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Colorado’s ‘special’ teams: What to expect from Colorado’s power play and penalty kill

Luke Marshall
Luke Marshall
August 21, 2019
Colorado’s ‘special’ teams: What to expect from Colorado’s power play and penalty kill

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Luke Marshall

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Troutzky

Troutzky

August 21, 2019

Good stuff. Do you think Donskoi might see time on one of the PP/PK units? I’m not super familiar with his usage in SJ or what he might bring to the table (or not) on special teams.

Troutzky Replying to Troutzky
debakeys

debakeys

August 21, 2019

He didn’t play significant time short handed. Was not very productive in 46 minutes on the power play.

debakeys

debakeys

August 21, 2019

Barrie had a lot of assists, but per Micah’s graphic, there is a lot of room for improvement in’offensive risk’. Maybe his absence will spur the coaches to rethink their approach to the power play a little. It may have produced more than’expected’ given the underlying numbers. On the PK, Connauton was a big minutes guy, but they were slightly worse with him on the ice. Could be that he always faced the the PP1, but if PK is the main reason he makes the team, there might be cause to worry!

Nels

Nels

August 21, 2019

Yikes! Cole out and Nemeth gone, I’m worried about the PK.

Nels Replying to Nels
Jose

Jose

August 22, 2019

Cute

briggs1628

briggs1628

August 22, 2019

Very good analysis. I can’t say I understand all the analytic numbers as that really came into vogue after my days of being involved in college and professional hockey. The one thing that I would like to see more on their PP is movement and cycling. Too many times last year they set up in the zone and just passed it around the perimeter and not create anything. With PP1, that’s more a matter of will over skill because they can all move and create and read off of each other, they just need to do it more. As for the PK, I’m of the belief that if you’re good enough to play in the league (especially as a defenceman) then you better be able to kill penalties. That being said, there are definitely guys you don’t necessarily want killing because those are hard minutes and you would prefer to keep them fresher for other situations. I can see them rotating G, Z, EJ, and whoever fills whoever ends up in the 5/6 spots rotating the PK duties to start the year. Up front I can see a mix of Kadri, Compher, Calvert, Nieto, Bellemare, and Wilson as the primary group which is a nice mix of speed and grit. Early in the season tho, I would like to see them rotate the big 3 and Makar through some PK situations depending on game situations just to keep them ready for those duties when they might have to pull some more of that load come playoff time when they might be pressed into that duty for whatever reason. When it comes to crunch time late in the season and the playoffs, it’s all hands on deck to win games and having those top players accustomed to a PK role is going to be an advantage when it’s needed most.

Sunfunbun

Sunfunbun

August 28, 2019

Makar is an anomaly. He’ll be better than Barrie on the PP no. 1 unit. While I realize first year d men don’t often clear 50 points, Makar has the talent and the team to do so. He has more talent around him than Dahlin did last season, who scored 44 points. It isn’t over expectation saying he is going to be a Calder candidate, even with Hughes and Kakko, in spite of the difficulty of d men coming into the NHL. Makar is an outlier…special talents show up early, and his is elite star level, something the Avs have never drafted, and certainly a way better player than Barrie ever sniffed.

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