dahrougem2
Registered User
Mittelstadt probably carries more fat than you do.Its legit, I'm trying to stay at 180 with all the fat I'm carrying around these days and I'm only 5'11.
Mittelstadt probably carries more fat than you do.Its legit, I'm trying to stay at 180 with all the fat I'm carrying around these days and I'm only 5'11.
Mittelstadt probably carries more fat than you do.
Mittelstadt probably carries more fat than you do.
Not that he's legit fat, but this is probably true.
That 195 for Mitts is probably a combination of being exaggerated and a little bit of fat because he could only pack on so much lean muscle for his frame, when attempting to get stronger for the NHL.
Where as someone like Nate who's listed as an inch shorter, has way more lean muscle, with a very low body fat percentage, and he also naturally adds muscle easier than Mitts.
Not the thread for it, but the problem for Mitts is that if he leans out too much, he can't play the hang onto the puck possession game he wants to play. If he leans out to improve his conditioning he might have to change his style of play too.
Actually think that's bullshit. He'd be fine more like Drouin, he doesn't get into contact that much. His ability to hang onto the puck is angles, quickness, and intelligence not heaviness.
Jagr had the fat ass, but was lethal fast, and quick with his hands.
Here's the thing with Mitts.. He always adapts, but it always takes him 1 to 2 years at every level.
I can see counting going from Buffalo shit show to us counting lol. I was hoping he'd adapt quicker..
My biggest f***in concern was that he'd hit a wall here being asked to skate harder, and work harder by about 20% consistently.
No one buys into my theory he just can't hang with his current physical conditioning so he looks stupid theory.
We used to practice it in the Army. We'd wake up at 4 am, road match out to the range 6 or 12 miles out and shoot. Immediately. The cadre would all be there, double the normal staff for safety waiting on us, and you get to see how much more difficult it is to perform under timed pressure in that instance.
I think my 5th time doing it in three years I finally showed up and shot expert. Where I always had zero issues from basic shooting that well after one to three runs.
It's a bitch, you have to step up your game, train harder, if you want to be as lethal while under heavy fatigue. It's real, and it isn't easy.
Mitts doesn't play at all like Drouin though. Drouin darts in and out of holes, moves the puck very quickly, and mostly plays above the goal line with the puck.
Mitts likes to slow the game down, hangs onto the puck like Forsberg, often plays below the goal line, and likes to spin back and forth in the corners and the half wall playing off contact, to draw the opposition to him and open up someone for a pass.
Drouin's style doesn't need to be strong. Mitts kinda does.
If Mitts ups his conditioning, he may lose some muscle, because he's probably a hard gainer of muscle.
If he busts his ass with cardio like you did in the army, I agree he may improve his conditioning, and may adapt to Bednar's system better, but I think he'd probably lose some muscle mass along with the fat, and make his style harder to play, so he'd have to change his style with it. That was my point.
Its about efficiency. Muscle is not efficient to feed. It's very demanding actually it needs more blood, and that's because it needs more oxygen.
Mitts needs to find a balance. You can carry that muscle but then you have to train your body to feed it at the level you need to.
Stamina + strength is the longest hardest road to achieve. You can be fast and light quick, or maybe even quicker you can be stronger.
But be 200lbs and run a marathon? No.. thats the ultimate achievement. I used to run on a treadmill with a 40lbs vest that I started with 10, then 20, 30 etc. before I ever thought about trying out for Special Forces.
It's truly the hardest thing to do as an athlete to both build strength and stamina equally. You can get caught, and punished by doing one over the other.
Mack learned the lesson, Mikko didn't.
Watch some of these Hurricanes games with me. It's even more noticeable. Mikko takes three strides and coasts all the f*** over the place. Then makes a hard drive behind the net, and he's gassed loses the puck and nothing happens.
If you want your body to move the way you need it to you better train right.
I don't think neither him or Mitts did it right. There is no way my skinny ass was carrying 140lbs unless I got stronger, but I had to get ready to run with that weight not just hold it up. It took years of getting ready for it.
You suffer a set back, injury, and lose 10% it's extremely difficult to get back. It takes absolutely embracing pain as your friend to get it back. Especially the older you get.
Its all possible though. Mikko can absolutely fix himself and be a monster at his age.
Will he though.. that's the question. You need both humility and work ethic.
It shouldn’t affect him much, if at all. Necas’ and Rants deployment are so different. Rants plays on the top line with skilled guys who are much more adept at carrying the puck.I’m curious to see if the loss of Necas affects the Canes offensive dynamic since he’s elite at skating the puck into the zone, but the Canes prefer to chip and chase (though they went out of their way to add more puckmovers to their blueline in the last couple seasons to move back the other way a bit).
I wonder how Mikko works in a system like that. He has more two-way guys and a more defensive system to cover up for his flaws, but he doesn’t strike me as a puck retrieval kind of guy. Doesn’t mean he can’t do it but I’m curious if he has to make some adjustments in his game and how Brind’Amour approaches that.
I think it's the other way around. The Canes will find a way to get the puck in the zone, their problem has been that their cycle game lacks skill and finish. Whereas we've kinda drifted away from that towards rush, and a lot of that has been because Landeskog has been out and Nuke has not been available. Necas fits the rush style well.I’m curious to see if the loss of Necas affects the Canes offensive dynamic since he’s elite at skating the puck into the zone, but the Canes prefer to chip and chase (though they went out of their way to add more puckmovers to their blueline in the last couple seasons to move back the other way a bit).
I wonder how Mikko works in a system like that. He has more two-way guys and a more defensive system to cover up for his flaws, but he doesn’t strike me as a puck retrieval kind of guy. Doesn’t mean he can’t do it but I’m curious if he has to make some adjustments in his game and how Brind’Amour approaches that.