herman
Well-known member
Things I really like that are happening now:
1. Fresh bodies
Players are being cycled in and out of the lineup. It?s hampered somewhat by our cap situation but there?s always one or two players coming in in make-the-cut mode and they know they have a chance to stick on merit due to...
2. Play time
Is getting allocated on a game-by-game basis to whoever?s got it going. No one player can ever really maintain an 82-game run of 100% performance/effort/result. If you?ve got it going that night, coach?s gonna play you and this pushes the parity see-saw on any given shift into the Leafs? favour.
3. Chemistry Experiments
The Leafs have long been set up on plug and play wingers, and now they?re actually being used that way to flex the lineup situationally beyond the usual post-special teams set ups. Is there an opportunity to take an OZ draw against a very tired fourth line? Please enjoy some TOI with 33M worth of firepower. You can bet the staff and R&D team are building up a nice little library of options to mix into future matchups as required.
4. Skillz
Those skill sessions before opportune practices are starting to manifest with regularity. It is most evident in someone like Zach Hyman. He shook off some forechecks while handling the puck that I did not know was in his repertoire resulting in fantastic feeds to Matthews and co. Adding that element to his engine and the chaos gravity he brings to the net front every time, and we will see his linemates flourish in the space he creates for them.
5. Keep the Puck
This is the process: tip the balance of the game at every opportunity. Having the puck is an advantage. Now there are times when having the puck in a certain situation is highly dangerous and it?s be better to move it along quicker. The Leafs are going to get the hang of that in the coming months ? most of our players are very hockey smart. Flipping the switch from finesse to fast and back again will make playing us far less predictable.
1. Fresh bodies
Players are being cycled in and out of the lineup. It?s hampered somewhat by our cap situation but there?s always one or two players coming in in make-the-cut mode and they know they have a chance to stick on merit due to...
2. Play time
Is getting allocated on a game-by-game basis to whoever?s got it going. No one player can ever really maintain an 82-game run of 100% performance/effort/result. If you?ve got it going that night, coach?s gonna play you and this pushes the parity see-saw on any given shift into the Leafs? favour.
3. Chemistry Experiments
The Leafs have long been set up on plug and play wingers, and now they?re actually being used that way to flex the lineup situationally beyond the usual post-special teams set ups. Is there an opportunity to take an OZ draw against a very tired fourth line? Please enjoy some TOI with 33M worth of firepower. You can bet the staff and R&D team are building up a nice little library of options to mix into future matchups as required.
4. Skillz
Those skill sessions before opportune practices are starting to manifest with regularity. It is most evident in someone like Zach Hyman. He shook off some forechecks while handling the puck that I did not know was in his repertoire resulting in fantastic feeds to Matthews and co. Adding that element to his engine and the chaos gravity he brings to the net front every time, and we will see his linemates flourish in the space he creates for them.
5. Keep the Puck
This is the process: tip the balance of the game at every opportunity. Having the puck is an advantage. Now there are times when having the puck in a certain situation is highly dangerous and it?s be better to move it along quicker. The Leafs are going to get the hang of that in the coming months ? most of our players are very hockey smart. Flipping the switch from finesse to fast and back again will make playing us far less predictable.