The Hockey PDOcast - Best of 2022, From the Archives - Offensive Concepts with Darryl Belfry
Episode Date: December 30, 2022To put a bow on 2022, we're bringing back a personal favorite PDOcast from the past calendar year. Darryl Belfry came on last January to talk about a variety of offensive concepts that'll change the w...ay you watch hockey.The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. If you'd like to gain access to the two extra shows we're doing each week this season, you can subscribe to our Patreon page here: www.patreon.com/thehockeypdocast/membership If you'd like to participate in the conversation and join the community we're building over on Discord, you can do so by signing up for the Hockey PDOcast's server here: https://discord.gg/a2QGRpJc84 The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.
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It's the Hockey PEDEOCast with your host, Dmitri Filippovich.
Welcome to the HockeyPedioCast.
My name is Dmitri Filipovich.
And today we're doing something a little different on the program.
Rather than bringing on a guest to talk about whatever's going on in today's game,
I thought we'd use this last episode of 2022 to bring back one of my single personal favorite shows that we did,
not only just the past year, but maybe ever.
It's one that I did with Daryl Belfrey all the way back on January 17th of the 6th of the
start of the year originally and in it we talk a lot about various offensive concepts that
we cite time and time again on the show these days it's how to get defensemen involved in the
offensive zone to optimize your teams attack shot selection and pros and cons of shooting high on goalies
specific things that guys like nekita kuturov and and troy tary do to change the game and
be so effective on the puck it's content matter that i personally still think about all the
time and I think the conversation has really stuck with me over the past year. And so I thought
this was a good opportunity to bring it back and hopefully it'll be a bit of a thought-provoking
and fun listen for you as well. If you've listened to it already, I'm sure there's other
stuff that you're going to pick up along the way listening to it again. And if you are a more
recent subscriber to the show and you didn't listen to it originally, then it'll serve you well as well.
So here we go with the conversation with Del Berfrey. I hope you're going to enjoy.
I think I've been thinking about a lot recently with regards to how to maximize the geometry of the offensive zone where it really feels like, you know, everyone always talks about how they want to see positionless hockey one day.
And I think we're still a ways away from that because you watch a forward, especially when they're on the power play and a penalty killer is trying to attack them off the rush.
You watch them try to defend skating backwards and you realize why defensemen are paid the way they are and why they're asked to do what they do.
but I think one way we can start sort of nudge ourselves towards there is really changing the framework of how defensemen are used offensively because it seems like such a large percentage of NHL defensemen these days are either programmed at lower levels or they're being coached up by their current coaches to basically be stationary in the offensive zone where once they get in they basically stand at the point occasionally they might pinch in and try to,
to keep it along the boards or something, but there's very little movement there and they're
very risk-averse. And then you watch someone like Akil Makar, for example, and obviously his
sort of innate skating ability enables him to do a lot of this stuff and kind of experiment with
it. And if he makes a mistake or he gets caught behind the net, he can just skate back into
play and recover defensively. But he's so willing to kind of probe around and experiment and get
involved in some of these actions with McKinnon and Randon and Landiscag, where it really becomes
kind of a five-man unit for them at times.
They're playing five-on-five,
but it looks like they may as well be on a power play,
and that's because you've got defensemen behind the net.
You've got Devon Taves kind of circling around
and looking for an opportunity to jump in and hammer a one-timer.
And they're just kind of not beholden to these sort of conventional,
I guess, tasks or responsibilities.
Okay, you stand here traditionally and you just stay there until the puck comes to you.
And if it doesn't, then you skate backwards and get back on defense.
How do we sort of bridge that gap or make it?
it's so that everyone can play that way because obviously the Colorado Avalanche have the gift of being,
you know, incredibly talented and having a ton of players who can play that way.
And obviously not everyone can.
But at the same time, I do think kind of philosophically, there is a change needed when you look
at how some of these worst teams in the league are playing on a consistent basis.
Well, I think like if you don't get the D involved, you are going to play three versus five in the
offensive zone.
So if you don't get the D involved, you're at a severe numerical disadvantage.
And offense is about movement and it's about creating numerical disadvantages.
So it's really difficult and you hamstring yourself in being able to do such things if you don't get these D involved.
And so the question is, is to your point, how do you get the D involved and not feel totally exposed where you're,
you're at a defensive disadvantage.
And so what we see is we'll see the offensive team get involved where you see whether it's
Macar or whoever is engaged and switching.
But you also see McKinnon in the high three on two in the middle of the ice.
You see rantaninan in that spot a lot.
And they do a lot to protect those defensemen.
So it's not necessarily positionless as much as it's positional interchange.
and that the effect of that is the ability to then move the defensive shape.
So every defensive, you know, when you're in the defensive zone,
you have a defensive zone structure.
And then all of a sudden a defenseman takes off on the back side and goes down to behind the net.
And then that winger is now going down to his icing line.
So now even if they get the puck, how do they, how do they bring?
And then you have the forward that was at the net.
He comes out to the top.
And so now that's your defenseman that was supposed to be at the net.
