Should fit right in, lazy, vanilla and can't skate. What more can you ask for?
Not the biggest fan of Roy, but one has to recognize this young player's talents.
I have been around this game for over sixty years as a player, coach, team manager, league convener and now the Executive Director of a large amateur sport organization. There are few truths about hockey that are immutable. One of them is that you can't teach scoring. There is no shortage of examples of players who have every attribute you are looking for in a player: size, skating, physicality, desire and high compete level - who just can't score. It's very frustrating when you're coaching or managing such players as you continue to ask yourself: why can't this kid score?
Roy has the innate ability to score. He anticipates the play and he finds the open ice that allows him the space to use his elite hand skills. He has a quick release and he sees the net, as Gordie Howe liked to say, with his stick, not just his eyes.
Roy's limitations in his skating ability and compete level are obvious. But if self-motivated, Roy has the talent to succeed at the next level. He is much stronger on the puck than many here (including this writer) thought. He protects the puck and his stick well. If placed in the right situation ( i.e. with the right line mates) Roy should be able to contribute offensively.
Roy will never be a play driver, he lacks the skating speed necessary to do so. But Montreal has a host of young forwards (Hage, Beck, Demidov, Tuch, etc.) that can, and will, in the future, drive the play.
Let's give this kid a chance to see what he can do. With his elite hand skills and offensive vision he may well surprise a lot of us.