He doesn't seem to be considered a potential 1st rounder anymore?
Potential and tools are still there, but seems like he's hit a bit of a wall in development for now. We'll see how he faces this adversity.He doesn't seem to be considered a potential 1st rounder anymore?
Somebody needs to tell the people from NHL franchise mode, because they seem to think he’s the next Patrick RoyHe doesn't seem to be considered a potential 1st rounder anymore?
I stopped believing in him. He has the size, he worked a lot before arriving in Q thanks to excellent supervision but he did not take the step. The 2025 draft is still far away but he is still not No. 1 on his team. He is far from the best CHL goalies born in 2006. We can forget the first one. He's not a goalie like Knight, Askarov or Wallstedt. He's too late. Perhaps he will manage to fill it after the 2025 draft but his development does not indicate this path.
Massive regression statistically from D'Aigle
Like any promising future draft eligible prospect, we expect them to make progressions year by year. But as we know, that doesn't always happen.While development is never linear...especially when talking about goalies...I never was all that high on this kid. He's gonna get drafted but he's definitely gonna be more of a project than other goalies available. There's lots of upside but he was never gonna be the top goalie of his draft year...as many thought he'd be.
Like any promising future draft eligible prospect, we expect them to make progressions year by year. But as we know, that doesn't always happen.
Yeah, I think this is spot on. Goaltending is pretty easy to scout. Look for the goalies that stop pucks at a high rate pre-NHL. The shooters are not that good. If you are good, you’ll stop a lot of shots. Some of them do so year after year. Those are usually the ones who continue it on into the NHL.In QMAAA, he was very prepared and physically exceptional. Confidence in him must have been lost. Bad in Q, bad in the U17 tournament, bad in the U18 tournament, bad in HG, he's bad that's all. He was simply overrated. Two U16 goalkeepers far surpass his QMAAA statistics and a 3rd Patrick Deniger, praised by Alexis Joseph in an interview, is on his bases.
Yeah, I think this is spot on. Goaltending is pretty easy to scout. Look for the goalies that stop pucks at a high rate pre-NHL. The shooters are not that good. If you are good, you’ll stop a lot of shots. Some of them do so year after year. Those are usually the ones who continue it on into the NHL.
People overcomplicate this stuff. Being 6’5 215 doesn’t matter if you stop 89% of the shots.
Yeah. Size isn't everything...as I said above I'm convinced the most important part for goalies is what happens between the ears. Still, size helps. Also, nowadays, even most of the bigger guys are phenomenal athletes and just as mobile as smaller guys. That wasn't really the case earlier. Smaller guys can still become top goalies but size definitely helps. You just cover more if you're big. Which is also a mental thing for skaters seeing less net. That's why NHL teams are eager to draft bigger guys.I don't buy the size argument.
I don't understand why NHL franchises continue to cling to tall goalies who are worse than smaller ones when NHL lacks good goalies.
These smaller goalkeepers end up in the European leagues. KHL is full of small goalies who put up better stats than the big ones.
A goalie like Juha Metsola hasn't played a single NHL game and he's not the best I mentioned among the small goalies. I am convinced that throughout his prime he will have been in the 64 best goalkeepers in the world.
It's discrimination. If you're good, you're good. If you're 180cm tall and you're better than a 195cm goalie in the SHL or KHL, he'll be better in the NHL.
Concerning D'Aigle, he is very far from 89% anyway.
I certainly don’t disagree that the position is more mental than any other.I disagree. I'm not a scout but I don't think goalies are easy to project. With goalies, a lot is decided between the ears. Especially nowadays where some of the 6'5 kids are moving just as well as the 5'10 kids.
As a goalie you need to be able to focus for full games, track the puck well no matter if you're peppered with shots or barely see any rubber. You also need high confidence and short memory, especially after goals against. You need positional awareness as well. If you keep on losing your net you're no good. That's especially true for smaller goalies. The better your positioning, the less you're in scrambling mode, the better you're prepared for shots.
Finally, the NHL is nothing like college or junior leagues because the workrate is much different. Much tougher schedule and the shooters are much better as well. So that makes it even tougher than before to not just bring it for full games but for every game of the season.
There's just a lot of mental work that goes into this. Lots of different things for goalies to learn and deal with. Some things are also very tough to maintain so there's always gonna be up and downs. Spencer Knight is a good example. Even the most promising goalie prosprect can suddenly run into problems of something is bothering him mentally.
As a skater you have to be mentally ready as well and it's gonna be tough to stay in the NHL if you're not but the mental requirements for goalies are definitely on another level. And I just think that scouting what's between the ears is very tough. You can see the result on the ice but you'd probably have to see what's going on inside a prospect to judge how solid he is mentally, how he'd deal with adversity etc.
I think that development is never linear and that's particularly true for goalies.
So I may never have been all that high on D'Aigle but I also think it's way too early to write him off now just because he's trending in the wrong direction. A bit of confidence, improved focus during games and a shorter memory could already be enough to turn the ship around. He's big and fairly mobile, a solid athlete so it's really all between the ears for him.
I agree with this but projecting goalies for the NHL is alot harder than even Dmen and forwards are the easiest.Yeah, I think this is spot on. Goaltending is pretty easy to scout. Look for the goalies that stop pucks at a high rate pre-NHL. The shooters are not that good. If you are good, you’ll stop a lot of shots. Some of them do so year after year. Those are usually the ones who continue it on into the NHL.
People overcomplicate this stuff. Being 6’5 215 doesn’t matter if you stop 89% of the shots.
The problem is between his ear. He was great when he was younger without any pressureStill falling out of favor for the draft with an average start to his draft year.
What happened to this once great prospect?
Watched him a bunch. He seems extremely weak mentally on the ice. Whenever he lets a goal in, he loses all confidence and shuts completely off. He's got very good tools to work with, but he's one of the shakiest goalies I have ever seen.Horrible start to the season for this kid. I forgot how good he started off as a 15 yr old. Up to midway point of his first season he actually had a save percentage of 0.920+ but Something threw his game off a little while after and he hasn't recovered from it