He's now at the top.
So now you win the puck.
And your best forward is at the icing line.
And a defenseman who you normally would not really want to be having the puck,
skating the puck through the neutral zone,
organize your attack is now on the attack.
So sometimes like I think the bridge to all of this is understanding the effective movement
and what it has on the.
defensive structure, which is one thing about how exposed they can be defensively,
but it's when they get the puck, how do they counter you?
They're countering you from really uncommon and very different positions because the
defenseman at the net's not normally up there and now all of a sudden he's asked to be
involved in a rush.
You know, you're not as exposed as maybe you would be if you were in a different way.
And I think that that becomes more the bridge.
And I think the other thing is it can't be just a decoy.
It works in Colorado because the D that's coming down is not just coming down to fill a role.
He's legitimately.
He's trying to score.
He is trying to score.
And so he's not going down.
He's uncomfortable.
He's not in a good spot.
He gets painted into a corner and gets stopped.
Now the puck gets stopped.
You got the D in the wrong spot.
Now they exit.
These guys are moving.
And, you know, the goal that he scored,
the other night that was spectacular against Nashville.
You know, like the movement that they had to create the play
from a five-man unit perspective is, is what made the opportunity.
And then he was able to recognize that this was an opportunity to attack
and he took it.
So I think that the more, the way that we get there to not necessarily positionless
hockey, but this positional interchange is,
we have to start understanding the game in the offensive zone from a more principled perspective.
Like what are we trying to do? Oh, we're trying to disable their, their breakout. We're trying to,
you know, we're trying to disrupt their shape. We're trying to get them in awkward positions where if they do get the puck,
it's not as dangerous against us. And we can, we can kill their exit and keep coming after. The other thing,
too, is, is like point shots now are very difficult to recover. And we're, and, and,
To score offensive, to score consistently in the offensive zone, like, it's really difficult.
And it requires a lot of different pieces to go in there.
And the point shot is a low percentage shot.
And what we are starting to understand is the lower the percentage of shot that you take,
the harder it is to recover.
The more dangerous the shot is that you take, the easier it is to recover.
And the more likely that you're going to have more people moving it.
Colorado and other teams that are like that, which there's a lot of teams in a league that have dynamic defensemen that get involved that way.
What they're able to do is once they get you in that defensive zone, it's really hard to get the puck because they have so much movement.
They're actually collectively moving at a faster rate than the defenseman, which is a principle.
So now you have this speed differential.
So now anything that's shot, you're already got five people moving faster than the defensive players.
You're going to win all those loosepox.
Where if you do it where it's three versus five, high to low, the guy shoots it, you're battling for body position.
You're relatively sedentary in the sense of that your speed and the defenseman's speed are the same.
So it's genuinely a 50-50.
These guys aren't playing 50-50.
The puck is being shot from dangerous areas and they have so many people moving.
we're in now a shot, shot recovery type of a mode.
So it's really changing in that way.
And we're going to need more defensemen who are more comfortable being in those positions.
And to your point, more forwards who are more comfortable in the high three on two position
of being able to defend from those spots.
So I think it's going to be different.
It's different now.
And you know, you can say, well, listen, McCar is a special player or Yose.
see as a special player.
And yeah, we don't have guys like that.
Oh, you're going to have them.
There's going to be lots of guys that are going to be able to do it.
It's coming quicker than maybe we think and that there's going to be guys deeper in the
lineup that are going to have to contribute to this type of role.
Well, it was interesting watching a couple of those World Junior games before the tournament got
shut down.
But what really stuck out to me watching someone like Owen Power was just how willing and
act if he was to just be living below the dots basically in the offensive zone and how
off and he was venturing down there. And it was promising it made me like think of a future where
that's just not a notable thing because that's the way everyone's playing. But that's a great
point about about the forwards kind of being involved in this as well. Typically we think about
the limitations of defensemen or their unwillingness to do so. But how often do you look and
honestly, I think in any 515 sequence for the avalancheur is likely to see Kel McCar behind
the net and Nathan McKinnon at the point kind of covering that conventional defensive spot as
you are their typical positions. And I think it's so interesting.
interesting how McKinnon loves venturing up to fill that point.
Part of it is by necessity if you're going to be on the ice with someone like
McCar and someone needs to go up there.
But it seems like he really likes getting up there and kind of getting some of his shots
off.
I imagine it gives him some additional separation from other defensemen as well in the flow
of the play just because they're not used to seeing a forward up there.
And all of a sudden he has more time to get a shot off than he typically otherwise would.
And it also just kind of manufactures more puck touches for him.
So along with the defensive responsibilities, I think, you know, he's probably not likely
to score a bunch of point shots from there.
But it's certainly just kind of over the course of a five-on-five offensive zone sequence.
It provides him with additional ways to kind of get involved and touch the puck,
which is what you want from your best players.
Don't forget also that there's advantages to be up there.
You're likely playing against a forward who is now having to track a ton of movement.
It's not traditional like skating straight out at the D and getting in a shot lane.
