K1984
Registered User
- Feb 7, 2008
- 15,614
- 17,443
I wondered in the past if this was systems related. It seems certain teams like the Knights have it ingrained to just shoot when the chance is “good enough”. Instead we are always looking for a perfect play, which in the hands of McDrai is fine, let them do what they do best. But as a general systems thing, from coach down there needs to be a mindset of just getting solid shots off and generating those oppurtunities. It should be a lot easier finding a top of the circle one timer than trying to sift a net front one timer through a maze of bodies .
I think it's a mix of system and poor execution.
Oilers like to push the puck high on entry and/or throw it to a stationary winger on the wall. If the puck got launched immediately when it goes high then this might work, but we often don't have anyone driving the middle opening a lane. D man then sits on it because the perception is probably that any shot is low%, so then it gets kicked to the other D man and the never ending perimeter cycle commences.
If the puck goes high on entry it has to go low immediately, even if the shot is low%. Short of that we need a lot more guys driving the puck low or to the net rather than continually try and pass their way there and fail.