Faterson
Delayed Live forever
An “intellectual perspective” indeed.
It's hockey philosophy 101.
An “intellectual perspective” indeed.
Why don’t more wingers cheat up the ice to create breakaway chances? Power plays only convert about what, 20% of the time? And in those cases, it's a teams most talented offensive players approaching play with a scoring mindset. A skilled player’s breakaway success rate should be higher. The reward seems worth the defensive risk. Should a bottom dwelling team take a chance on a cheap, high talent AHL superstar and employ this kind of tactic?
I think watching on TV, and even at the rink, a lot fans follow the puck and fail to see what’s going on away from the play. Lots of wingers do “cherry pick” and have for a long time.
I think we only have that viewpoint because we base it off the assumption that there would be no adjustment against it. Say Nylander wants to sit at the far blue line and wait for the puck. In your view, this gives the other team a 5 on 4 PP, which is reasonable. But based on a ton of games I've watched, the PK'ing team is able to clear the puck relatively frequently. Best PPs are at 25% over 2 minutes. I would be willing to bet that if the team "clears" it up to Nylander and he goes in and scores, there would be less willingness to leave him open in the future. Teams would quickly adjust and push their dman back and then it's a 4 on 4 and a 1 on 1.William Nylander is certainly no Selke candidate, but not a liability by any means and he is a master at this move. The trick is, you can't just cherry-pick because then you are effectively giving the other team a PP lol.
You need to read the play and when you see the puck going into a spot you expect your D to win the puck, take off into the neutral zone and let them find you
OP sounds like they doesn't go to live games, to be honest. Cherrypicking happens like a handful of times per game but the standard TV angles can't/don't show it if the action is in the defensive zone.Players do this all the time.
OP sounds like they doesn't go to live games, to be honest. Cherrypicking happens like a handful of times per game but the standard TV angles can't/don't show it if the action is in the defensive zone.
It's not so much a "coached strategy" either at the NHL level, so much as it is "these are professional hockey players that play the game for a living and have the instinct to know when to blow the zone" ... and sometimes it works and sometimes it fails, but that's every strategy.
While proposing this, OP has provided no basis of statistics or numbers to even begin a debate which I believe is needed to present this potential strategical shift as viable.
Yeah, Bure was the first name that came to mind. Also not an unheard of strategy at lower levels of hockey. Actually fairly common in Canadian juniors until the later 90s when you started to see a more pro-style structure being demanded by coaches.Florida with Bure probably used this strategy more than any team I've seen. No good team would do it regularly, but sometimes a team, like Florida around the year 2000, knows it isn't winning a Stanley Cup and wants to at least get some eyeballs.
It's pretty easy to counter a player excessively cherry picking. It's one of the first strategies any new player to the game would try/think of.
Fair enough. Can't really have stats for something nobody is willing to do unless they want to be benched for the game and healthy scratched for two more.What the OP is suggesting is a little bit different than normal.
Normally forwards will blow the zone when they anticipate a turnover, it's a little more rare to park on the other club's side of the ice all shift when the other team has solid possession in your zone.
I don't know what statistics you are suggesting be presented.
Yes understand that, 2000ish Florida is mainly the team that I'd say came closest to implementing such a strategy, not that Bure literally hung at the redline no matter what. The actual suggested strategy is obviously not a strategy that would work. You'd park one player in passing lanes and take the offensive advantage that is four on four.Yeah, Bure was the first name that came to mind. Also not an unheard of strategy at lower levels of hockey. Actually fairly common in Canadian juniors until the later 90s when you started to see a more pro-style structure being demanded by coaches.
That said, you and I are talking more about guys who “blow the zone” really, really early or players who deliberately take their sweet ass time getting back to their end, in hopes of being left alone following a quick turnover.
What OP seems to be talking about is a set strategy where a team would defend undermanned in their own end for a sustained period of time while keeping a designated “cherry picker” out of the zone.
I have never seen anything as extreme as this, probably never will.
Maybe he means the team plays a PK style setup in the defending zone while the 5th player is hanging around the other teams blue line hoping for a breakaway pass?I'm not entirely sure what OP thinks could happen here? Do you mean cherry pick on the PP? Impossible. As stated above, defenders often don't even leave their zone on the pk so there's no breakaway pretty much ever on the PP.
At 5on5, as soon as a defender saw a winger trying to get in behind him in the neutral zone he would just retreat.
Only real place I could see this happening is on the pk. But do you really want to play 3on5 in hopes that you can intercept a pass and get a pass off to the cheating winger?
Also, what's a 'high talent AHL superstar?'
In the playoffs or a must-win situation, this tactic might not be so pretty. Complete players are needed in dire situations and the whole team needs to be on board for success.Why don’t more wingers cheat up the ice to create breakaway chances? Power plays only convert about what, 20% of the time? And in those cases, it's a teams most talented offensive players approaching play with a scoring mindset. A skilled player’s breakaway success rate should be higher. The reward seems worth the defensive risk. Should a bottom dwelling team take a chance on a cheap, high talent AHL superstar and employ this kind of tactic?
It just doesn't work in reality. Playing perpetually a man down is such a significant handicap. It's why powerplays are so effective.This is the Andreas Athanasiou thread. I've long maintained he's a unicorn fourth liner. Put him with two low event checkers and tell them to chip it in front of AA and let him attack in transition. He's one of the most dangerous players in the league when attacking with speed and open ice. He's brutal everywhere else and doesn't use his teammates.
It's against conventional coaching wisdom but I really think there's a 30-35 point "game breaker" fourth line winger in that idiot head of his.