Player Discussion Elias Pettersson - Please, Be Civil

Hodgy

Registered User
Feb 23, 2012
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Is there a documented case in NHL history of a player losing significant speed & shot power in the middle of a season without it being injury-related? Because that is essentially what you are claiming happened with Pettersson if you don't buy that he is injured.

Is he choosing not to skate or shoot hard? And he started choosing to do that about 20 games before signing the biggest contract of his life?

You can either use common sense, or you can believe that the Canucks are the unluckiest franchise in the history of the sport who had a player look elite for 400 games, and then turn off the switch (before signing a deal)

Seriously it's such a stupid theory.
So why was he skating so poorly during his last half season slump?
 

Hodgy

Registered User
Feb 23, 2012
4,952
5,211
Because that is the exact timeline of when he said he was injured and his production fell off? What is your theory?
He had a minor wrist injury. Your theory is that this minor wrist injury caused him to skate poorly?

Look, I've said it a million times, but I am not claiming to definitively know. But anyone that thinks this is cut and dry and that an injury must be causing him to play poorly isn't looking at the evidence closely.

EDIT: To clarify, I am talking about his previous slump that was half a year long or so, not this current slump that began last year.
 

racerjoe

Registered User
Jun 3, 2012
12,495
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Vancouver
It's not just if it is minor or not, and whether you miss games. That's part of it. But the bigger more important part is that its a wrist injury. It wouldn't have stopped him from any skating training, or any real core training. So it just isn't reasonable to think it likely that his wrist injury caused him to skate poorly in his last slump. Debating exactly how minor his wrist injury was, when trying to figure out if it significantly affected his skating, is a waste of time. Its a moot point.

If we were talking about a knee injury, like his current injury, then for sure the severity of the injury is extremely important. But it just isn't the case when we are talking a wrist injury.

It couldn’t be like Hronek who had a shoulder surgery than got knee surgery? Or he’ll for all we know he could have had tendinitis then too and needed a rest…. And yes a wrist injury could theoretically keep him off skates in ways for him to be behind on his training.
 

Hodgy

Registered User
Feb 23, 2012
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It couldn’t be like Hronek who had a shoulder surgery than got knee surgery? Or he’ll for all we know he could have had tendinitis then too and needed a rest…. And yes a wrist injury could theoretically keep him off skates in ways for him to be behind on his training.

It couldn’t be like Hronek who had a shoulder surgery than got knee surgery? Or he’ll for all we know he could have had tendinitis then too and needed a rest…. And yes a wrist injury could theoretically keep him off skates in ways for him to be behind on his training.
Sure, any player playing poorly at any time could have an injury to excuse his performance. But there isn’t any evidence of that and it seems far fetched and grasping at straws to me.
 

racerjoe

Registered User
Jun 3, 2012
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Vancouver
Sure, any player playing poorly at any time could have an injury to excuse his performance. But there isn’t any evidence of that and it seems far fetched and grasping at straws to me.

Except there is two known injuries…

Also you took the wrong part of my point, but whatever.
 

Hodgy

Registered User
Feb 23, 2012
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Except there is two known injuries…
But not an injury that explains his poor skating in the first slump.

Also you took the wrong part of my point, but whatever.
What’s your point then? I thought you brought up Hronek to suggest that Pettersson, during his first slump, may have had a lower body injury in addition to the wrist injury. And my point is that any player at any time may have an injury, and that it comes off as grasping at straws when you suggest there is some phantom injury that no one knew of or reported on.
 

mriswith

Registered User
Oct 12, 2011
4,584
8,351
This argument about ancient history of EP only exists because literally no one remembers what was happening several years ago. It's 100% narrative.

Luckily we don't need to go back to the history of Charlemagne's reign to examine what's wrong with EP when we can look at what's happening game to game right now.

It's not a lack of effort or confidence or likes on instagram that makes EP skate like this and we don't need to review the Magna Carta or find out who built the pyramids to see this:

 
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SillyRabbit

Trix Are For Kids
Jan 3, 2006
9,203
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Let's say Pettersson is injured.

What exactly are we supposed to expect here?

That he just continues to play through injury, very clearly not on the level that he's shown before?

For how long exactly? For the rest of his career?

We just accept that this is his new norm?

Or alternatively, are we expecting him to get better? When? How? Does he need time to "play through" the injury and it will eventually go away? Does he need time off? Does he need surgery?

He signed for 93 million dollars. The organization has made a significant investment in him. I find it difficult to believe that nobody has asked these questions already.

If he was injured, surely they'd sit him out, get him surgery or at the very least announce publicly that he's playing through something and will get better over time.

So either the organization is legitimately incompetent, or he's not injured.

And frankly, whether he's injured or not isn't important, what's important is how does he get back to normal?

If he's injured, what's the path back to normal?

If he's not injured, what's the path back to normal?

Or is his current play over the past 70 games the new normal?
 

racerjoe

Registered User
Jun 3, 2012
12,495
6,344
Vancouver
But not an injury that explains his poor skating in the first slump.


