One argument other posters have disregarded is especially persuasive to me -- if he was injured, I really doubt the team would publicly attribute his poor performance to his approach/attitude, even indirectly. Leaving norms aside, they would have to know it wouldn't help this particular player to be motivated that way.
This is the biggest single thing for me. I think its pretty clear Pettersson has
an injury. But players have minor injuries all the time, and play through them all the time, and frankly, we usually don't even hear about a player playing through a minor injury. So, the question is, whether the injury is significant. And basically everything management has done and said suggests that it is not significant, and that the injury is minor. And frankly, this, in my opinion, is pretty consistent with how Pettersson has spoken about the injury as well. He's never framed it as being overly significant, nor has he used it as an excuse. In fact, and this is just my opinion, he seemed sheepish even mentioning the injury at the player exit interviews at the end of last season (and good on him for that).
And sure, is it possible management is just totally wrong about the injury (despite being the ones who have access to the doctors
and who have access to Pettersson and likely speak to him about his health on an almost day to day basis)? Sure, but that seems incredibly unlikely to me. And if there was even any real chance that the injury was signifncant, then why wouldn't management be more protective of Pettersson?
When I read this thread and the last one, I see two types of conversations.
First type: Analyze the drop off in his skating that corresponds exactly to his injury timeline in meticulous detail. Analyze the change in his shooting rates and shot selection for the same. Post charts about it. Discuss a wide range of possible explanations for his performance. Agree that EP needs to either do better or if it's injury causing the issue, sit and recover, status quo is a disaster. Confess we don't have all the information and every opinion is ultimately a shot in the dark.
Second type: 100's of posts repeating the same HE'S NOT TRYING HARD ENOUGH AND NOTHING ELSE MATTERS cliche, oftentimes caps included
I guess the people reading this thread can decide for themselves who is trying to have a nuanced discussion and who is a dogmatic spammer.
I mean, this isn't helpful and to me, isn't even accurate.
An argument I've brought up and seen brought up a dozen times and get disregarded every time by the ultra dogmatic crew is how the slump also coincided with him getting stuck with two 4th line wingers and not getting the majority of the Hughes shifts last year and yet he's still expected to put up 100 points as if he's a prime Crosby.
This argument has been addressed and disregarded countless times because it isn't a very compelling argument. Not only has he played with different better players at even strength over the past 30-40 games or so (inclusive of playoffs) as
@MS has already outlined, he's also played on the top powerplay throughout his slump.
And there is a big difference between playing with bad players, getting bad statistical results and looking bad doing it, and playing with bad players, getting bad statistical results but actually looking good. And throughout this slump Pettersson has generally just looked bad at even strength. He doesn't look like a guy that's being held back by his linemates. And he has looked bad on the powerplay while playing with elite talent.
With that all said, I do accept that linemates matters and I am not trying to argue that having better consistent linemates with Pettersson wouldn't help to improve his play. But also true is the fact that Pettersson is now making $11.6 million per season, and frankly, needs to drive his line better.
I don't know what you mean about taking EP criticism personally, but you can't tell me I'm being overly reductive when the part you are calling overly reductive was a direct quote.
outh to soften his position, which is something he certainly isn't doing himself.
I mean, taking one sentence from probably tens of thousands of words
@MS has typed on this subject seems pretty reductive.