He's the only defender that had more than 1 point on the tournament. I get the criticism of his play, but it's not his fault coach has him there that much. I've always said he's Austrian Yandle.
I admire your optimism, but I doubt that youngsters wouldn't make more mistakes with more ice time and if you got completely rod of Heinrich, there is no-one with any offensive whatsoever potential to replace him (among people on that roster).
Except Nickl and even there I'm starting to have doubts, I'm not convinced that any player will ever be more than lifelong ICEHLer or 7th D in NL if they're luck enough to have the licence. So always "damaged goods"
Sure, I think these are fair criticisms! I'll go into why I disagree.
We don't need to wonder what mistakes they would make with more ice time, they actually played more ice time than him and didn't make the same mistakes. Because Heinrich sat out a game if you recall, Zundel and Maier had more ice time on the tournament than he did. Wolf had less than 6 minutes less. And that's not factoring out PP time, if you remove PP time then they all had much more ice time than him. They did not make nearly as many mistakes.
For me personally, the whole point of this tournament is that as team Austria, there's always this negative mindset or expectation like "of course every team is supposed to score 6 goals on us. That's normal. It's unavoidable. It will happen to any defenseman you put out there." It's not normal. It's not unavoidable. And now we see clearly that it doesn't happen when you put defensively sound defensemen out there. That's not supposed to be the way it is. And when you can keep games within scoring range, you can win them. And we found, for the first time, defensemen who can keep games close. People thought this team would get beat up badly because we were missing such and such forwards, but this tournament showed instead the value of defense.
In Heinrich's WC/OGQ career, he scored 8 points in 24 games and still ended up -23. Basically -1 goal per game, and in the WCs he was -20 in 20 games so exactly -1 per game. That's bad even by Austrian standards. That's even worse than other defensemen like Martin Schumnig, Alexander Pallestrang, Patrick Peter, Clemens Unterweger, Steven Strong. But I think, if this last WC showed anything is that we don't have to settle for these terrible defensive performances. Teams that accept those terrible defensive performances get sent back down to D1, and that has been our reality for the last 7 years or so.
If the other defensemen were getting his PP time, they would score more. Sure, they would not score 7 points. But that leads into my main point, which is more my personal philosophy. I'm old school in that I believe the #1 job of a defenseman is to defend. Austrian fans understandably were asking "what will we do next time if Heinrich retires and we're down 3-1 against GB?" The answer is pretty obviously...we wouldn't be down 3-1 against GB. Great Britain was the lowest scoring team in the tournament, scored one goal per game pace before our game, there's no reason to give up 3 goals against them. Heinrich created a problem so huge that only Heinrich could fix it. But the better idea is to not get into that problem in the first place.
And you're 100 percent right, it's hard to blame Heinrich when it's the coach who puts him on the PK. There is a place for Heinrich, next to a defenseman who can babysit him. Someone who can let him play like a 4th forward. But then, one must be clear, the magic is not coming from Heinrich. The magic is coming from the person who is allowing him to play this 4th forward role. Because we have seen Heinrich many times, at 3 WCs and 2 Olympic Qualifiers. He was never capable of doing what he did this tournament until he had the partners he had this tournament.
I understand the pessimism. That's why I wrote
THIS TEAM IS DIFFERENT. People are asking "what if it's a fluke?" I don't think you fluke your way to 110+ minutes of solid defense against teams comprised of some of the best players in the world. If you could fluke excellent defense, then I wish we could have one it in the past 8 years, especially around Olympic Qualifying times, it would have saved me much heartbreak. But even so, there are other really promising system defensemen. Thimo Nickl, Julian Payr (if healthy), Luis Lindner, and down the line there's Sablattnig, Horl, Reinbacher. Maybe some of them do end up lifelong ICEHLers. Most likely at least some of the names I mentioned will. But that's what Matthias Trattnig and Gerhard Unterluggauer were, even Andre Lakos traveled more, but still played more in the EBEL than every other league combined. If they play in the ICEHL but they can keep the puck out of the net against NHL/KHL/SHL players, I'm ok with that.