fall off. His IQ is questionable and he gets the London bump. Protected with the quality of team.”
In regards to all the draftees, forward and defence, depending on the style of play your team utilizes or wants to implement in the near future will determine the right draft pick for the job. Same as most years if there's no clear cut BPA.That's some great info. The opinions on the dmen really are all over the map. It's stressful for me to read and think about this decision.