Eiserman’s a trickier one because there are so few one-dimensional ultra-scorer types to pull from and he doesn’t really fit the moulds of any of Phil Kessel,
Patrik Laine,
Cole Caufield, etc. He can give you that feeling that
Nikita Kucherov gives you inside the offensive zone. By the time a pass across to Kucherov is about five to 10 feet away from him, you know whether there’s a goal or a post coming — you say in your head, “Here comes another one,” before he has even touched the puck. Kucherov’s never been a committed or reliable defensive player, either. But Kucherov is also a 100-point machine and first-ballot Hall of Famer, and it goes without saying that Eiserman is almost certainly not going to be that (I’m not sure Eiserman has the rest of Kucherov’s offensive arsenal/feel either).