Elias40
Registered User
- Jan 3, 2020
- 603
- 323
Hartikainen is a very strange player. When one sees him on the ice, he has the impression that with his skating he has no chance against better players. But this is a brutal mistake, because what he loses in skating is replaced by hockey IQ. Incredibly smart player, knows when to pass or when to hold the puck and wait for a better teammate position. Although it looks harmless and lazy, it is the biggest threat. I'd say bigger than Granlund.So where will Manninen and Hartikainen play next season. These guys are rather expensive salary wise. If they would play in any European league, they would have to take massive salary cuts.
Both of them are too good for anything else except the NHL, but for Hartikainen the skating speed might be an issue. Hartikainen has everything else needed though. Hartikainen said in an interview during this WHC tournament that with his age this would be the last moment to go back to NHL.
Manninen belongs to the NHL and we've seen smaller guys succeed there before so I could see it happening. Manninen is tougher than his size suggests. I've noticed him tackling guys hard and so on, but that's not what his primary focus should be though.
Which NHL teams are in need for a top-6 center that would be cheap in cost in NHL standards? Imagine Panthers and they would have only Finnish centers playing lmao. So I don't think that's the destination, but the thought of it is funny.
x-Barkov-x
x-Manninen-x
x-Lundell-x
x-Luostarinen-x
In the semifinals, I wrote how well he solved the situation on the blue line and actually prepared a goal for Manninen, an excellent demonstration of his hockey IQ.