herman
Well-known member
Remember how a couple of years ago the Leafs were so bad that one time Kessel sniped yet another quick wrister and it turned into about 3 days of shot analysis?
Well, now the Leafs are so good that Matthews' first 'real' goal of the season (a GWG to boot) has spawned detailed breakdowns of his release, the subtlety of his fakes, and the unpredictability of his attack.
https://twitter.com/peteblackburn/status/917567564913442817
https://theathletic.com/123758/2017/10/10/mirtle-what-went-into-auston-matthews-game-breaking-ot-winner-against-the-blackhawks/
There's a lot that went into this play (Gardiner!), and the team sounds like they're more than happy to discuss the nuances that don't show up immediately in the game or even during the replays. JvR, in particular, is really great to hear from as his offensive insight is next level stuff.
Matthews has honed his repertoire to the point of highly consistent execution. His thinking is almost entirely devoted to executing his plan and adapting to minor changes.
In this case,
- Matthews showed pass with a stick/shoulder fake
- Forsling bit and went down for the passblock and stickcheck (pretty good play by him, actually)
- Matthews drew in tighter to pull the puck around the stick
- this prompted Forsberg to start dropping to cover the lower half and blocker side as that's usually a low rebound-inducing wrister move
- which led to Matthews abruptly changing his blade angle to roof one by the short-side ear hole just as Forsberg finished his right leg shuffle and started putting weight on his left to cover the rebound pass
I don't know how much of that was deliberate or instinctive (Matthews says he wasn't really thinking anything other than, hmm, I should shoot), but you can see his subtle fakes led to a gap opening (a low percentage one at that) and his execution took it the rest of the way.
Pam Poovey gif goes here.
Well, now the Leafs are so good that Matthews' first 'real' goal of the season (a GWG to boot) has spawned detailed breakdowns of his release, the subtlety of his fakes, and the unpredictability of his attack.
https://twitter.com/peteblackburn/status/917567564913442817
https://theathletic.com/123758/2017/10/10/mirtle-what-went-into-auston-matthews-game-breaking-ot-winner-against-the-blackhawks/
There's a lot that went into this play (Gardiner!), and the team sounds like they're more than happy to discuss the nuances that don't show up immediately in the game or even during the replays. JvR, in particular, is really great to hear from as his offensive insight is next level stuff.
Matthews has honed his repertoire to the point of highly consistent execution. His thinking is almost entirely devoted to executing his plan and adapting to minor changes.
In this case,
- Matthews showed pass with a stick/shoulder fake
- Forsling bit and went down for the passblock and stickcheck (pretty good play by him, actually)
- Matthews drew in tighter to pull the puck around the stick
- this prompted Forsberg to start dropping to cover the lower half and blocker side as that's usually a low rebound-inducing wrister move
- which led to Matthews abruptly changing his blade angle to roof one by the short-side ear hole just as Forsberg finished his right leg shuffle and started putting weight on his left to cover the rebound pass
I don't know how much of that was deliberate or instinctive (Matthews says he wasn't really thinking anything other than, hmm, I should shoot), but you can see his subtle fakes led to a gap opening (a low percentage one at that) and his execution took it the rest of the way.
Pam Poovey gif goes here.