95snipes
Registered User
- Dec 11, 2019
- 1,110
- 1,451
I watched this game and remember watching it. I have notes on this game from March and in my notes I say as part of criticism that his passes aren't clean, tape to tape and he doesn't skate with the puck to put his teammates in a good position. And you can see it here, the film doesn't lie. If you objectively look at the shifts in this video (he obviously played more than 7 minutes during the game) -
0:09 of the video, 19:35 of the 1st period (-)
1st shift of the game. You have a slow forecheck here, his initial read isn't there and he throws the puck the other way for a turnover. I get that's a set play, but you either need to skate it or that pass needs to be hard. Levshunov throws a floater in no man's land which is an easy step and zone keep for Wisconsin.
0:25 of the video, 19:25 of the 1st period (-)
That's more on the forwards for the neutral zone turnover than Levshunov, but you take a poor angle and let the Badger player walk right around you.
0:40 of the video, 17:35 of the 1st period (-)
Whitelaw gets the outside on Lev.
0:54 of the video, 17:19 of the 1st period (-)
These are the exact plays that I knock Levshunov for. You could call that a puck battle, but Levshunov is first to that puck. He lacks any sort of composure and 'throws it' back around the boards. This results in a 50/50 puck battle that MSU loses and sustained Wisco pressure.
1:19 of the video, 15:17 of the 1st period (-)
Wisconsin is changing here, Larson opens up to his forehand, Lev passes on the back side to his backhand, turnover and the end result is Wisconsin possession in MSU's zone.
1:40 of the video, 14:36 of the 1st period (+)
He scored a goal, that's obviously good. That's a floater from the blueline, really soft goal to give up. It's hard to tell from the angle, but it might have been going over the net.
1:59 of the video, 12:35 of the 1st period (+)
Has back support, good read / step here to kill the breakout. Gets tripped otherwise likely ends up with the puck.
2:13 of the video, 10:03 of the 1st period (+)
Does a good job defending there stick on puck.
2:38 of the video, 6:26 of the 1st period (-)
Weird sequence leading up this and ends up a tough play because his winger's not in position yet for the breakout pass and Lev has no real play, but it's a continued pattern of putting the puck in a bad spot for a teammate.
3:06 of the video, 17:51 of the 2nd period (+)
Nothing crazy here, but has his head up and makes a good first pass to Howard.
3:29 of the video, 15:04 of the 2nd period (-)
He's on his backhand, but I don't love this play. One not particularly hard forechecker. Not too difficult of a pass to Dorwart or an easy reverse and you have full possession, instead icing.
3:52 of the video, 11:52 of the 2nd period (+)
Is able to cut off Whitelaw in the neutral zone. Right after that looks like a miscommunication between his partner, both take the left side, and there's a scoring chance against.
4:32 of the video, 8:44 of the 2nd period (-)
Conceptually, I like the idea of putting pucks into space for teammates when it puts them in an advantage. But it's situational awareness and that's not the case here. You're shorthanded for another 4 minutes, that puck has to get out. All 5 Badgers are on the screen, if he rifles the puck as hard as he can, that puck isn't staying in the zone. Instead he floats it around the boards and results in a puck battle that MSU loses.
4:56 of the video, 1:39 of the 2nd period (+)
That's a great play to beat the forecheck as nervous as he can make you with the puck.
5:08 of the video, 19:44 of the 3rd period (+)
Wins puck from Whitelaw and moves puck up for a break the other way.
5:20 of the video, 18:06 of the 3rd period (+)
Get a fluttering puck from his partner that skips over his stick. A little bit of panic, but makes the pass, chip by Larson and it's a 2 on 1. You notice in a lot of these sequences, he's looking to move the puck north as quickly as possible, which can be good and bad.
5:47 of the video, 15:41 of the 3rd period (+)
Strbak's beat and Levshunov defends it well overall. If you pause at 5:46/5:47 a chip pass to the streaking right winger could have been problematic. Strbak's flatfooted and Howard's taking the angle, but may have been able to close that.
6:11 of the video, 12:13 of the 3rd period
There's nothing wrong with this, but you have time with the puck. Move your feet and make a play, hit your winger directly, look to the center support, or let the forecheckers commit and give it to your partner. Why throw it off the boards and make it hard for your winger. It's an easy step for Wisconsin and you're not exiting the zone with possession.
For all of the talk for how much he improved over the year, this game was in March. The overall impact in this game was hit or miss. Some good plays in transition, could tilt the ice at times, but quite a few negative plays with and without the puck.