I disagree - especially the "clear as day" part.
Our best players are not creating any turnovers in the nzone - and that is when the Jets perform the best and also happens to be the way they played early in the season. I've already posted something similar to this but it's worth repeating if we are going to slide back to the "systems / coaching" narrative that we like to fall back on when our best players are not getting it done.
We are not good off the rush - we struggle with zone entries.
Unless we are transitioning off a nzone turnover, we approach the ozone in slow mo, glide into the zone, and wonder why we don't have any options.
Without speed, it's tough to make plays other than curling back and sending it to the point. That is how our top 6 execute offense from our dzone, off the rush - very slowly. And every team we play know this, and defend it with a wall - because it shuts us down.
The major issue is our nzone play which is not creating turnovers - because we are a decent transition team that will gain the zone with speed when we are not faced with a wall of defense that we usually run into when we are starting our offense from our end.
Bones is not asking this group to stop the nzone back check - makes no sense. But the top 6 are not nearly as effective with nzone coverage as they were earlier. That, at least in part, is due to lack of effort. And lack of effort is what Bones has been calling out for months.
So, it you can't convince your best forwards to back check, and they insist on trying to beat the defensive wall in slow mo, you are left with limited options. We curl and go to the point - and at least hope for shots on net. It sucks that we play that what - but it is not by design.
It all comes down to effort in creating turnovers - we are not seeing that effort and it impacts our ability to play a high tempo game that would allow more offensive options off the rush.
Watch how the teams vs our top 6, exit their zone - they do it with speed and they do not run into any interference in the nzone - it open water all the way to our zone - and that includes good and poor teams. We leave that neutral zone wide open. That creates two problems: We start our offense from our end, and we do it slowly and against a 5 man wall, and two, we lose our transition game which is reliant on turnovers but opens up the ice and eliminates that wall.
IMO, that's as clear as day.
It's also ironic that our bottom 6 do not come in slow - they actually have speed behind the rush and usually gain the zone quickly. But they are also much more effective in creating nzone turnovers which translates to speed the other way.
Why are they more effective off the rush? Mostly effort in all zones. But they are not playing the same brand of offense as the top 6 - it's too bad they don't have the high skill shooters / finishers.
We did the same thing LY - we blamed poor execution on coaching / systems rather than the effort required to execute - especially with our top 6 offense. I thought our success early in the year would be proof enough that this team can be very good when they work hard.