95snipes
Registered User
- Dec 11, 2019
- 1,110
- 1,449
The production is good to be sure, but the question is more are the tools and style translatable to similar success at the NHL level. In my mind, that answer is no for the reasons outlined below. I can see him flirting with 60 in his best years with the right usage, but far from a slam dunk.How about production? Does generational production mean anything?
Ok wow, let's take a step back here. I have nothing against Levshunov personally (don't know the guy so no 'agenda') and hope he has a good career and proves me wrong. I'm not 'in his corner' so to speak, but the more talent in the NHL, the better for the sport. Hopefully he wins a norris trophy one day and in his speech says '95snipes is moron'. At the same time, people have 'rated' plenty of prospects highly before that did not have successful careers.It means coaches and media that follow the play night in and out considered him the best performing defenseman in the confernece.
yes you have, I see you post clips that would suggest he's a trainwreck is his own end. His results this year suggest that this is not the case, unless you are prepared to defend a belief that he has either been insanely lucky or his teammates are elite at covering up his weaknesses, both of which are not commonly held opinions.
That's fine but it bears acknowledgment that your opinion is an extreme minority from Big Ten Hockey people and people that "rate" draft prospects. My issue is it's been bordering on "agenda" for a while and I have a feeling you formed an early impression and are getting a bit of tunnel vision. This is very common when people look at prospects.
For me, I've been watching the USHL and NCAA pretty closely this year. I've easily cleared 100 games already and that's before USHL playoffs and U18s. I'm going to put out a ranking which people can read or ignore and Levshunov won't be higher than 6th. Most likely he'll be 6th. The reason I post a lot in this thread is that he is a polarizing prospect and I see someone with a ton of red flags. So when I identify that, I post it. You can disagree, but I am offering an opinion and defending it with the film/clips you reference.
My take on Levshunov is he has the athletic tools to be good. Top pairing good. He's 6'2 and built like a tank. He can skate. Not an elite skater, but certainly above average. He's pretty quick when he moves his feet. Has good top speed. You can see when activates and joins the rush, he can wheel. He's got a heavy shot and can snap the puck. He can be physical. Not necessarily his game, but he's capable and can hit hard when he chooses to. All of the tools you want to be a high end defenseman.
Now the issue is everything else. The positioning has gotten better from early season, but there are still 3 big issues for me:
- The glaring issue is his compete and yes this is still an issue. For someone his size, he loses lots of board battles. Has a really tendency of lapses and lackadaisical play. D zone coverage is still a concern as well.
- The puck management is a big red flag for me. This is the main reason I'm not high on him. Under duress, he has a really tendency to 'throw' the puck to a teammate in a poor position or a turnover. This happens many times a game, every game. Careless stuff. I'm really looking for composure in prospects and if they make their teammates better and put them in good spots. Levshunov does not do that. His passes are also often not clean, not on the tape.
- I don't like his hockey sense. He struggles with his reads. He struggles to anticipate. He can play on your powerplay, but not an ideal 1st unit powerplay qb. I don't believe the instincts are there to be a big point producer. Meaning 70+ point defenseman. I don't see that.
So I see him as a bet on tools. And depending on a) your franchise's current direction and b) how deep your pool is, would determine where a team would/should have them on their board. Can he be worth 2nd overall? Potentially. The tools are there. Will he be when look back 5 years from now? No, I don't believe so. I see something like Bouchard/Sergachev as a good case with a floor much lower. Like I said, whoever drafts him, would be wise to slow play it.