I would agree his line mates don’t have the same brainlines. Right now he and Bjorkstrand don’t click at all. Now to me, Bjork is one of the most cerebral offensive players we have. He sees the ice well and positions himself well. All of which leads me to wonder what what those lines in his brain are saying to him. In any case, I don’t think they should be on the same line. Bjork meshed much better with Tex.He hasnt done much points, but he is giving everything what he can. His offensive ability is something what we dont have, he doesnt have linemates with same brainlines. If and Bjorky can find eachother it could be lethal, Domi is great passer with great hands. He is smiling in every game that tells something. I like this guy
Yep, there’s times a simpler play might be the better play. Also, I might agree that his confidence is suffering after being shifted from center. I think Tex is going thru something similar.After his experience in Montreal, he needs a coach who is going to build him up, not one that he is worried about getting benched if he makes a mistake.
He is actually an amazing passer. He has to use his speed more and go to the net and shoot more. Wants to dangle fandangle too much.
Danault would have been a better fit for us, perhaps we can get him in the off season
First...I'm genuinely interested in how Domi is doing. I liked the kid up until he started to look disinterested and then whiney because other centers surpassed him. He has the tools to be a 1C....if he had the will.
So how is he doing? Is his nasty streak on display? Board battles? Effort?
He hasn't really been impressive but I'm hoping he can get some resemblance of a game going. He, in my opinion, makes so many dumb decisions although he has been better recently. I find that most of these decisions come on the PP where he is on the other half wall. He's like that kid on your hockey team growing up who thought he was the best player on the ice so he took every shot he could even though the actual best player is across the ice waiting for a one timer. He forces pucks to the net just because there's a shot open without actually working the puck around but I kinda don't blame him all that much considering its a literal miracle when the PP can get setup, so when one of our guys sees an opening the natural response is SWEET JESUS SHOOT THE PUCK WE ONLY HAVE 9 SHOTS THROUGH 30 minutes of play. When he was getting more ice time we saw a lot of failed dangles and turnovers, pretty sure Torts has told him to simplify his game and he kinda has to since he's on the 4th line atm.
Yes but...Danault would have been a better fit for us, perhaps we can get him in the off season
Still too early to judge but we will see, he has competed hard he just hasn't been good. Who knows if he will be in Columbus in the long term, I would like to know how the hell he put up 72 points in a season, his shooting percentage must have been sky high?Exactly what he did in Montreal and great observations...
His glaring weaknes for Julien was his 200 ft game. Second weakness was selfish play for a center.
The essence of a center is to help his wingers. In the offensive zone, he must be behind the puck while his wingers are ahead of the puck.....on the net or in scoring positions. He can't do that if he thinks he's the only one that can score and doesn't use his wingers.
Question is...does he want to learn? I'm sure Torts and the coaching staff see what you and see, but Domi may be a hard head. He certainly has the tools.....
When one has 72 points and plus 20, one has 52 goals scored against. Conclusion, relatively poor defensively.Still too early to judge but we will see, he has competed hard he just hasn't been good. Who knows if he will be in Columbus in the long term, I would like to know how the hell he put up 72 points in a season, his shooting percentage must have been sky high?
When one has 72 points and plus 20, one has 52 goals scored against. Conclusion, relatively poor defensively.
Domi was exiting early, before we had clear possession, wasn't always working the zone behind the goal red line, etc. He was playing more like a winger then a center. He also a bit selfish when his line had opportunities.
To me, a good center is behind the puck, always trying to pull defenders toward him to open up space and lanes to his wingers and should have at least a 2 to 1 assist to goal ratio.
Let's see if Torts makes him a better player.
Still too early to judge but we will see, he has competed hard he just hasn't been good. Who knows if he will be in Columbus in the long term, I would like to know how the hell he put up 72 points in a season, his shooting percentage must have been sky high?
He needs a different coach, not an old school guy like Torts with grind, dump and chase. I could have told you it was a horrible match before the trade.
Plus means you are winning.... more goals than not.
Travis Yost, TSN
The biggest reason plus-minus is such a useless measure is that it's not exclusive to any one game state. Plus-minus includes all even-strength goals, goals with goaltenders pulled, and even short-handed goals. In other words: It is impossible to use plus-minus to make apples-to-apples comparisons across players.
So the hockey community came up with a brilliantly simple way to fix plus-minus, and that's to use goal percentage. Goal percentage -- full disclosure, it's a measure I use to this day -- simply aggregates the goals scored by a player's team with him on the ice, and divides out by the total number of goals scored, both for and against. We tend to use goal percentage for even-strength and 5-on-5 comparisons, and for descriptive purposes, it's quite useful.
The problem is that people still, to this day, use goal percentage as a meaningful data point for forecasting or predicting future goal percentage, and that is outstandingly dangerous. We already know expected goals and/or Corsi for percentage are vastly superior measures at predicting future goal percentage, both because the sampling data is substantially larger and the impact of small sample variance are substantially lower. We also know that goal percentage is a very weak predictor of future goal percentage for a multitude of reasons.
Context is key.
Would guess he is overthinking everything at this point due to receiving feedback on every single thing he does wrong small or big (not that he should not hear about it)Heard the exact same thing about Panarin and Laine yet they produced/are producing.
From what I see the effort is there but he is just making some boneheaded decisions with the puck like trying to pass through a player before gaining the blueline in his own zone that led to a 2 on 0 goal in the last game.
That’s not a system thing but a player thing.
Still too early to judge but we will see, he has competed hard he just hasn't been good. Who knows if he will be in Columbus in the long term, I would like to know how the hell he put up 72 points in a season, his shooting percentage must have been sky high?
When one has 72 points and plus 20, one has 52 goals scored against. Conclusion, relatively poor defensively.
+/- is overrated and not all that useful and it definitely does not tell us what you think it does.
I use +/- in a general way. The further away from even in the minus direction will make me look at that player closer to see if it is his play that is the cause, or is it the lines and or situations they wind up in. Same for the plus side.I don't want to get into an "advanced stats" side conversation, but one things that I always think about when looking into them - and, to be clear, folks like you and others who help out with those is something I appreciate greatly because it's not something that comes easily to me...
But more broadly about stats in general:
Like most "advanced stats" (because surely +/- was considered such as one time), it's a stat intended to provide context to simpler stats. Of course, +/- also requires context. Any stat is only as valuable as the context it provides and things that provide context to it. IMO.
Heard the exact same thing about Panarin and Laine yet they produced/are producing.
From what I see the effort is there but he is just making some boneheaded decisions with the puck like trying to pass through a player before gaining the blueline in his own zone that led to a 2 on 0 goal in the last game.
That’s not a system thing but a player thing.
Would guess he is overthinking everything at this point due to receiving feedback on every single thing he does wrong small or big (not that he should not hear about it)