You got this guy in the middle of the ice.
There could be three of them up there.
There could be four of them up there.
There could be one of them up there.
And now you've got a guy like McKinnon who has like gifts.
He's got gifts of physical gifts.
And it's unnerving for a forward to have to defend a guy with that kind of space up there
who might be willing to take you on one on one from that position and be attacking down.
So there's the whole, the whole thing is is designed to create competitive advantage.
where they're trying to find these competitive advantages,
whether it's McKinnon versus a forward that far away from his net
with not a lot of support behind to find numerical advantages at the net
because they've just pulled you all over the place.
A lot of times when you see a player like McKinnon doing it,
he's shooting a puck,
but when he shoots it, they have a three on two or a two on one at the net.
He's not even trying to score from up there.
He's trying to deliver the puck to the net into that numerical advantage.
So I think that, you know, their team and other teams that are really proficient in this, in this type of game are scratching the surface.
And we're going to see more and more innovation in this way because it's so hard to score in other ways.
Like if you want to, you're going to have the bold D stapled to the blue line and the puck comes up there and they go D to D and then try to sift it in.
the odds of you, the odds of you defending a breakout or a rush against are much higher than
you recovering the puck and sustaining your offense or getting a rebound goal.
It's almost like the point shot in that sense is now kind of a hope play.
It's not really an offensive strategy that you can rely on from a, from a numerical advantage.
But when you start doing this type of movement and then all of a sudden, you know, McKinnon or McCar or
or ranting and it's getting a dot-to-dot one-timer.
Those are incredibly dangerous plays that are coming from this type of movement.
So I think that there's going to be more to it.
And we're going to be see guys.
And we're seeing it now in the league.
There's guys with much less physical ability than K.L. McCar.
Playing with less talented players than that Colorado line that we're referencing
that are getting really involved offensively.
So it's coming.
Yeah.
Yeah, I agree.
It's interesting how, you know,
just doing some self-reflecting how much I've changed my tune.
I remember when I first started analyzing hockey,
I was just all I cared about was shot volume.
And I would just give players credit for getting the puck to the net
because I've been sort of programmed to think that way, right?
Like you hear people talk about it on broadcast.
You hear a player, you hear coaches talking about it.
You just, you prioritize that above all else.
You get the puck to the net, the things are going to happen.
And the more I've watched,
the more I've come to appreciate.
that concept of sort of decision-making and shot selection and optimizing your offensive zone
possessions, right? Like I think having a purposeful plan for, okay, mapping out, you can't necessarily,
it's not like, it's not like the NFL where you can go into a play and be like, all right,
this is where everyone needs to go and we're going to try to get the ball here and we're going to
score that way. Like there's so much randomness that happens and you kind of need to adjust on the fly.
But I think generally having an idea of, okay, these are high danger areas. If we get the puck moving east-west,
if we get the defensive shell stretched out,
we cause some miscommunication and blown assignments,
good things are going to happen,
and how do we strategically find a way to get it there
as opposed to just,
you're right,
going D to D to D and just trying to hammer the puck from the point
and hope for the best.
Like I honestly these days,
when I see that,
if I was tracking that game,
I would mark that down as a turnover, basically,
because the other team is going to recover the puck.
It might, like we saw,
how many times did we see the one week link,
I thought for the avalanche in that postseason series
against the Golden Knights last year,
when the tide really turned,
was just Ryan Graves just hammering from the point. And we saw the ill effects of that where it goes
off a shin pad all of a sudden, it's a breakaway going the other way. And that's basically a turnover for me
when I see that. So I just think like there's so much that goes into it, but I think enabling
defensemen to or giving them the framework or the ability to do something with productive with
the puck when they get it as opposed to dumping it as deep as they can into the zone or hammering it
from the point, I think is so important to revolutionizing 5-1-5 offense and really kind of modernizing it and optimizing it.
Well, what I think you've already outlined a lot of the framework, which there's principles that then become guiding that allow people to be able to read off of each other.
Because when you start talking about positional interchange, there's a lot of trust that's involved.
There's a lot of reading and both people kind of have to see what's, see where the advantages are and see what.
what it is that we're really trying to do to get on the same plane. And that comes from principles
and rules. And when you start talking about, well, we got a side change, you know, the guy that's
coming up the wall, if he's on his forehand, he's more willing to put the puck in the middle
of the ice. So you can support in the middle of the ice. But he's less likely to put a
backhand puck in the middle of the ice. So now you're going to support down the wall. Those are,
that's a framework of an engagement. Those are rules of engagement that I now can quickly read
the situation. I understand.
the rules, I understand the principles.
Now it's easy for me to get involved.
And those are things that you can, that you can teach and you can influence.
And you can get much more, like you can get many more players in the lineup able to do that because they understand the principle.
So they go, when, when this guy moves, they go, oh, okay, I see what he's trying to do.
So that means I got to go here because I understand the principle.
I understand where we're supposed to go.
