herman
Well-known member
Bullfrog said:Nylander should definitely remain on the right side with Matthews.
A Kapanen-Matthews-Nylander line generally plays out more like: Matthews-Nylander-Kapanen anyway.
Nylander stays very high in the zone if the other two are working a cycle, and then makes runs into the seams of the defense (similar to Pastrnak*). If he gets the puck and doesn't like the initial look, he'll take it around the net for more options or hand off to the defense for resets.
* Pastrnak camps up high above the left dot to lose his check (or cause repeated handoffs). Bergeron and Marchand know to look for him with blind passes to the high slot, or the left post, depending on whether the cycle is low or high (respectively) along the right boards.
On the backcheck, because he's so high up, Nylander's usually the first forward back in support to provide an outlet for the defense or break up the play. If the other team sets up in our zone, then Matthews draws the middle (bigger body) and Nylander is on the wall for high support.
Kappy's cool, but he's so much of a rush option that I like him better with Kadri against lesser competition. Johnsson is a better cycle partner: he is a sneaky, sneaky passer and a fearless body.
I'd start with the standard lineup on paper:
Hyman-Tavares-Marner
Johnsson-Matthews-Nylander
Marleau-Kadri-Kapanen
Moore-Gauthier-Brown
But then really play Moore in place of Marleau every other shift, and OZ start 43-91-16, or 43-34-29 on occasion to spice things up when we catch their bottom pair on the ice.