Simply identifying skill and putting those players in position to succeed may be more important than trying to find clutch players.
That would be the stance of Toronto Maple Leafs assistant general manager Kyle Dubas, an executive whose background mix of hockey scouting and analytics makes him a little more skeptical when it comes to labeling a player as clutch.
“It’s affected so much by who is on the ice in the last minute,†Dubas said. “If you’re a good player playing on a good team, you’re going to be on the ice late in the game. It’s proportionately weighted to players in that situation.â€
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For him to even consider the notion of clutch, it needs to happen again and again and again and again in a player.
“I’ve always been very careful about it. It has so much to do with the quality of team you’re on, the circumstances,†he said. “I do think it takes special characteristics and traits when under pressure to continue to play your same way. I don’t necessarily believe that players get any better and I haven’t been doing this long enough to say it with any authority, but I believe in pressure moments that there are some players by every measure that do get worse. I think it has to do with the quality of competition you’re playing against in those clutch moments.â€
“[Toews] is one of the best players in hockey. He’s in big moments all the time. He’s a great player in those big moments all the time,†Dubas said. “In the end, we’re all just trying to figure out how it all works.
I hope one day, you can define clutch. Right now, it’s a mystical, magical thing few players have. And it makes sports cool.â€
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