And I think, you know, when you talk about defense, defense, there's a
so much structure and there's positional, you have to adhere to a lot of positional
constraints of where we need you to be at certain times because of, because that's what's
important. In the offensive zone, it's more based on these, like becoming more based on
principles that guide movement so that we aren't moving just, everyone just moving haphazardly.
You might say one of our principles is ice balance. So we need to make sure.
that we have, you know, two people low and two people high.
And then one person is, you know, creating an advantage one way or the other.
Okay, but it doesn't have to be the same two people.
So now if I leave to go off the point, well, I have to know someone else is coming up
because that's about, or if I'm in the offensive zone and I see one of my D leaving the
point, well, that tells me right away, well, I have to go up and support that.
You know, you might have rules that surround, rules that surround how the engagement is of your,
of your F3.
That whole position and on the ice,
it's not a single position.
It's a role that's integrated.
And all five guys could end up into that position at a given time.
And they need to understand what the rules and rules are of that.
And so I think what happens when we're trying to score because of how difficult over the last,
you know, six or eight years has been to score five on five,
we're now seeing that, you know, you need to come out at a different way,
it has to be unfamiliar than what the defense is doing.
And we have to start doing things one step ahead.
And these are part of it.
And you're starting to see it with some of these players are revealing what these rules should be.
We don't know.
What do we know?
McKinnon McCar, like these guys are the geniuses of the game right now.
Yeah.
These type of players.
And they're in their play and their habits.
They're revealing what these could be.
So if we're paying attention, we could say, you know what?
like that they have ice balance they have this guy on this side you know they not only they
they have ice balance from the top to the bottom but they also have it side to side and so now if
the puck turns over they're not at a positional disbanded they're not giving up two-on-ones and
breakaways all the time because they're just overrun because they're just running without any
rhyme or reason there's there's rules of engagement and there's principles in play and and if they do
lose the puck they're in a position which they can get the puck back quickly which as much as we are in a
shot recovery type of game.
We are also in a get the puck back as quick as you can.
Because if you don't, you might not get it back at all.
Because these teams, once they get it, you know, it's hard to get the puck back.
It was hard before.
Now it's really hard to get the puck back.
Well, okay, so related to that, I'm really curious on your thoughts on this.
Because it feels like just anecdotally just watching all these games,
players are purposefully shooting high more often.
than in the past.
And I think part of the logic for that is goalies are so good and athletic these days
and their pads are so massive that you're typically not going to beat a good goalie down, though,
if they get a clean look at that shot.
And especially, I said you some clips of this over the off season,
but you see sorrows to someone who's obviously an aberration because he's under six foot,
which is really rare in an NHL goalie these days.
And he's so athletic that he goes laterally from post to post as well as anyone I've ever seen.
and he's just such a freak, uh, athletically that shooting low on him, like,
you're probably not going to score.
And so in that first round series that they played against Carolina,
I felt like a lot of their skaters were typically if they had time,
uh, they were picking a spot up high near the year, basically,
and just trying to either bank it in off his mask or try to sneak it in right under the post
there.
And the logic makes a lot of sense because you get a good shot.
You want to try to optimize it and you want to increase your likelihood of scoring on it.
At the same time,
logically you miss the net more, I'd say, especially over the net.
And that leads to fewer opportunities to recover that puck as we've been talking about.
And I imagine that must drive coach is crazy because usually if you miss the net like that,
it leads to a scoring chance going down their way because it bounces off the boards.
And all of a sudden it's a leakout for the other team.
How do we sort of balance those two things in terms of when you get a shot optimizing it?
And if that is aiming high and sort of that concept of trying to maximize the
volume of opportunities and being able to get the puck back more often.
Well, I think that there's some, you've got a lot of different things going on there.
So I'll try to tackle them in as much of a sequence as I can.
So the first thing that I think that we have to acknowledge is that the hardest thing to do,
the hardest skill in the NHL is to be able to score when the puck is on your stick for any
longer than two seconds.
So if you have the puck and it's on your stick,
stick for any period of time.
And the defense and the goalie and everyone's had an opportunity to adjust,
your chances of scoring are so low.
It's really hard to score like that.
So now, you know, many of the shots are also contested.
A lot of the shots are contested.
So we talk about, well, you got to shoot high or whatever the case may be.
It could also, one of the factors of shooting high or shooting high more often can be that
there's defensive stick is in the way a lot.
It's a problem.
You have to solve that problem because very rarely are you going to shoot without a defensive
stick either already there or coming into quickly into that space.
So being some of it's a reaction of trying to get the puck out of the way of that defensive
stick.
I think that that's a factor.
And so that's, I think that's part of it.
The other part of it too is that rebounds off of shoulders tend to be, tend to be, tend to travel for less away from the net than rebounds off of pads.
Yep.
So because people shoot the puck so hard now, even when they're not shooting it hard, they shoot it really hard.
You know, if you're shooting it off of a pad, for example, it's,
really hard to predict the the pace that puck's going to come off that pad.
But when you go off a shoulder or an arm, for example, and you go like six hole and the goalies
had to reach, you know, the rebounds tend to stay more contained. So if you're shooting
for a second puck, it used to be, well, go far pad. We talked about that for a decade.
