Behind Enemy Lines
Registered User
I dunno. I'd like to see the context. It's pretty common for players to comment about the training gap they've experienced moving from junior age competition where they were likely dominant players with poor habits to highly competitive life as an adult professional player. No one is able to coast by on talent alone and training, conditioning, nutrition and every variable becomes important to battle to elevate into one of the precious few that ever make it to apex NHL level competition.Its hardly hindsight for me to be saying Logan Thompson or Adin Hill were good goalies. I was saying that for years. You should look at goalie fundamentals, skillsets, flexibility, skills, not just the stats.
Slacker attitude? We've been through this many times. Skinner is the first to admit he never took training or conditioning seriously until recently. At same age I took physical fitness more seriously and I'm not a pro athlete nor was it my intent. Theres no inference involved in the slacker label. Skinner said this himself.
The Oilers hired one of the most touted mental strength coaches in the world off the basis of Jackson reading his book and feeling that even a team driven by McDavid and Draisaitl could gain more edge with this huge, unseen aspect of winning.
Skinner onboarded as pro after a largely successful junior career that included winning a WHL starting job very young and ending by being a critical piece to drive a WHL championship team. But as a young pro his eyes became open that raw ability would never be enough as he bounced between ECHL and AHL. He was projecting to be an NHL backup through this team's mature phase winning window until Campbell cratered like 30 games into his big money free agency bonanza.
The Oilers as a team is in its prime unfortunately with a developing stage goaltender who can slip with wild variance in his play. Skinner's working on all elements of his game, mentally; at the bio-mechanical level with Francillia's help recently added; training and conditioning (with eyes open from his early Bako days); and ongoing with technical approach. This is the hardest position in hockey under the most mental pressure to perform and for Oiler management, coaching and players they are fortunate Skinner didn't melt down like a candle. The unfortunate reality is they have a young goaltender with physical limitations and processing abilities and game that's a work in progress and prone to slip into some pretty wild fluctuations in play. Huge risk for a team ready to win it all and was 1 goal away in a Cup Championship Final Game 7.
I'd like to see a veteran quality 1A tandem upgrade that pushes Skinner into a 1B development role as originally planned.