transition defence worries me more with hamilton, than his work in the defensive zone. as other mentioned he often gives up early, if the opposing team is on the rush and he is last player back. obviously speed is an issue, but effort seems to be as well, which is kind of trouble. it sets a bad example for a young team like the devils, if the highest paid and one of the veteran players doesn't even try.
i will search for you on the IUCN red list
I don’t think Hamilton doesn’t try, I just think his pace is always slow and measured. That’s not always good but it’s who he is as a player.
Due to his wingspan, he waits on the offensive players to come into his window and then engage. Hamilton is going to try and fill the area of the ice he thinks is correct and use his stick to disrupt and win battles. Sometimes he will fail and we will wish he had used his body more or skated harder to recover but I don’t think it’s because he’s not trying. This is how he thinks is best to play.
Hamilton is really good in the offensive zone and we see the same measured pacing there as well. Sometimes we wish he would try and quickly make a play but he’s going to glide around to where he thinks he’s filling the best space.
I wish Hamilton played with more pace but I think this is a case where you have to not let perfect be the enemy of great when it comes to what Hamilton brings. Accept the warts for all the benefits.
——————
This reminds me a bit of Viktor Kozlov.
Big guy, not physical, good stick work, and slow/measured pacing. Someone who good things normally happen around but doesn’t look like he’s trying very hard. Lack of pace becomes a very visually obvious thing to criticize him for.
I wonder if the analytics era would have helped Kozlov’s reputation, I bet it would have.