I mean I think you saw a lot of what Silovs needs to work on in this game. Only caught a bit of it but he lacks a lot of judgement on what to do on point shots. He's big enough that he should be able to fight through screens better. This was the book that was out on him before that it took awhile for the Oilers to exploit.
First goal was probably the worst, screen was just forming. There was a window to see that release. Player was RHS so short side is the most likely so it was somewhat of a changeup that he went across his body with the shot.
Just FYI textbook play is to guard the short side and peek from that side when in doubt. Hopefully your dman does their job and pushes the screen to the far side.
Second goal, clear sightline on the release but he pushes to the side for no reason. Basically the puck was going to miss the net. The mass of players is too high so you can't crowd the tip on this play. But if he has just kept his feet he had a chance on the guy in the slot who came out with it. He is a bit of an over-committer.
For example, the tip goal was a textbook example of a high tip, you literally practice these all the time. It wasn't a super hard point shot so you should be able to keep that from going straight in while being aware of the tip - to be fair there are two tip threats but he pushed hard towards the center top of his crease. Even if that guy just received the puck this would leave the player with an easy stickhandle around him. It's just not a great play. Again, if he makes a microadjustment for the far side angle and holds his feet he has a chance on the deflect, which isn't going to be super fast because the point shot didn't have that much velocity. His depth is pretty good.
Last goal was fairly shameful. Guy at the point is RHS, far side is his easiest shot, if he walks out it's going to be to the middle of the ice. So basically no reason to look short side on this one. His first peek is the right direction, I would have liked him to look far side low if he didn't pick it up the first time instead of leaning to the short side and then back again. Especially because the shooter was stationary, you have some idea of where the shot is coming from. You could even watch the feet of your own forward knowing that this is a screen situation and you can read the shot coming through their legs.
I think a lot of it is that Silovs just doesn't have at this stage the innate puck tracking of guys like Marky or Demko. He's only slightly better than Martin IMO. And it's clear he needs to work on reading the play on point shots. It's also clear that other teams have read the book and are going to be trying this all the time.