herman said:
It sounds like the crux of the disagreement is that Nylander a) is closest to Couturier, b) would have no effect on Konecny. I don't know that those things matter in terms of Nylander's decision making, especially in light of the directive for him to take the carrier unless told otherwise. Gardiner has a clear view of both A and B transpiring, so he could have easily waved Nylander off. Even if he didn't, he was in perfect positioning to shade the pass to Couturier AND force Konecny wider than preferred by staying where he was already positioned. Electing to challenge the carrier before Nylander could get back opened up a lot of passing room.
So we can fault Nylander for picking the suboptimal track (though I think he had a shot at harrying Konecny if Gardiner didn't press). Gardiner here had the responsibility and opportunity to direct this play and flubbed it.
I still disagree that he had a shot at "hurrying" Konecny if Gardiner didn't press. All he may have prevented is a deke attempt if Konecny went backhand since Willy was chasing on Konecny's left side.
I also think "tracking" the puck carrier makes VERY LITTLE sense in 3v3 OT unless you are already on top of your man (ie if Nylander was already ahead of Konecny, not chasing from behind). Nylander was GUARANTEED to stick with Couturier and wasn't guaranteed to disrupt Konecny. It was a bad decision and I don't think its defensible.
I don't disagree with your/Bourne's assessment of Gardiner:
1. He should have directed Nylander to stay with Couturier.
2. Once he saw that Nylander was going to track Konecny he should have played the 2on1 more traditionally- which is trying to prevent the pass without giving Konecny a perfectly clear path to the net (ie, stay mostly in the middle)
However, I've seen a NUMBER of cases recently where Leafs D are being very aggressive on the puck carrier on 2on1's and I wonder if the coaching staff wants it... in which case, part of the blame goes to them for wanting that aggression. Instances where this happened in just the last 3 games:
1. Hainsey on the last Ottawa goal (after Rielly made his bad pinch). Hainsey was really aggressive on the puck carrier.
2. Gardiner on the St. Louis OT goal. He went right at Dunn on the 2on1 leaving Stastny pretty much alone had Dunn passed. Dunn was actually forced to shoot just inside the top of the circle but had a wicked finish. Had Gardiner been less aggressive, Dunn could have walked in further for an even better chance.
3. Morgan Rielly on the Philly Shorthanded goal. Tried to block a shot/and take away the pass in one diving move and it went horribly. It was quite aggressive and backfired.