What are the shooting and save percentages with him on the ice? And how is he being deployed and against what kind of competition? Actual questions, not trying to be contrarian. My eyes are telling me that he does not drive play and loses the puck easily when it's in the offense zone, and that positive results with him on the ice may be in spite of and not due to him. And the compete level with him and Vrana is non-existent. For being as immensely talented and strong on their skates as they are, their play when the puck is along the boards seems almost impossibly bad.
A positive GD could mean a ton of things, including getting bailed out by goaltending on his side or poor opposing goaltending, or getting choice matchups either in terms of quality of competition or situationally, or both. Or a very small sample size given he's only played in half of their games.
And the compete level with him and Vrana is non-existent. For being as immensely talented and strong on their skates as they are, their play when the puck is along the boards seems almost impossibly bad.
Thanks for doing all this. Interesting stuff. I hope that he's getting soft minutes just to get him back into game shape and not because he's not capable of more because we're not paying him $7.8M to get sheltered. Well, technically "we" aren't paying him anything -- Ted is -- but you know what I mean.From the last thread:
He has a great on-ice save percentage (close to 98%), and a pedestrian on-ice shooting percentage of 9%. He's been getting very lucky overall with the percentages. But, as shown, he's rarely allowing chances against and is on the ice for some high-quality chances for so you'd expect his percentages to be pretty good (though not that good).
He has the highest percentage of offensive zone starts in the entire NHL at 26%. However, his deployment is quite similar to Oshie (24%) and Ovechkin (21%), who have also been heavily deployed in the offensive zone, but they haven't enjoyed nearly the same success as Kuznetsov on-ice.
His QoC chart is:
So yes, it does appear they are avoiding pitting him against top lines but he hasn't avoided the top lines completely and is still more-or-less going against other team's top pairings.
I think a fair conclusion is that he's been getting some soft minutes, but he's also been getting excellent results in these soft minutes. What more can he do?
My response to this would be how much does compete level and strength along the boards actually matter? 4th liners are typically really good at these things, but there's a reason they're 4th liners. Of course you want the complete package but there are only so many Sidney Crosbys (Crosbies?) in the league who are both excellent on the boards and excellent in transition and excellent setup men.
100% this last part. No matter how good you are as a passer or a shooter or a whatever, if you're a one-trick pony, your usefulness is limited. If you're where possession goes to die, you are a liability a lot of the time. No one expects Kuz (or Vrana for that matter) to be big hitters or Selke candidates or to crash and bang, but they need to be able to use their hands and skating effectively to maintain possession and generate scoring.Thanks for doing all this. Interesting stuff. I hope that he's getting soft minutes just to get him back into game shape and not because he's not capable of more because we're not paying him $7.8M to get sheltered. Well, technically "we" aren't paying him anything -- Ted is -- but you know what I mean.
I think it means a lot. Being able to win those battles can be the difference between keeping possession of the puck in the offense zone or losing it, or clearing the puck out of the defensive zone or getting hemmed in. It could mean keeping possession of the puck on a PP or losing possession and having to waste 20 seconds retrieving the puck and then trying to set back up. It could lead to a penalties drawn/taken differential since tired legs at the ends of shifts tend to make bad choices, especially if they don't have the puck. And I think it says something to the other guys on the team if two of your best forwards are constantly getting ragdolled and dispossessed of the puck. I agree that they don't need to be Crosby or Oshie but they also don't need to be awful and lifeless in that aspect either. I don't think that's asking for too much.
100% this last part. No matter how good you are as a passer or a shooter or a whatever, if you're a one-trick pony, your usefulness is limited. If you're where possession goes to die, you are a liability a lot of the time. No one expects Kuz (or Vrana for that matter) to be big hitters or Selke candidates or to crash and bang, but they need to be able to use their hands and skating effectively to maintain possession and generate scoring.
I'd at least entertain the idea that he hasn't actually been great at 5v5 thus far, even if he looks a bit faster and the points have been there.
He's still been excellent on the power play though.
"Expected goals for" is not a thing even if someone is calculating it. That kind of foolishness is why I ignore the fancies.I'd argue that they do maintain possession and generate scoring. Kuzy is first in expected goals for/60, Vrana is 3rd.
Maybe they're just accomplishing this in other ways than banging in the corners?
I think a fair conclusion is that he's been getting some soft minutes, but he's also been getting excellent results in these soft minutes. What more can he do?
My response to this would be how much does compete level and strength along the boards actually matter?
I'd argue that they do maintain possession and generate scoring. Kuzy is first on the team in expected goals for/60, Vrana is 3rd. Kuzy is 2nd in expected goals against, Vrana is 3rd. And they're #1 and #2 in goals-for percentage on the team.
Maybe they're just accomplishing this in other ways than banging in the corners?
In your previous post you said that style points don't matter, but they do matter on message boards. People on message boards want every player to work like Jay Beagle on every shift. They want Kuzy to not only be dangerous with scoring chances, but to work like Konowalchuk (or Oshie) every shift. And they want Kuzy to cut down on his unforced bad decisions, mainly because they stand out so plainly to message board game watchers. And Kuzy will never do all that, he's said before if he worked harder he would be an All Star but he doesn't really care to. And the fancy stats seem to show that overall he is driving the play in the Caps favor, even when his glaring mistakes take up 10 pages of HFBoard space.
