I certainly do. I don't pretend he has great puck skills, and it does hamper him a bit, but he's a pretty smart player; smart enough at least. It's a physical limitation, not a mental one. He knows how to keep tight gaps, he knows how to pinch correctly, he knows how to move the puck in the cycle game, he knows when to trail rushes, he knows how to position correctly. Despite not having the best puck feel and, yes, looking down a bit too much, I do believe he generally knows what to do with pucks in terms of making reads. More structure in the NHL probably will help.
I didn't mention anything about Morin though. I was more taken aback by the concept of any player -- forget Hagg -- being too smart as an explanation for subpar play and decision making. And yes, Hagg's canyon sized gaps, terrible pinching, inability to make reads, turnovers, tunnel vision, and so on are an indictment of his hockey sense. As I've said before: his "low energy" narrative was just code for not being able to make reads or impact games. Hagg being so smart that he processes everything too quickly and too accurately and can't decide which good option to take so he turns catatonic and takes the worst option.......that's a unique spin, I'll grant you that, Mr. Beer.