Ducky10
Searching for Mark Scheifele
- Nov 14, 2014
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His play has changed so drastically that I would even go as far as saying his injury changed his entire career forever.
His play has changed so drastically that I would even go as far as saying his injury changed his entire career forever.
Yeah ideally you have a good skating puck mover and a bigger defence first guy on every pairing. Even more ideal is a bigger good skating puck mover. We really need to give Heinola and Samberg a shot. At best we turn this sinking ship around, at worst they suck and we at least know what we have in them and can look at other options.
Not sure if this belongs in the D thread or the coaching thread but they are connected.
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So if I am reading this right...we have the second worst defence in the league.
Even just a bigger guy who doesn't give up craploads of chances. But even still, if you don't give up scoring chances why does your size matter? I get the optimal relationship between the two but they aren't mutually inclusive.
Still a small sample size with only 147 minutes together, very scattered (about 9 minutes per game on average). Still, the Morrissey-DeMelo pair was over 50% in CF and almost 50% in xGF, with relative metrics that are positive. It's perhaps not ideal, but worth looking at for an extended period of time to see if Morrissey can be better in a stable pair.Maybe, but I'm skeptical on it.
The fact that Morrissey with DeMelo in middle of the road usage over two seasons garners similar results to Pionk, who is also not a top pairing defender IMO, with a worse partner in Forbort under much tougher minutes says something.
I would like to see those two in the line up for a few games to see if there is some improvement.I think what frustrates everybody is you can help both our size issues and puck retrieval/moving issues by inserting Heinola and Samberg instead of what we’re running.
I disagree and see poolman, Stanley, forbort all better than beaulieu.This is the way I see our D right now in the 1-8 ranking.
Morrrisey - Falls somewhere in the 2/3 category. Was a really strong #2 but something seems off this year. He's trending downwards which isn't good. He's dragging around some anchors but his individual play is also just not up to his standards regardless.
Pionk - In the 2/3 category, seems to be pushing towards a 2 now.
DeMelo - More of a 5/6. Ideally he's not on your top pairing. Probably better suited to a 2nd pairing role.
Beaulieu - More of a 6/7 kind of guy, I like him more on a 3rd pairing.
Forbort - Also more of a 7/8 kind of guy. I don't think you want him playing a lot, but can handle a 3rd pairing role.
Poolman - 6/7 kind of guy like Beaulieu. Someone whose best suited on a 3rd line.
Stanley - 7/8 kind of guy right now. Maybe he rises up but I don't see him getting much further than a 6/7.
Heinola - I think Ville can come in as a 5/6 likely and has the potential to be another 2/3 for us.
Samberg - I think Dylan likely comes in a 6/7 kind of guy and has the potential to rise quickly to more of a 4/5 type, maybe as high as a 3/4.
I think ideally based on these projections we have something like.. we just need to give one of Heinola/Samberg a shot right now. I think playing both at the same time could be dangerous. But just bring in one and see how they look. Then bring the other in later on.
This is an interesting thought.
Defense has changed so much over the years. You rarely had more than one skilled d-man per team in the 80s, the 90s that started to change. With the increasing speed in the game, and room for smaller forwards, you can play smaller on defense. Skating is the most important thing to me, I look at guys like Makar, Heiskanen, Josi, those aren't big guys. Even before them there were guys like Keith and Letang that dominated. You can hem them in their own zone, on a good cycle shift, but once they have the puck they make things happen, which many big defensemen can't do. Buff was a notable exception. Ideal pairings are Werenski-Jones where there is no weakness. I think a guy like Pionk is perfectly adaptable to the pace of the NHL today, when I watch him the play rarely gets behind him because he is such a good skater. When we played big on defense, the fundamentals of it was back pressure, from speedy forwards, closing gaps. We can't play that way anymore because our defense rarely plays to angle players off on the boards anymore. It's quickness, stick position and good support positions that are the tools our defensemen often rely on.
Stanley is a breath of fresh air because he has a lot of Oleksiak like skills to his game, where he is able to use his size/reach in a lot of different situations to his advantage, both offensively and defensively. He won't be a guy that fills the gaps on the rush though, his skating isn't that good. That's where Pionk, Morrrissey, and Poolman can contribute.
We are getting very important defensive contributions from Forbort and De Melo, particularly on the PK. I don't think there is any reason to draw Poolman out of the lineup, so there's a spot for one defenseman, and it's arguable whether that d-man should have an offensive or defensive impact. If we had a stronger defensive impact from Morrissey, I'd say that spot would be Heinola's for the taking, but I'd argue that Stanley's probably the best suited right now to fill that role, as he has the potential to fill both ends. Beaulieu's PKing might make him more valuable however, if you are measuring the overall impact, including special teams, that's a tough call. Samberg is the one most likely to make the jump this year, but he's had the longest layoff and as long as Forbort is playing decent hockey, I'm not sure I'd promote him over Stanley at this point. By midseason once he's gotten up to speed, I think he offers more to his game than Stanley can, because of his better mobility. Starting him on the right side maybe he could replace Poolman, but I wouldn't be racing to do so. Poolman took awhile to process the game, I'm not sure Samberg would offer better results as a raw rookie.
This defense is still in the rebuilding process, at least one rookie has contributed positiviely so far. Wouldn't be surprised if all 3 of Stanley, Samberg and Heinola contributed at various times. I also wouldn't be surprised if Maurice goes with a more veteran lineup on the road, just because rookies can be exposed. And learning to stop a guy like Mc David isn't an easy training on the job. With the points being tight, and the Jets being unable to separate from the pack, it makes the decisions tougher on Maurice, as to when to take the kid gloves off a young player.
It seems to me that Maurice was well justified in making some efforts at retrenchment when he lost key personnel, but that he has simply gone too far and too deep. The result is what we see on the ice now. The problems are systemic in nature and will not go away with some simple personnel change. A rebalancing of risk/reward is in need -whether Maurice recognizes/shares that view is the question.
As they should at this point, Niku should atleast be playing somewhere and it doesn’t matter what he does he won’t get to play in Jets, wasted entirely there.According to Niku’s agent they might be requesting a trade.
I love these assumptions based on zero practical data.I think what frustrates everybody is you can help both our size issues and puck retrieval/moving issues by inserting Heinola and Samberg instead of what we’re running.
If he can't crack the Jets lineup, it's extremely unlikely he's an NHL player.As they should at this point, Niku should atleast be playing somewhere and it doesn’t matter what he does he won’t get to play in Jets, wasted entirely there.
Still a small sample size with only 147 minutes together, very scattered (about 9 minutes per game on average). Still, the Morrissey-DeMelo pair was over 50% in CF and almost 50% in xGF, with relative metrics that are positive. It's perhaps not ideal, but worth looking at for an extended period of time to see if Morrissey can be better in a stable pair.