- Zach Miskovic was solid defensively and moved well, but wasn't as adept at moving the puck as some of the other prospects.
- Greg Burke looks a little like John Carlson.
- Well, his face and the way he wears his helmet, not his play on the ice.
- Dustin Stevenson needs to move the puck faster and better (improve decision making I guess with the puck) but skated pretty well and had a smart day positionally.
- Patrick Wey looks confident with the puck, but was forcing passes a bit (panics without options?).
- Stefan Della Rovere was impressive. Despite being smaller than some of the others, he was all over the place and chased and got the puck quite often.
- The guys on SDR's line all have long names--Hauswirth and de Kastrozza.
- Marcus Johansson could very well be NHL-ready. He was clearly the best player in Group A this morning, and it wasn't even close. His skating, agility, decision-making, skill, patience, and positioning were all on display.
- I was disappointed not to see Dmitry Kugryshev. According to HF boards he can't attend due to visa issues.
- The cycling drills were unimpressive, except from the white and red groups in Group B. The other lines were losing the puck pretty quickly.
- Wade MacLeod showed good vision from the blueline, making easy, smart passes.
- Breaking out of the zone and clearing the defensive zone seemed to be points of emphasis, as three drills focused on them, at least.
- Patrick Cullity was spreading the ice really well, keeping himself open for the pass.
- Andy Miele is small but was noticeable during the drills.
- Felix LeFrancois was shooting slap shots a lot.
- Kristaps Sotnieks had good speed on the rush.
- Trevor Bruess was really being the playmaker today.
- Steve Spinell looked tired pretty quickly, skating almost completely vertically after just a few drills. Either that or he needs more lower body strength.
- Stanislav Galiev was good defensively with regards to position, but needs to be more active with his stick.
- The suicides were the only drills that made Johansson look less than very very good.
- Miskovic was strong in the suicides though; then again, he already has a full North American season under his belt.
- Chris Bond had some nice heads-up play.
- Evgeny Kuznetsov was the Marcus Johansson of the second group, but a little flashier with his skills. He seems to be looking for the pass quite a bit, maybe a little too much.
- Anton Gustafsson was exactly as I expected: big, smooth on his skates, smart, and skilled, but not standing out. He rarely put it all together on a single play, missing that final pass or putting the shot into the glass. His white line, though, was excellent at controlling the puck.
- Samuel Carrier was passing the puck well. Seems like these younger defensemen all make sure they can move it up ice competently.
- Joe Finley isn't just needing improvement in his skating; his decision making is also slow. He was reacting late to plays, especially off the cycle, in development camp. Yeah, the NHL is a stretch at this point.
- Brendan Woods seems like a good grinder. He played unselfishly and was good at creating screens and deflections.
- Andrew Cherniwchan was skating pretty fast.
- Patrick Cullen showed good vision on a line with Kuznetsov.
- Chris Forfar, the other member of that red Group B line, was not very fast and probably the third best member of that line.
- Holtby might not have let in five goals the entire session (not including from those 9-on-0s afterwards). He was a wall and his thinking and reactions were faster than the others'. Well, except on Evgeny Kuznetsov's sweet slap pass across the crease on a 2-on-0.
- Brett Fleming on Braden Holtby = Alexander Semin on Marty Turco.
- Kuznetsov, Cody Eakin, Flemming, and Holtby were all fast in suicides.
- Bohumil Jank and Ian Ruel were solid defensively.
Your stop for all things Caps, with an extra focus on the numbers...like 8, 19, 27, 52, 70, 74, and 90
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Development Camp, Day 2
I had the chance to go to Kettler Capitals Iceplex this morning to see Development Camp. I missed the first twenty minutes or so of Group A, but I caught the rest and these are some of the notes I'd written in my handy-dandy Qafqaz Universiteti-notepad.
Kuznetsov was particularly fun to watch in the second session. He was perpetually flying around the ice and always seemed to have a grin or smile on his face. End of session passing horse around with Gustafsson and Orlov provided entertaining glimpse of Caps future.
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