Now you just don't see that because it's really hard to do. And goalies are obviously smarter.
use their sticks much better, their angles are much better. Everything goaltending is way better.
So they've seen that story before. So it's up to us as the shooters to find different ways to be
able to provide dangerous shots and secondary opportunities. So I don't know that shooting high
is a goal score is a goal scoring strategy per se. I think sometimes it's a reaction to the conditions
of the stick.
And it's also a reaction to the fact that if you've had the puck on your stick for any length of time,
the odds of the goalie not being square and in perfect position is probably pretty low.
So you're now trying to play for the most optimized shot opportunity.
The other thing is the closer you are to the net, based on the trajectory of the puck.
So let's say I'm shooting from a bottom hash mark, middle bottom hash mark.
if you try to hit the top corner from there and you shoot on the goalie,
by the time it arrives to the goalie,
it's actually like maybe six inches to a foot off the top of his pad.
So the actual, the puck hits the top corner.
But when it arrived to the goalie,
it was just above his pad by six inches to a foot.
So you see what I mean?
So when you get into distances like that,
When I'm talking, that distance would be anywhere between like 22 to 30 feet.
Trajectory is an issue.
And then the closer you get to the net, obviously now the elevation angles are very different.
And now, you know, just to get it up, an over his pad, like you're going to potentially miss the net because of the, because of how close you are.
You see what I mean with the trajectory.
So these are, to me, because of where.
the puck is and the trajectory.
The puck is normally on the ice unless you're like now these guys are reinventing
some of that by, you know, scooping the puck and getting it up.
It's the first time we've really seen the puck up in that area where the puck is not
shot from the ice.
The only time we've ever seen anything like that is a deflection of source, but that's
not really a shot.
We counted as a shot, but the guy wasn't shooting.
He's redirecting a puck.
This is very different now because it's so hard.
The goalies are so big.
and a shot that's high when it was released and when it arrived at the goalie,
it's not as high as we think it is just because of the geometry of the game.
So I think that those are important factors to keep in mind as it relates to that.
And I also think because of what I said from the outset,
the hardest thing to do is to score when you have the puck on your stick for more than two seconds.
we're now seeing guys shoot off the pass a lot more.
The fuck is being shot past.
And so traditionally, like those types of releases,
particularly with the follow through,
you're going to follow through high.
You know you trying to get away from the desperation of the goalies pad.
You're trying to get it like halfway up the net and in the middle so that,
you know,
you're giving yourself the best opportunity.
So I think those are factors into what it is that you're talking about.
All right.
Let's take a quick break here in the show.
and then when we come back, we're going to keep rolling the conversation with Daryl
from the PEDYO cast vaults.
You're listening to the HockeyPedio cast streaming on the Sportsnet Radio Network.
That's a perfect segue because I wanted to talk a bit about Nikita Kutrov
because I was so fascinated watching him play in these past couple games since he returned
just because it really gives you an added appreciation for what he's able to do
in exactly that area that you're talking about
where I don't think there's any superstar in this league
that has the puck on his stick
for a shorter period of time than he does,
which isn't to be mistaken for him being impatient
or anything by any means further from that.
But his ability to shoot off the pass
in regards to one-timing it is so fascinating to me
because he doesn't really even one-time the puck.
He kind of does this sort of scoop
motion where he in one in one move he can receive the pass and then he can either basically kind
of scoop that pass into the bumper spot and get brain point a wide open look or he can sort of
redirect it on net himself and it can basically serve as a one-timer for him and i'm just so fascinated
by his approach the game in that regard where he can catch in real release from pretty much any position
like we we hear often how you know with any great player like you can't really throw them a bad
pass because they'll be able to make something of it. But I think that really strikes true with him
where you can throw it to his front foot, his back foot, in between his skates, wherever,
and he'll be able to basically replicate whatever motion he wants to do. And it just makes him
impossible to defend because regardless of where the pass is or how he's standing, he'll be able
to beat you in two or three different ways. And so I just, it's, it's a very sort of, you know,
you're just talking about how if you have the puck on your stick for a longer than a period of
time you're probably not going to beat a goalie because there's so few players in today's game
that have the shot talent and the ability to consistently cleanly beat goalies. And he sort of is a
great example of that where you're never going to see him just kind of hold on to the puck
for no reason until something materializes. Like it's instantly moving off of his stick somewhere and
it's so impressive to watch. So one thing about Kutrov that I think is he is he kind of innovates
in one sense is that he is ability to separate his upper body from his lower body.
is and his comfort level of doing that very consistently in the offensive zone or when he's in an offensive situations is quite is quite fascinating.
What I mean by that is like his feet are facing the net.
But his shoulders are facing the middle of the ice and his stick is behind him.
And we're seeing more and more like of like as you watch him over his career.
he's been doing this more and more and more.
And what it does is the puck is in a shooting position all the time.
And he could shoot it and he can pass to any part of that offensive zone from that position.
So he's got an ultimate like dual threat where he could do anything.
