Player Discussion The Slaf Thread - Parabolic Growth Edition

Mrb1p

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Dec 10, 2011
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No, it's exaggeration posts like these that are awful. I'm sure you are a nice enough person.

Words have meaning. People don't always agree on said meaning. Far from a waste of time, clarifying the intended meaning is important if any attempt at dialogue is desired, let alone debating ideas or opinions.

What does seem like a waste of time is the constant empty complaining and "poor me" victim posts... Not sure I get the point of that :dunno:

What you and @ReHabs seem to have in common is posting opinions that are often incoherent in the context of your own implied or stated meaning, then clogging up threads with these kinds of posts rather than just talking hockey.

Slaf has "low IQ" is a meaningless comment unless you categorize what low vs high IQ is (in your opinion)... When pressed on that, the response you provided was inconsistent to the point of making the whole statement incoherent. Stating that was never meant to imply anything about you as a person... Aside from being a person who at times makes incoherent posts and terrible takes.

I'd argue it's a pretty terrible assessment of Slaf to suggest he has low hockey IQ... Relative to his draft class, he's clearly among the elite. Relative to U25 NHL forwards, he's easily among the top 10%.

Hope that helps clear up the confusion :teach:
Lmao crazy that you still don't understand that a player can have lower IQ and still be very successful.

Evan Bouchard is one of the dumbest hockey player I've ever seen, yet he produces more than almost any other D in the league? Why ? Phenomenal vision, insane shooting mechanics and timing. None of those are IQ related.

This is me clarifying for the 7777777th time to you, by the way.
 
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Miller Time

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Sep 16, 2004
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Lmao crazy that you still don't understand that a player can have lower IQ and still be very successful.

Crazy that you miss the point of my response entirely
Evan Bouchard is one of the dumbest hockey player I've ever seen, yet he produces more than almost any other D in the league? Why ? Phenomenal vision, insane shooting mechanics and timing. None of those are IQ related.
Production does not equal IQ. I didn't suggest that. Who are you arguing with?
Regardless, your assessment here is poor.

Vision and hockey sense is literally the first attribute listed in his draft profile lol

Strengths
Hockey sense and vision

Cutting off the gaps
Shot
Strength and size

And while prospect profiles are far from the definitive assessment of a player, it does speak to the skills that got him to the show...

This deep dive into his game provides ample statistical evidence of how out to lunch your take is...



Bottom line, your Bouchard take much like your Slaf & Matheson takes point to a very poor grasp of what "hockey IQ" is... That, or your meaning of it lacks coherence with the realities of the game of hockey. Either way, terrible take with no substance to it.

This is me clarifying for the 7777777th time to you, by the way.
Clarifying that your assessments are poor? We already addressed that.
 

ReHabs

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Lmao crazy that you still don't understand that a player can have lower IQ and still be very successful.

Evan Bouchard is one of the dumbest hockey player I've ever seen, yet he produces more than almost any other D in the league? Why ? Phenomenal vision, insane shooting mechanics and timing. None of those are IQ related.

This is me clarifying for the 7777777th time to you, by the way.
I met with a soccer tactics coach recently and we had a deep dive conversation. I basically cornered him as soon as I learned what he did for a profession but to his credit he obliged me.

What he revealed and reinforced in my understanding of sport is that pro athletes are very athletic and skilled (top x%) but their decision-making (what he constitutes under tactics) is often lacking and rarely improved by coaching. Coaches motivate and plan the team’s approach to win but they rarely have the bandwidth to improve individual players.

(I think this will change in the very near future with AI tracking and cheaper video coaching.)

But my point is that it is very likely players don’t have good hockey IQ but success comes to them with their other qualities.

One example I thought of was a Jeff Petry. Athletic player with good skills, very capable in a supporting role, but when he played up the lineup and faced superior opposition more often than not he performed worse than expected. Because his decision making was (let’s pull a number out of a hat) 75% right, that 25% got punished with more TOI and more capable oppo. He didn’t get worse necessarily, he was just punished in aggregate. Hockey like soccer is a game of duels and mistakes.

As an aside: Therrien coached to minimize mistakes. We found it extremely difficult to enjoy but his approach didn’t trust that the players could try anything audacious or ambitious. Hard ceiling for success with such a game plan but a higher floor than structure less pond hockey.

In every duel and at every inflection point is a decision and players don’t always make the optimal decision — some due to vision, some due to confidence, some due to tactical misunderstanding or miscommunication.

Anyway, with Slaf it’s clear his decision making has to improve for him to hit higher highs and find consistency in success. Whatever names the usual suspects have to call those of us who make this assertion doesn’t change reality.
 

Mrb1p

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Dec 10, 2011
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Crazy that you miss the point of my response entirely

Production does not equal IQ. I didn't suggest that. Who are you arguing with?
Regardless, your assessment here is poor.

Vision and hockey sense is literally the first attribute listed in his draft profile lol

Strengths
Hockey sense and vision

Cutting off the gaps
Shot
Strength and size

And while prospect profiles are far from the definitive assessment of a player, it does speak to the skills that got him to the show...

This deep dive into his game provides ample statistical evidence of how out to lunch your take is...



Bottom line, your Bouchard take much like your Slaf & Matheson takes point to a very poor grasp of what "hockey IQ" is... That, or your meaning of it lacks coherence with the realities of the game of hockey. Either way, terrible take with no substance to it.


Clarifying that your assessments are poor? We already addressed that.
I think you're the one with the poor grasp on what IQ is.

There is no "statistical evidence" for a players non physical skill, lol. Speed? Sure. Strength? Measurable.
 

