I think his recognition of passing lanes, pressure, and the location of the opposing players is what is underrated about Dragiceveic. He has a sense of the "flow" of the game that is hard to grasp. It's also what people continually comment on, about how hard explaining this player is. I agree with that, but once I started to really understand why he was doing what he was doing, it clicked. He is so patient with the puck. He doesn't force passes generally, he activates when he needs to, but mostly waits for lanes to develop for breakouts.
The best example is that skyhook pass from the U18 games yesterday if anyone saw it. He gets the puck in his zone, recognizes that he has two open passing options, teammates in front of him. The problem is there was this huge wall of defenders sitting in the neutral zone. He knows that if he breaks that puck out to his two options, they are likely to get nowhere, get battled in the neutral zone, and the puck is likely coming right back to him. So, he adjusts instantly, lobs a gorgeous pass over every defender, and away goes his teammate on a break.
He's just so smart with how he creates offense and passes the puck in transition. It's really projectable.
There are so many concerns with his game with his skating and his defense, but from a projectable offensive mind from a defender, he's one of the best in the draft IMO.
I made these clips a few months ago but they're more examples:
Dragicevic is at the top of the screen in white in the right defense position. Watch how he gets this puck, and has two passing options immediately available. There's a player skating back into the zone, halfway between the lines, and another player just visible at the top of the screen. Dragicevic however recognizes the flow of play, with two Prince George players in the area who would immediately be able to challenge the puck carrier if he passed to them. So, he holds. He waits, and he draws in the attacker enough to launch a cross ice pass perfectly on the tape of an uncovered man. Excellent understanding of the flow of players, and reversing the play to break out.
He recognizes the play is breaking down, so he intercepts the stretch pass after leaving the offensive zone. Now his body is facing the benches, as is essentially 7 other players on the ice. Everyone has overloaded that side. So instead of trying to deke around two players, or backing up into the zone, or trying to land a pass through traffic, he immediately reverses. He spins, anticipating the weakside option. Then in perfect form, he hits him on the tape in a split second. Excellent play recognition, reversal of play, turning nothing into something, and capped off with simply superb passing skill