And like to your point, he uses this, like you call it like a scoop motion.
I call it it's like it's like a whip.
Yeah.
It's like a whip or like in the old day.
we used to call it a sweeper.
Now I think he's innovated.
I think it's much more of a whip because of how far he has it behind him.
He holds the puck back behind him.
And when he's asking for a puck on his off wing, he tends to have his stick on the back side.
Like he doesn't hold it in the middle.
Like most people, when they're expecting to get a puck from the side, they hold the puck like they want it in their skates.
He kind of holds his stick way behind.
He actually wants it behind.
because he has that whole like sweeping whip scooping type motion that is that's innovative it's
innovative and now to your point he's able to find other people now what I find most interesting
about Kutrov and what you've picked out is is really interesting what I also think is interesting
is that he when he has the puck everybody is moving right he inspired
movement because he doesn't have the puck on his stick long and he can put it into spots
quickly. And so he's one of those superstar players that elevates the speed of people around him
because you just don't know when you're going to get it and you're trying to move the people
around him are moving to space and moving to spots because they know if he gets it that they
want to be in advantageous positions. And there's a lot of players that when they get the puck,
everyone on the ice that's on their team is slowing down because they're expecting them to either go
one-on-one or they're expecting them to take some time to make a decision.
And so they're trying to figure out what they're going to do with this guy.
Because of the way he plays, he inspires people around him to move at a faster rate.
That is to me incredible.
Like that, as much as I love the, the, this whip shot and the separation of the upper body and lower body and I've studied it to nausea because I think it's, I think it is a really innovative thing that can be transferred to other people. So I think that that's why not phenomenal. But the, the real genius in my mind is how people move. Like you watch point when he's with him, how much movement he has and where he goes, the type of places he goes on the ice.
it's interesting because he's elevating pace.
And that's what we were talking about previously,
about the offensive zone and how important it is to elevate the pace.
He just does that because of his style of play,
which is really unique.
Well, see, I think those two, and that's a great point you brought up,
but I think those two are sort of almost related in a sense
because we tend to loosely throw around the term dual threat
for a lot of players because they can pass and show.
the puck equally well. But I think for a lot of those players, they're not necessarily dual
threats because their action in terms of whether they want to shoot or pass is predicated on
where they receive the puck or sort of what position they're in. And so it's great that they can do
both things, but they are limited to an extent because especially on the power play,
if you're operating from the half wall and you get the puck, depending on how you receive it,
you have a split second basically to make the next play if you want to catch the other team out of
position.
And you're so reliant on basically the person, typically the point man, or maybe the person on
the opposite flank, where they're going to get the puck to you with him, since he can really
with that scoop or whip motion do either of those, I think it also encourages the players that he's
on the ice with to keep moving and keep trying to find open spots because they feel confidence
knowing that this guy can get us the puck regardless of what happens in the past before.
it, right? And so that must be such a fun thing for a point or, you know, Stamco's on the power play or even like a colorn around the net to have that confidence in a teammate knowing that regardless of what happens, as long as he gets the puck and it doesn't get intercepted on its way to him, I have a reasonable chance of basically having a tap-in goal here if I do my job before it.
Well, it's the movement expands the amount of passing surface space that he actually has.
So if you're if you're not moving and he sees you, there's now because you're not moving,
he has like there's one path.
Yeah, he has to get it to you.
He's got to get it to you and you are where you are.
Yeah.
Now he might put it a little ahead of you.
You might put a little behind you depending on the context of where the defender is,
etc.
What we're talking about is guys who are moving, trying to move to space,
who are now expanding the amount of windows of time in which he has to be able to get
you the puck. And by expanding that window, it makes it even more dangerous and try to defend that.
Try to defend that kind of movement when it's not as predictable where that pass would go because
you have people that are that are in motion. I think as dangerous as he is on the power play,
I think five on five when he gets to that offensive zone. I think he's even more. I think he's
like he's an innovator. As much as we talk about some of these high three on two and the movement
of the D and stuff like that, you take a look at a single player who's doing things.
interesting that is going to inspire others.
Kuturov is a really interesting player to study because he does do these really interesting
things.
The way he handles the puck,
the way he likes to shoot this,
this like you say,
a next level dual threat situation.
Did you see the Kane goal last night on a power play?
Yeah,
Montaubo is kind of like,
yeah.
So he catches him cheating,
right?
Because he was,
he was deceptive.
But if you watch Kane,
he's got the puck hidden.
He looks like he's going to pass, which is not too much of a stretch that he's probably going to pass from there.
He's typically looking for someone on the back door.
And then at the last second, he changes it and turns it into a shot and shoots.
That's what we've previously thought of as, in my mind, a dual threat deception.
He makes, he sets everything up to make it look like he's going to pass.
He gets everyone convinced that that's the case.
And then he fools you by shooting.
