Navin R Slavin
Fifth line center
In fact, let's see if there's a Team Hex metric. Oh, look, there is!
http://war-on-ice.com/hexteams.html
Now select Carolina.
Of course, we already know that Carolina should be well above average in Shots Against, since the team leads the NHL in that category. And the graph reflects that; it's completely blue. But where are the shots coming from?
As it turns out, the Canes are quite a bit above average in preventing shots from the slot! Not just light blue, but moderate blue!
So in looking at these two graphs, we see the following data -- and this is data, not interpretation:
* The Canes are better than league average at preventing shots.
* The Canes are way better than league average at preventing shots from high-risk areas.
* Cam, as a goaltender, is NHL average in stopping shots from high-risk areas.
* Cam, as a goaltender, is lower than NHL average in stopping shots from anywhere else.
Now, how does one interpret that data? I don't know how else to interpret it, except that Cam is mostly to blame for his own poor save percentage. He sees fewer high quality shots than most goalies in the league, and he surrenders more goals on poor quality shots than most goalies in the league. That combination is pretty damning.
http://war-on-ice.com/hexteams.html
Now select Carolina.
Of course, we already know that Carolina should be well above average in Shots Against, since the team leads the NHL in that category. And the graph reflects that; it's completely blue. But where are the shots coming from?
As it turns out, the Canes are quite a bit above average in preventing shots from the slot! Not just light blue, but moderate blue!
So in looking at these two graphs, we see the following data -- and this is data, not interpretation:
* The Canes are better than league average at preventing shots.
* The Canes are way better than league average at preventing shots from high-risk areas.
* Cam, as a goaltender, is NHL average in stopping shots from high-risk areas.
* Cam, as a goaltender, is lower than NHL average in stopping shots from anywhere else.
Now, how does one interpret that data? I don't know how else to interpret it, except that Cam is mostly to blame for his own poor save percentage. He sees fewer high quality shots than most goalies in the league, and he surrenders more goals on poor quality shots than most goalies in the league. That combination is pretty damning.