Miller Time

Registered User
Sep 16, 2004
24,426
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I think you're the one with the poor grasp on what IQ is.
Right...
Can't "waste time" clarifying meaning, yet you don't offer any coherent description of what you mean except for terrible comparisons that are factually incorrect by any reasonable or statistical measure.

There is no "statistical evidence" for a players non physical skill, lol. Speed? Sure. Strength? Measurable.

What are you even talking about?

Bottom line. Slaf makes better decisions with and without the puck to create advantages for his team at a higher level than the vast majority of players his age, players within a 5 year window, and certainly on this roster.

To argue otherwise is silly.
 

lou4gehrig

Registered User
Aug 2, 2005
5,729
199
Got his payday and he’s checked out. 1 goal and on pace for 4. Not good for a first overall pick. Significant regression before our very eyes.
So he's on pace for a career high in points, playing the most minutes of his career and he has a zero plus minus. Luckily he doesn't read all the toxic nonsense from this thread from our "fans". The team isn't particular good at anything right now because we're young. He's 20 and perfectly fine.
 

morhilane

Registered User
Feb 28, 2021
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For some strange reason he refuses to shot.
Slaf is 6th in shots attempts per game on the team. The players above him are Caufield, Matheson, Hutson, Suzuki and Gallagher. Only Gallagher play less minutes than Slaf on that list.

He is 2nd for unblocked high danger chances shots behind Caufield. 3rd in medium danger chances. But he doesn't take a lot of low danger chances shot attempts.

Despite the point blank shots, he miss the net a lot. His sh% is also abysmal on the shot on net.

But statistically, he should have 4 goals right now. It should fix itself over time, it did last year.
 

CristianoRonaldo

Registered User
Apr 7, 2014
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In your head
Slaf is 6th in shots attempts per game on the team. The players above him are Caufield, Matheson, Hutson, Suzuki and Gallagher. Only Gallagher play less minutes than Slaf on that list.

He is 2nd for unblocked high danger chances shots behind Caufield. 3rd in medium danger chances. But he doesn't take a lot of low danger chances shot attempts.

Despite the point blank shots, he miss the net a lot. His sh% is also abysmal on the shot on net.

But statistically, he should have 4 goals right now. It should fix itself over time, it did last year.

I stand corrected then, thank you. :thumbu:
 

ReHabs

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Jan 18, 2022
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Bottom line. Slaf makes better decisions with and without the puck to create advantages for his team at a higher level than the vast majority of players his age, players within a 5 year window, and certainly on this roster.

To argue otherwise is silly.
Wow. Citation needed, my lying eyes would love to see this quantified and qualified.
 
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Artaud

Registered User
Jul 21, 2012
999
353

Slaf is doing centre drills! Could be just as an alternate faceoff guy, or maybe an audition is brewing with the hole on the 2nd line?

He's definetly got the vision for it, but maybe not the puck carrying skills. I'm not a big fan of this potential move, because it's going to be another thing to work on for a guy who already has a lot on his plate.

Interesting development nonetheless.
 
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Yep

Lighthearted
Sep 12, 2009
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Planète XY 1000 Z
a4483568eebf371fb5ccef7235874453.webp


:sarcasm:

PS : Go Slaf go!
PS : Thanks Kent and co.
 
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Mrb1p

PRICERSTOPDAPUCK
Dec 10, 2011
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Citizen of the world

Slaf is doing centre drills! Could be just as an alternate faceoff guy, or maybe an audition is brewing with the hole on the 2nd line?

He's definetly got the vision for it, but maybe not the puck carrying skills. I'm not a big fan of this potential move, because it's going to be another thing to work on for a guy who already has a lot on his plate.

Interesting development nonetheless.
How about he takes this time to work on his non existent shot arsenal?
 

morhilane

Registered User
Feb 28, 2021
9,017
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Slaf is doing centre drills! Could be just as an alternate faceoff guy, or maybe an audition is brewing with the hole on the 2nd line?

He's definetly got the vision for it, but maybe not the puck carrying skills. I'm not a big fan of this potential move, because it's going to be another thing to work on for a guy who already has a lot on his plate.

Interesting development nonetheless.
Alternate probably, Habs centers gets chased off often enough and he's one of the few lefty.
 

admiralcadillac

Registered User
Oct 22, 2017
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Lmao crazy that you still don't understand that a player can have lower IQ and still be very successful.

Evan Bouchard is one of the dumbest hockey player I've ever seen, yet he produces more than almost any other D in the league? Why ? Phenomenal vision, insane shooting mechanics and timing. None of those are IQ related.

This is me clarifying for the 7777777th time to you, by the way.

How can you be dumb as a hockey player with great vision?
 

Mrb1p

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Dec 10, 2011
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How can you be dumb as a hockey player with great vision?
Because both things don't belong to each other. IQ helps you anticipate and understanding where the play will go. Passing vision is just that, you often do this prepared in your mind. "Oh, X player is coming up on the net and the defender hasn't pivoted yet. I will make a pass".

It's reactivity vs proactivity.
 

admiralcadillac

Registered User
Oct 22, 2017
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Because both things don't belong to each other. IQ helps you anticipate and understanding where the play will go. Passing vision is just that, you often do this prepared in your mind. "Oh, X player is coming up on the net and the defender hasn't pivoted yet. I will make a pass".

It's reactivity vs proactivity.

I think you just described the same mental process in two different ways, but it’s an interesting discussion
 

Mrb1p

PRICERSTOPDAPUCK
Dec 10, 2011
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Citizen of the world
I think you just described the same mental process in two different ways, but it’s an interesting discussion
One is about manipulating defenses and being proactive to what you want them to give you and the other is reacting to what they give you, or what you want to do. You see this often with Slaf where he does the patented pass behind the goal line to the front of the net.

That's only offensively too, there's a lot more to IQ than just manipulating defenses of course.
 

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