That's, that's been a previous.
definition of dual threat. This Kutrov is a whole other level of dual threat because of the
where he holds the puck and where he likes to catch the puck and his range of being able to
pass or shoot and change his mind in the middle of the motion to be able to make whatever next
play that he sees. And of course, his ice vision is spectacular. His shot is ridiculous. And so
it just amplifies it even more. Yeah. No, he's a he's a hell of a play.
to watch. I'm not sure how replicable it is because it seems like he is a freak in that regard,
but certainly some biomechanical stuff is interesting there. One final thing that I do want to talk
about with you before we get out of here, one concept player is Troy Terry. And I've been blown away
watching him this season because, I mean, obviously, statistically, you know, he's on pace for 47 goals
or something after having 15 and in his first 130 NHL games. Like, so this is, you know, not necessarily
completely out of the blue because he was a highly productive college player, you know, played for
the States. Like he came in with with a reputation as being a high skill level player that could
conceivably be a great NHL player, but we hadn't seen it up until this point heading into the season.
And what's really stuck out to me watching him this year is how he attacks the triangles with
defenders with regards to basically he like, he's so confident in his ability now that he's seeking
out these one-on-one situations where he can basically get isolated against a defender,
and then he puts them in a compromising situation where he puts the puck basically under
their stick or between their legs, and they either have to take a penalty against him, and he's
one of the league leaders and penalties drawn, or he just gets around them and gets a clear
path to a net, and I can't even count how many times he's basically dashed in for a mini break
or a breakaway. So I'm just, I love watching a play. Like,
I know that Trevor Zegroes commands a lot of the attention because he does these sort of flashy highlight plays.
And he's certainly deserving of all that attention.
But for me, Terry and his ability to be an entirely different player this season to me has been just as impressive.
And I think deserves just as much attention.
So the interesting part I think about with Terry is that he, in coming into the NHL,
one of the hardest things, I guess the defensive stick and the defensive ability of players,
is so good that it would take a while, I would think,
to get to the level of comfort that he is at.
And it would be very brazen to just walk in and start attacking triangles the way he is.
But what I think the difference is when I watch him is he likes to put the puck,
not quite in the kutcher off position,
but he can separate his upper body from his lower body.
And what he does is he puts the puck like equal to his,
to escape.
Like he draws it back
as though he's in a shooting position.
And he
carries this momentum
into the defender's stick space.
So normally you would
you know,
as a player was attacking
a defender one on one
and was concerned about their stick,
they'd have the puck
in the middle of their body
and they'd be looking
to try to problem solve
the stick with their hands.
What Terry does
that I think is really interesting
is he's very comfortable
moving his body
into the stick space of the triangle.
And to your point, he can step by you.
If he has a speed differential,
he can take the puck from that initial position
where it's protected from the initial stick,
but he uses his feet then to get into the stick range
of the defender kind of cramping the stick
and then puts the puck into the triangle
or past the defender's feet as he steps by.
And I think what, as you look at him
and then you listen to that description,
and then you think about McDavid and some of his highlight goals where he's going one on four
and he's going through guys and it's a speed differential which is, you know,
there's two or three guys in the world that have that kind of speed that can get into those positions.
But he does similar things in putting the puck into that protect.
He uses the triangle to protect the puck.
Like that's the area in which he's protecting the puck is in that space.
And so if you can get past the defense.
defensive stick between the defensive stick and the other side of the skates is a protected
position for the puck.
So because it's very difficult to defend that now that you don't have your stick, especially
when you're moving back at a reasonable speed or you're concerned about the speed of the guy
coming at you.
So you have McDavid who has the puck in the middle of his body and he just goes quick hands
to get the puck past your stick and then gets it through you and then steps on the other
side. And now we're talking about Terry, who's doing exactly the same thing, only he does it
differently. Rather than putting the puck in the middle of his body and doing it that way,
he puts the puck to the side of his body in what we would consider like more of a shooting
position. But then he uses that to get his feet to cramp the space of the defender. And then now
he can shoot it. He can step by you. And he's done all those things this year. So he's really,
and he can move laterally, and he's obviously been able to do it.
But at previous levels, I would have thought that that would be a skill that would be difficult to transfer into the NHL.
And here's a guy proving that that's not the case, that you can do it and that using your feet in this way and having the puck in this particular position is a different way of being able to get the puck into that triangle, protect it by using it and being comfortable.
closer to the defensive stick with your feet and your body and then use these like quick stick
handles from that position and then also then step by with the speed differential.
So he's a very interesting player in how he's doing things because like I said,
he's approaching kind of an age old way of trying to protect the puck inside the triangle,
but coming out of it from a very different way that going into it until he had this kind of
success, the NHL, you wouldn't even have, you would have said, okay, well, that's,
just that's that's a way that you could do it before you get to the NHL but when you get the
NFL the defenders are too big the sticks are too good they read this stuff too fast and it's
going to be very difficult and now you see him having the confidence this year of of doing it
it's just it's just phenomenal you love seeing that I really do I enjoy watching it so much I think
especially like you you know you compare him to McDavid in that regard I think when McDavid I mean clearly
the speed like when it comes out you a million
million miles an hour. It's, it's very sort of, you know, like, you're like, okay, I'm in trouble.
