abbbaron
Registered User
- May 6, 2015
- 477
- 173
yeah, there was puck luck involved, but he also knows where to go and what to do once he got there. You're right, he couldn't generate much of anything on his own, but he was still productive when he was with someone who could do the leg work. Capitalizing on your opportunities shouldn't be held against him. The problem with Weiss is that he literally could't skate and still didn't seem to know what to do defensively. The guy looked lost whenever he was in his own zone, and I have no idea how he could still seem to not have a good grasp of our system.
Anyone with that puck luck could have been at least as productive as Weiss especially when on a line with possession drivers like Datsyuk and Helm-- if it was Weiss who was providing any kind of secret sauce then Babcock would've kept that line together. Weiss' knowledge of where to go had probably less to do with his own instincts/style of play than instructions that the coaching staff gave him ("let Helm's speed and Datysuk's shiftiness create time and space for you to just crash to the net"). That line was obviously a matching of the strongest with the weakest, typical of Babcock's preference for smoothing out his scoring lines; it had a pop of productivity then fizzled and was broken up, likely because Babcock saw its productivity for what it was, chiefly puck luck, and didn't want to have to overwork Datsyuk (on both sides of the puck)
I'm not holding it against Weiss for capitalizing on his chances (as a Wings fan I'm glad he did), I was making the case that we have to look behind the numbers, specifically his point scoring, and calling attention to the fact that they're unlikely to fool anyone around the league who actually observes Weiss' play.