Guys still have to produce from the point they are drafted to the point where they must be signed in order to actually earn the contract. It's not like everyone loved this kid from day one and have suddenly turned--there were some questions about the pick from the moment it was made. A small, relatively weak creative center who is an average skater. It's a tough projection to the NHL.
Gorton and Co. can think the world of him. Scouts and the front office get it wrong. Sometimes you take kids and love them and you end up wrong. It's fine, it happens. Is that happening with with Henriksson? Who knows, it's still early. Premier bottom six center? He has to find a place where he can actually play C, because he's not doing that with Frolunda.
I don't get the "don't judge these kids so soon" mentality. It's fine to evaluate players as they progress through each season. You don't think the front office is evaluating the players in real time? They are. Why can't we? It's silly to write off a player at such a young age, but there's nothing wrong with reiterating the concerns about him and his game and looking at how that is affecting him in his current stage of development.
I've probably been the most outspoken critic of his this season (beyond the "he suuuucks" toolbox) and even I readily acknowledge that his coach trusts him, he plays good minutes, and his overall game is better than it what a season ago. The offense, isn't there, though, and that's concerning for a guy who was drafted as a playmaking top-9 center.
Frolunda is not a developmental team for him, the SHL is not a developmental league. This isn't baseball spring training where the veteran pitcher is told to go work on refining his slider and adding a two-seamer at the expense of results; to play he has to contribute. He has to do what his Frolunda coaches ask him to do. I suppose that he's doing that to some extent, since he still plays solid minutes. Eventually, however, the offense needs to show. As I think we all know the reality is that guys who can't score in the SHL don't magically start scoring in the NHL; since he's not a shutdown center, that would present a problem.
He has plenty of time, but he also has a long way to go. And there's nothing wrong with evaluating his progress as we get there.
I think the challenge with any evaluations is taking into various aspects and attributes and objectively assigning a value to them.
I think where a lot of fans struggle is that they get a little high on guys when things are going well, and too low on them when there are struggles.
Literally, depending on the week, you have guys being penciled into a top 6 role in the NHL or being labeled a bust. I think when a lot of fans buy into those two extremes, emotion comes into play a lot more and every change is magnified.
The reality is that for a lot of these guys, be it Henriksson, Kravtsov, Miller, Lundkvist, Robertson, etc., there's not a heck of a whole that's changed. The challenges facing those prospects is more or less what they were before and will continue to be.
But I think it's important to remember that those challenges don't inherently disqualify guys from finding a role in the NHL, sometimes it just limits what they provide in that role.
I think it's easy to focus too much on upside. So when you start looking at many prospects through that prism, anything less than their ceiling feels disappointing.
I say that because I can already tell you this board is probably going to struggle with that when Miller starts playing his first pro games. Because he's going to be the next kid that a lot of people are penciling into the NHL lineup, and getting caught up on the physical tools, etc., and there's going to be quite a few ups and downs there --- especially when people see how he's still learning the defensive game.
Kreider is another example. People were skeptical when he was drafted (a lot of this board wanted Schroeder). He had a solid D+1 season and everyone was up on him, then he was struggled in his D+2 season and everyone had doubts and there was a desire to pull him from college. Then he had a great D+3 season and a lot of people wanted to raise the bar for him.
That's where the whole 35 goal+, 65+ point expectation started to take hold.
Then he went to the AHL and didn't necessarily light the world on fire, before settling into a 20 goal, 45 point plateau for a while. Ultimately he settled into a 25-30 goal, 50-60 point level, with fans still debating what exactly they had in him.
Now if your someone who had hoped for 35/65, that might be disappointing. But it's still a very good and important player.
My long-winded point is that even if a guy doesn't hit his full potential, it doesn't mean he has to fall all the way to the other extreme either.