Horvat1C
Registered User
- Oct 2, 2015
- 695
- 439
But at the same time Virtanen and Juolevi were bad.
Yup, nobody bats 1000%.
But at the same time Virtanen and Juolevi were bad.
You're kidding me right? Byfield's been given far more than he's earned, including a spot on the top line last year.I think it varies. Some prospects play too little and some prospects play too much. The issue with Byfield has been while he’s been very mediocre, he hasn’t been given a green light to go screw up. He’s been unlucky with that. But also, the times where he does play you rarely notice him doing anything important.
Indeed. Players are basically assessed based on how they do against their own cohort, and it's difficult to say how that will project when they're playing the very best players from all over the world with about 95 % of players falling within about a 15 year age spread.Busts are created through expectations set by analyzing children playing against other children. Of course development and self-determination matter but projecting what children will achieve as adults is pretty imperfect.
Both Tyler Seguin and Joe Thornton played small roles in their rookie seasons and they turned out fine. If you have the talent and skillset, you will show it when given an opportunity.The Rangers had many more roadblocks on forward than on defense (Panarin, Zibanejad, Kreider all occupying spots at the top on the lineup).
I think with young players there needs to be a grace period where they are allowed to play in positions without getting the rug pulled out from under them. Anybody needs time to adjust to the speed and physicality of the NHL and then figure out how they can apply their own skillset in that new environment. Basically you need a decent sample size of a player (especially a rookie you are hoping will be elite) before you can evaluate whether or not they can sink or swim.
The Canucks didn't bury Pettersson or Boeser to force them to learn a defensive game even though they weren't great defensively. The Devils didn't bury Jack Hughes after 2 rough seasons as a teenager. The Senators didn't bury Stutzle after lackluster team results. Even Torts doesn't bury Michkov at the bottom of the lineup (although he does manage him). Unless you are Crosby, McDavid, Matthews, Bedard, etc. level, you have to be patient and truly develop your potential star players into stars.
Hard to say, the Oilers destroyed so many 1st OA picks in a half decade until they were gifted a guy even that franchise couldn't ruin.With Kaapo Kakko, a former 2nd overall that has failed to meet expectations despite glimpses of the skill and smarts he was drafted for, being traded and a general negativity swirling around the Rangers (a team that seemingly struggles more than average with developing prospects and young players) in recent weeks, I've got to thinking about the magical "what ifs" of what prospects *could* have been in different circumstances.
It's incredibly hard to become an impact player in the NHL, and there are, seemingly, any number of reasons why a prospect might end up busting. Development may be affected in surprisingly significant ways by things as seemingly small and invisible to fans as how good your linemates are in the AHL, or what opportunities you're given when called up, or whether or not you get PP time, or how sporadic or consistent your ice time is, or what practices your team runs, or how buried you are on the depth chart, or what kind of system your coach is running and how suitable you are for it. Would an Olli Juolevi that failed to develop in Vancouver succeed if he were drafted by someone else? Would someone like Brayden Point who blossomed in Tampa Bay flounder if he were drafted one or two spots earlier? We all imagined that New York was set once they drafted Lafreniere and Kakko first and second overall: were they really just never all that talented after all, or were there systematic failures in how the Rangers introduced them into the league that stunted their ability to succeed?
The importance of all of this is underlined by players that end up "breaking out" somewhere else; while on the other hand, some players seem to have no more success when shopped around than they did on the team they already busted on to begin with (but maybe at that point the damage is already done - and failures to develop at critical developmental points cripple you as a player for good). A player like Nail Yakupov never had any success anywhere else, even after he had left the black hole of the pre-McDavid Oilers, but the pariah of the hour, Buffalo, is notorious for players developing into elite talent after they've moved on somewhere else.
This is all, ultimately, rooted in the ephemeral concepts of "talent" and "learning," which are both extremely complicated and abstract topics that hardly anyone really understands. I've always imagined that anyone who ends up drafted in the first round has plenty of talent to spare and is receptive to teaching and learning new things - so why do so many of them struggle to keep improving once they're in the NHL? Are scouts really just failing to properly assess a players ability - or lack thereof - to learn new skills and develop further in the NHL? What are teams that successfully develop talent, like Tampa Bay, doing that teams that seem to struggle, like NYR, aren't? How much is busting a psychological process, where losing all of the confidence you had in junior cripples your ability to both play at peak performance and your ability to be passionate for the game? Do we place too much blame on individual players for failing to meet expectations, or are there real failures on their part to meet the expectations of the team that drafted them? Are there any prospects that you really believed in and think could have succeeded if a few things here and there were different?