Player Discussion Nikita Zadorov

LouJersey

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Jun 29, 2002
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I thought he started the game well last night but yeah, seemed that Reaves settled him down a bit for sure. Basically every situation where the Bruins would have reason to run around, Reaves came out on the ice and the game got quiet. People will tell you that didn't happen, though.

Reaves sucks ass, but to say he's not an intimidation factor is flat out wrong.
I didn't watch but that's very interesting. I've often said the Bruins don't run the other teams best players because they know they will have to stand up for themselves against a Reaves say and they just never do it and haven't for a long time.
 

Colt.45Orr

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Mar 23, 2003
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Radko Gudas 2nd overall in goals by a D-man?

Are you really comparing Zadorov (and his cap hit) to a couple guys making basically league minimum?

Brutal take, but it figures.
What you're missing here (by comparing Zadorov to Gudas) is that Zadorov was #2 in the entire NHL in goals by a Dman a few years ago.

Gudas, meanwhile, averages 2.16 per season. Not your best work.
 

Aussie Bruin

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I think Zadorov has been just ok. Not overly impressed, not really underwhelmed either. The problem is the price tag, as was always likely to be the case. It comes with inflated expectations, that in his case are difficult to meet. His extra value, whatever it's worth, is linked to playoff performance, but the Bruins have to get there first to see if he can make good on it.

Otherwise, a passable player. Just overpaid and expected to do too much. Seen worse signings, also seen plenty better.
 

GordonHowe

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It has been. Which is what I think they are trying to change.

Maybe the unreasonable expectation is expecting adding a few physical more aggressive players would change that mentality.
Yes, but they have been drafting for size and truck killings in every position for about 3 years now, especially this past draft. I am not speaking of letourneau.

It hasn't translated. Yet.
 

PB37

Mr Selke
Oct 1, 2002
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His strengths have been good when he uses them. His hits have purpose, he can move the puck, imposing figure, strong against the boards, has a mean streak, etc etc.

What i don't like is that when he gets overwhelmed, he stops moving his feet and gets caught standing around which is not good for a defenseman. Almost like he gets winded really quickly. Happened to him on a few shifts the other night against the Leafs.
 

TheRealChrisKelly

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Feb 3, 2012
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A "fluke"can be extrapolated over 82 games??? Weird.

He has a big tool box.
he averages 5.9 goals a year if you include the 14 goal season. His career shooting percentage (including the 14 goal year) is 5.9%, it was 10.8 that season. if you take that season away he drops to 4.7 goals on 5.2% shooting. I don't know what you consider a fluke, but that is absolutely an outlier
 
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BiteThisBurrows

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Feb 11, 2022
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You know I see this guy as great and incredibly valuable in a playoff series but the problem is you have to get to the playoffs and his dumb penalties and inconsistencies aren't going to help them get there, quite the reverse.
 

UncleRico

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May 8, 2017
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I think he’s been fine. He’s +4 higher than the next defenseman fwiw

What is he when we factor in all his penalties that lead to power play goals for opposing teams?

Hopefully he settles down but zadorov averaging roughly a 2 minute minor per game is killing this team.
 

Gee Wally

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Nikita Zadorov has massive shoulders.

On Thursday night against the Flames, he had a chip on one of them.

Zadorov is one of two Bruins (along with Elias Lindholm) who spent time in Calgary. The 6-foot-6-inch, 248-pound Zadorov played two-plus seasons for the Flames before he was dealt to the Canucks midway through last season.

The defenseman acknowledged facing one of your former employers brings out a mix of emotions.

“I’ve got a lot of friends there still on that team. A lot of good memories,” he said before the Bruins’ 4-3 overtime win, during which he was minus-1. “Obviously there’s a lot to prove, as well. You have a chip on your shoulder to play against your old team because for some reason you didn’t stay there or didn’t work out, but you want to prove yourself. Somebody made a mistake, right?”

Zadorov has played in every game and Jim Montgomery sees a player who continues to adapt to his new environment, but as with the entire team, there have been hiccups.

“I don’t see him pressing,” said the coach. “I think overall, I think he’s finding his way in our systems, and I think at times he looks like he’s understanding exactly what we’re trying to accomplish and at times he looks like he’s not and that’s, but I wish it was just him. Then it would be easier to solve.”

Zadorov believes he’s getting more comfortable with how the Bruins roll.

“I think past five games I was really dialed into it and it’s been good, been easy so far,” he said. “Obviously, we’re in the little slump right now. The puck’s not going in, every bounce is going back to us. We’re trying to stay positive in here and all the guys try to work together, but when the unit of five works within the system, I think the system is perfect for us.”

Zadorov said staying positive and working hard are the ways to break out of a slump, and that’s what he sees from his teammates.

“I thought that was like a playoff game against Toronto five-on-five-wise, and we had two shutouts before, so I thought we were in a good place,” he said. “Obviously, they scored three power-play goals, one empty-net goal, what are you going to do? The special teams have got to be better. We all know that, but five on five, I thought we have been playing good. We’ve been improving. There’s a lot of room to improve still, but I think we’re getting going.”

When things aren’t going smoothly team-wide, it’s natural to start pressing.

“You meet pressure with pressure, so I think the guys in this league who thrive, that’s the guys who can take that pressure and then put it into the hard work and make sure it works for them,” said Zadorov. “Obviously, you can’t be on top of your game your whole career. You can’t be on top of your game for your whole season. There’s going to be some slumps. There’s going to be slumps in the team game. There’s going to be slumps in the individual game. You’ve just got to deal with it. It’s the National Hockey League. It’s the best league in the world. That’s our job. So, I think you go up there, whatever’s not working, you try to do little things, right? You start with that and then the big things will come up.”
 

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