herman
Well-known member
http://theleafsnation.com/2017/1/10/reimagining-how-we-approach-the-leafs-defence
Jeff gets me.
https://twitter.com/JeffVeillette/status/791803356230582273
www.twitter.com/JeffVeillette/status/791803356230582273
Synopsis:
I think this team almost has the horses to play a fluid, rather than stationary, defense the way they currently play fluid offense, mostly because it's dependent on the forwards, i.e. roles are basically your default position, but your duties are dependent on your proximity to the puck and direction of flow.
https://twitter.com/ml_han/status/818548916975190017
www.twitter.com/ml_han/status/818548916975190017
We've already seen this up front with Babcock experimenting with dual centres, offensive zone auto-pinch with high forward support. The Leafs run a modified swarm in the defensive zone to always try to outnumber the puck carrier. This usually leaves at least someone more open than usual.
Carlyle got it right when he didn't mind receiving shots from certain areas; the only flaw (other than lack of talent) was he played it too conservatively (off the glass and out), which led to repeated attempts with rapidly diminishing defensive effectiveness.
Babcock's system also doesn't mind shots from low-risk areas, but is far more aggressive (think Hyman, Brown, Soshnikov, Marner on D), and plays to the percentages of puck retrieval with numbers. Some players are still calibrating because it's quite different than traditional defense where you either mind your zone, or take your man. This aggressive swarm defense requires a lot of support from teammates. Those wide open breakdowns we saw very early in the season, and lately are generally communication issues. Individually, the process is relatively straight-forward. Making sure everyone is doing it at the same time is trickier. It's very Soccer/Basketball.
Jeff gets me.
https://twitter.com/JeffVeillette/status/791803356230582273
www.twitter.com/JeffVeillette/status/791803356230582273
Synopsis:
- 2016-17 Leafs have the 4th most dangerous offense in the last 10 years (since play-by-play stats started to be tracked), with ~7 rookies in the lineup regularly
- The shutdown defensemen people want are low-event
- High CF60 + Low CA60 is very expensive (and doesn't exist?). But High CF60 + mediocre CA60 is pretty affordable. As long as the CF% is positive, basically.
I think this team almost has the horses to play a fluid, rather than stationary, defense the way they currently play fluid offense, mostly because it's dependent on the forwards, i.e. roles are basically your default position, but your duties are dependent on your proximity to the puck and direction of flow.
https://twitter.com/ml_han/status/818548916975190017
www.twitter.com/ml_han/status/818548916975190017
We've already seen this up front with Babcock experimenting with dual centres, offensive zone auto-pinch with high forward support. The Leafs run a modified swarm in the defensive zone to always try to outnumber the puck carrier. This usually leaves at least someone more open than usual.
Carlyle got it right when he didn't mind receiving shots from certain areas; the only flaw (other than lack of talent) was he played it too conservatively (off the glass and out), which led to repeated attempts with rapidly diminishing defensive effectiveness.
Babcock's system also doesn't mind shots from low-risk areas, but is far more aggressive (think Hyman, Brown, Soshnikov, Marner on D), and plays to the percentages of puck retrieval with numbers. Some players are still calibrating because it's quite different than traditional defense where you either mind your zone, or take your man. This aggressive swarm defense requires a lot of support from teammates. Those wide open breakdowns we saw very early in the season, and lately are generally communication issues. Individually, the process is relatively straight-forward. Making sure everyone is doing it at the same time is trickier. It's very Soccer/Basketball.