Micklebot
Moderator
- Apr 27, 2010
- 57,201
- 34,980
Ok, so Hamonic flubs passes equally with and without pressure, he's just unskilled, but in terms of willingness to engage, there is no shortage there. Just on that player alone, I'm questioning your ability to judge these players by your own standards.combination of things.
but mostly looking at ability to win battles and move the puck in pressure and how willing they are to engage in the first place. those are the basics for tough d even before blocked shots or hits.
those other d save Sanderson and Zub do not stack up favourably there. so they are soft.
hamonic was constantly hearing footsteps and flubbing easy passes passes because he was scared of pressure. the softest of the bunch.
Oddly, to your point about flubbing passes, Brannstrom is 2nd worst behind Chychrun in givaways/60 5v5, which isn't a perfect proxy for flubbing passes, but is notable none the less. Chabot and Zub have the best giveaway/60, followed by JBD.
Ability to win battles, Sanderson seemingly wins almost every battle, but not because of he is tough, that's not to say he's soft, but the point is you're using a metric that isn't measuring what you are claiming it measures.
To me, Chabot, JBD, and Brannstrom are all willing to take hits to make plays, that's an indication of being tough in my mind, but none of them engage physically to win battles as a primary tool (well, JBD does a bit but he's got to get stronger for it to be effective), they use their other skills like skating, body positioning and stick to win battles,
On the flip side, Zub and Hamonic are more likely to use their physicality to win battles, and make life tough (from an physical perspective) on the opposition. using their strength to outmuscle the opposition, or through in a slash or crosscheck.
Chychrun is a guy I would probably call soft though maybe that's because of how much more effective he could be with his physical tools if he used them, to me, he often avoids using his body and favours using stickwork, isn't getting infront of
Anyways, TLDR, I don't agree with your analysis, or how you've chosen to define toughness, and if we aren't on common grounds for the basics of what is soft/tough then we likely won't accomplish much here.