@tarheelhockey
Since Necas was a regular with the Canes
Year 1 - 29th with -6 (3rd worst amongst regulars and worst forward except for Brian Gibbons… who even is that?)
Year 2 - LED THE TEAM WITH +25
Year 3 - 15th with +5 (8th best forward)
Year 4 - 17th with +5 (11th best forward, literally no one on this team was a minus except for Puljujarvi and Dylan Coughlan who were/are not good at hockey and played 17 games)
Year 5 - 32nd with -9 (Was better than Selke Staal
and Michael Bunting
)
Year 6 - 8th with +4 (5th best forward)
——-
If you want to say that this track record means nothing then OK. I think it shows that when Necas chooses to pay attention or at least being aware on the ice without the puck then he can be totally fine on the defensive side of things. I think the majority of the time it’s not on his radar. I don’t think it’s an effort thing as I agree he works hard and he backchecks. He just doesn’t always or often play the game smartly.
You have to also remember. Not every single minute of the game each player is going to be with their most often linemates. Sometimes there are injuries, sometimes there a line shuffling, sometimes players are on different pp or pk units.
Of course SHG and ENG affect things but wouldn’t you find it odd that a player is consistently lower than his teammates regardless of these variables?
Hes not ever the only player on the ice that’s subject to these factors and situations. If he gets a minus due to an ENG… so did 5 other guys. Is it just chance and bad luck that the the minuses seem to stack up for certain players and not others?
Defensive specialists I get. You’re not a high scoring guy and you might be tasked with stopping the other teams best players. You’re gonna get your dashes. But offense first guys with easy zone starts? You’re earning your minuses in a different way.