Yes. But with, with, with, with, with, with, with, with, with, you know, he's obviously got agility and he's, and he's
able to create dead speed differential as well. But he, he looks so much more unassuming, right?
Like, like when I watch him play, he kind of looks like kind of Bambi on ice sometimes where it's like,
he's a bit lanky and he's sort of like you wouldn't necessarily think it's coming. And then all of a sudden,
it's almost like he lulls these defensemen to sleep a little bit or maybe kind of catches them off
guard and then all of a sudden it's in this compromising position for them where they basically
have to pick between obstructing him because they've already lost the one-on-one battle and they
don't want to get embarrassed or just letting him get by them basically and he's done it time and
time again and it's been really cool to watch so so i'm entirely with you there the best part about
this situation is the reason why it's successful is because obviously he does it with he does it with a real
purpose. He understands what he's trying to do. And he is doing things different than what this
defenseman is seeing. So the defenseman is playing three games in a week. He's going to be in,
you know, 10 or 12 of these one-on-one situations. Everybody in those one-on-one situations has the
puck relatively close to the middle of their body as they attempt to do these sorts of things.
And then this guy, he takes the puck from the middle of his body, puts it to the side of his
body and then crowds the space and then steps by you, it's different.
And a lot of, and if different is also better, this is the result.
But you got to get these, these young players like it, Terry, to come up and, and, and, and,
and prove it and try it at these, at the NHL level.
And I would suspect that it's going to be difficult, uh, for defenders to, to initially, like,
really understand how to defend him because there just isn't a lot of guys that approach it that way.
There are guys that get into that puck protection position or in that shooting position,
but not the way he does it.
Like the way he does it is very interesting because he's coming straight at you.
Most of the time when people put the puck to the side of their body, they're also on the side
of your body because it's a puck protection situation.
Then at some point they try to draw it through you to get to the other side.
You know, there's all these like things.
they come into it and yet he's coming straight at you he could shoot it which he's done he gets
in the middle of that position all of a sudden he shoots it through you or um he's got it in a
shooting position you have to respect the shot next thing you know boom like you say all the sudden
without really much warning he's stepping by you and one-on-one in the nchel is really difficult
and to see someone a young player do it differently is is really cool because it gives me a lot
to work in a fun way.
Like that's fun work to go and figure out like what is he doing?
How is he creating this advantage?
And in my job, it's what part of this is something that, you know, another player might be
able to take a look at.
The bones of it might be something interesting for them.
Well, when you're a young player and you're doing something differently, you better
be getting results because I imagine the appetite for teams and coaches to stick with you
and keep letting you try to do stuff that looks different and isn't working.
is very low. You're going to quickly get either benched or put in the press box or traded or
or sent to a different league or something like that. And so it's cool. Like I know he was sort of on
thin ice last year, right? Like he was in trade rumors. There was a lot coming around or okay,
because you're going to be able to translate this to the NHL level. What's going to happen? Is it going to
is you going to have to kind of get a fair start somewhere else? And, you know, for it to work out.
Like this is obviously great for both him and the ducks. But it's another reminder of sort of how,
how thin that margin is between basically being very productive and just never getting in the
chance to really show that if it doesn't kind of happen for you quickly enough.
Yeah, no, exactly.
And having the intelligence of picking his spots and being early, I'm sure he had to pick his
spots.
And now he's gotten a lot more comfortable as he's been.
And he's scored in different ways and it's really leveraged itself.
But this is a core piece.
But like in the NHL, you don't score whatever it is.
what is he got, 22, 23, 23 goals.
He's not scoring the exact same way, 22, 23 times.
This is a piece of what he's doing.
He's doing other things also that are really interesting.
And it's just opened up his whole game to be able to do some other things.
And confidence in the NHL is a really, that's the most valuable commodity because it's so hard to get,
particularly for a young player, for all the reasons that you talked about.
And there you have at the commerce.
with Darrell Belvery. Hopefully it was enjoyable as I hyped it up to be at the top. If you did dig it,
certainly recommend going back into the PDOCast archives and checking out some of the other shows
that we've done with Del Belfrey along the way, along with all the other stuff that we've put out there.
That's going to be it for today. And that's also going to be it for the 2022 calendar year here in the
PDOcast. It's been quite a wild ride this year. We transitioned to the daily format on Sportsnet back in
October and, you know, it's been challenging doing shows every day after going from doing, you know,
picking my spots once or twice a week. But the fact that all of you have continued to listen and
subscribe and share the show us love along the way has made it a rewarding process and much easier to
do than I honestly thought it would be heading in. So we're going to keep doing it. Looking forward to
2023, where we're really going to be able to blow this thing out and take the pediocast to another level.
So thank you for supporting us along the way.
Thank you for listening to us.
And we're going to be back.
We're off this coming Monday after the new year,
but we're going to be right back on Tuesday with plenty more
and get back into the regular daily schedule.
So until then,
thank you for listening to the HockeyPedio cast streaming
on the Sportsnet Radio Network.