Simple fact is, the coaches see things more clearly than we do. It may just be a simple appeal to authority here, but everyone trashing Kuzy and proposing these far fetched trades, most likely are no where close to seeing what the coaches see and valuing Kuzy like the coaches value him. Its the same with Eller. We spent a ages searching in vain for a #2 center until Kuzy developed, and we spent even longer searching for a #3 center until we landed Eller. Now some folks can't wait to run them out of town on the first thing smoking, because style points and board compete level are about the only thing that matters to most message board posters.
Thanks for doing all this. Interesting stuff. I hope that he's getting soft minutes just to get him back into game shape and not because he's not capable of more because we're not paying him $7.8M to get sheltered. Well, technically "we" aren't paying him anything -- Ted is -- but you know what I mean.
I think it means a lot. Being able to win those battles can be the difference between keeping possession of the puck in the offense zone or losing it, or clearing the puck out of the defensive zone or getting hemmed in. It could mean keeping possession of the puck on a PP or losing possession and having to waste 20 seconds retrieving the puck and then trying to set back up. It could lead to a penalties drawn/taken differential since tired legs at the ends of shifts tend to make bad choices, especially if they don't have the puck. And I think it says something to the other guys on the team if two of your best forwards are constantly getting ragdolled and dispossessed of the puck. I agree that they don't need to be Crosby or Oshie but they also don't need to be awful and lifeless in that aspect either. I don't think that's asking for too much.
People are concerned because we went out in the first round for two straight seasons. That includes getting our ass handed to us last year in the least competitive series in recent memory.
Why would you not be concerned?
There are a LOT of reasons for that, but Kuzy being Kuzy and Jake being Jake, those are only part of the playoff issues, not the whole story. And those two guys helped lead a Cup win the year before, without significant changes to their game, just significant changes to their results. Jake wasn't battling along the boards on the way to the Cup, he was a sniper who was on target. Making him grind isn't how we get him back on target.
We also, fired the HC, so lets start there before we blow up big parts of the roster that that won just a year prior.
Vrana was very much a secondary piece in the Cup win and contributed little.
In the last two playoff he has produced zero goals and zero assists in 15 games while the team desperately needed him. Vrana being Vrana in the playoffs is one of the main reasons we haven't gotten out of the 1st round since the Cup.
Not saying you are wrong, but Kuzy also has a crazy lopsided zone starts ratio this year. I've never seen that before.
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2019 playoffs vrana not scoring was a pretty big factor but 2020 nobody showed up outside of very few players. There was no depth scoring and outside of Ovi, Carlson, Kuznetsov, and to an extent Oshie there wasnt much from the big boys either. To put lots of the blame on Vrana is unfair imo although I do agree his unability to score in the playoffs 2 playoffs in a row is somewhat concerningVrana was very much a secondary piece in the Cup win and contributed little.
In the last two playoff he has produced zero goals and zero assists in 15 games while the team desperately needed him. Vrana being Vrana in the playoffs is one of the main reasons we haven't gotten out of the 1st round since the Cup.
Isn't this exactly how Lavi SHOULD be using him? He's not Bergeron after all. He's Kuzy.
In your previous post you said that style points don't matter, but they do matter on message boards. People on message boards want every player to work like Jay Beagle on every shift. They want Kuzy to not only be dangerous with scoring chances, but to work like Konowalchuk (or Oshie) every shift. And they want Kuzy to cut down on his unforced bad decisions, mainly because they stand out so plainly to message board game watchers. And Kuzy will never do all that, he's said before if he worked harder he would be an All Star but he doesn't really care to. And the fancy stats seem to show that overall he is driving the play in the Caps favor, even when his glaring mistakes take up 10 pages of HFBoard space.
Simple fact is, the coaches see things more clearly than we do. It may just be a simple appeal to authority here, but everyone trashing Kuzy and proposing these far fetched trades, most likely are no where close to seeing what the coaches see and valuing Kuzy like the coaches value him. Its the same with Eller. We spent a ages searching in vain for a #2 center until Kuzy developed, and we spent even longer searching for a #3 center until we landed Eller. Now some folks can't wait to run them out of town on the first thing smoking, because style points and board compete level are about the only thing that matters to most message board posters.
Not saying you are wrong, but Kuzy also has a crazy lopsided zone starts ratio this year. I've never seen that before.
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"Expected goals for" is not a thing even if someone is calculating it. That kind of foolishness is why I ignore the fancies.
Let's put it this way: Who is Lavi putting on the ice? Who is delivering in real terms, not hypotheticals?
@Corby78 mentioned in the GDT that the best possible outcome of Lavi's TOI distribution/line combo tinkering is that Vrana and Kuzy start playing to their actual real-world potential. And I agree. But I think we also can reasonably deduce from that TOI and tinkering that they are, as of now, not doing that.
Lavi appears to have just placed his current value at around 3 mins in the 3rd period lol....