What’s your point then? I thought you brought up Hronek to suggest that Pettersson, during his first slump, may have had a lower body injury in addition to the wrist injury. And my point is that any player at any time may have an injury, and that it comes off as grasping at straws when you suggest there is some phantom injury that no one knew of or reported on.

It was one of many things I said… to show that there is a lot of ways a wrist injury could have effected his skating, and or been more of an injury than you just claiming it’s a minor injury with no evidence.
 

Bobby9

Registered User
Feb 10, 2019
2,601
3,492
Let's say Pettersson is injured.

What exactly are we supposed to expect here?

That he just continues to play through injury, very clearly not on the level that he's shown before?

For how long exactly? For the rest of his career?

We just accept that this is his new norm?

Or alternatively, are we expecting him to get better? When? How? Does he need time to "play through" the injury and it will eventually go away? Does he need time off? Does he need surgery?

He signed for 93 million dollars. The organization has made a significant investment in him. I find it difficult to believe that nobody has asked these questions already.

If he was injured, surely they'd sit him out, get him surgery or at the very least announce publicly that he's playing through something and will get better over time.

So either the organization is legitimately incompetent, or he's not injured.

And frankly, whether he's injured or not isn't important, what's important is how does he get back to normal?

If he's injured, what's the path back to normal?

If he's not injured, what's the path back to normal?

Or is his current play over the past 70 games the new normal?
He’s a very talent extremely streaky player. There is no injury. It’s made up from posters. When he’s on fire he is pretty much a top 10 player. Issue is when he’s not it’s long long stretches of sub par play.

It’s a cycle at this point. You just hope at some point over the next decade he goes on a heater during the playoffs. It happens every 8-10 months.

Certainly not a 11.6M dollar player. That requires consistency he is incapable of.

An 11.6M forward is: A constant threat to score every game. Elevates his game when the team requires. Shows consistency of showing up when needed. Performs in the playoffs. Plays physically. That is not who EP40 is.

He is an over paid RNH. A good and occasionally great player but a support player and should be paid around 7 M
 
Last edited:

mriswith

Registered User
Oct 12, 2011
4,584
8,351
Let's say Pettersson is injured.

What exactly are we supposed to expect here?

That he just continues to play through injury, very clearly not on the level that he's shown before?

For how long exactly? For the rest of his career?

We just accept that this is his new norm?

Or alternatively, are we expecting him to get better? When? How? Does he need time to "play through" the injury and it will eventually go away? Does he need time off? Does he need surgery?

He signed for 93 million dollars. The organization has made a significant investment in him. I find it difficult to believe that nobody has asked these questions already.

If he was injured, surely they'd sit him out, get him surgery or at the very least announce publicly that he's playing through something and will get better over time.

So either the organization is legitimately incompetent, or he's not injured.

And frankly, whether he's injured or not isn't important, what's important is how does he get back to normal?

If he's injured, what's the path back to normal?

If he's not injured, what's the path back to normal?

Or is his current play over the past 70 games the new normal?
We don't have access to enough info to know any answers to this. If he's permanently injured then trade him, if he's not then don't. Any sort of prognosis is impossible.

Whether the org is incompetent or not with how they deal with injured players was already answered by how utterly atrociously they handled Mikheyev.
 

PuckMunchkin

Very Nice, Very Evil!
Dec 13, 2006
13,128
10,887
Lapland
How is it "bad faith"? That's a ridiculous accusation. I mention that he missed no games for his wrist injury to show that it was a relatively minor injury and not something that could explain his poor skating. My point isn't that he didn't have a wrist injury, not an injury someone would reasonably expect to significantly affect his skating.
This is not a good way to think.
 

PuckMunchkin

Very Nice, Very Evil!
Dec 13, 2006
13,128
10,887
Lapland
Let's say Pettersson is injured.

What exactly are we supposed to expect here?

That he just continues to play through injury, very clearly not on the level that he's shown before?

For how long exactly? For the rest of his career?

We just accept that this is his new norm?

Or alternatively, are we expecting him to get better? When? How? Does he need time to "play through" the injury and it will eventually go away? Does he need time off? Does he need surgery?

He signed for 93 million dollars. The organization has made a significant investment in him. I find it difficult to believe that nobody has asked these questions already.

If he was injured, surely they'd sit him out, get him surgery or at the very least announce publicly that he's playing through something and will get better over time.

So either the organization is legitimately incompetent, or he's not injured.

And frankly, whether he's injured or not isn't important, what's important is how does he get back to normal?

If he's injured, what's the path back to normal?

If he's not injured, what's the path back to normal?

Or is his current play over the past 70 games the new normal?
We should expect the Canucks to to blow up and reconstruct the medical staff.

Their record is horrific. If I were a player I would be really worried about signing here and giving my health and career in to the hands of this group.

We should expect for EP to change his training. I dont know what he does but its obviously not working as intended.

So why was he skating so poorly during his last half season slump?
I dont think he was.
 

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