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Is Jiri Hudler a perimeter player?
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Ryan Pike
Jan 24, 2016, 10:00 ESTUpdated: Invalid DateTime
If read Pat Steinberg’s piece on Jiri Hudler’s decline last week – and if you didn’t, here’s a link, get to it – you might have had the same question come to mind that I did: “Hey, why is Jiri Hudler’s shooting percentage so much lower than last year?”
The obvious answers are: (a) he got a whole lot worse at shooting or (b) he’s taking worse shots than he was last year. I had some time on my hands, so I did some digging. The short answer is that it’s a bit of both, and a great deal of it comes from the fact that Hudler has become a perimeter player almost overnight. (Or at least over the summer.)

THE EVIDENCE

For the visual learners in the audience, I have a few nifty charts for you.
First, from our friends at Sporting Charts, the heat charts for Hudler’s even-strength shooting this season and last season. Redder and yellower means he shot from there more frequently.
As you can see, he’s barely getting into the slot to shoot this season.
And for giggles, here’s something similar from our friends at War-On-Ice. Rather than looking at his own frequency, this is a look at how often Hudler shoots from the various areas of the ice relative to the league average.
THIS SEASON:
LAST SEASON:
What do these charts tell us? Hudler’s shooting less often from every area of the ice relative to the league than he was last year, but there’s a notable massive correction in how often he shoots from the slot.
And all the charts taken together say that he’s shooting less often and when he does it’s from the lower-percentage parts of the ice. For comparison’s sake, he had 158 shots last season (2.02 per game) in all situations and this season he’s averaging 1.45 per game.

SCORING CHANCES

Before we dive in, some definitions.
  • Scoring Chances: Only some shot attempts from the periphery, most shot attempts from the mid-areas, and all shots attempts from the slot.
  • High-Danger Scoring Chances: Any shot attempt from the slot.
Listed here are the Individual Scoring Chances (and High-Danger Scoring Chances) credited to each player, via War-On-Ice:
Player
iSC
iHSC
Sean Monahan
98
35
Johnny Gaudreau
89
37
Sam Bennett
86
47
Michael Frolik
73
25
David Jones
68
39
Mikael Backlund
66
25
Micheal Ferland
49
26
Mark Giordano
46
4
Dougie Hamilton
40
7
Matt Stajan
40
23
Joe Colborne
39
23
Jiri Hudler
39
21
Granlund
36
15
This season, Hudler is the 12th-best Flame in terms of all Scoring Chances (behind nine forwards, plus Giordano and Hamilton) and he’s the 10th-best Flame in terms of High-Danger Chances. Last season, by the same measures, he was third in Scoring Chances (behind just Gaudreau and Monahan) and fifth in High-Danger Chances (behind Gaudreau, Monahan, Jones and Bouma).
So not only is he sticking far to the outside in terms of shots and scoring chances relative to the league, he’s doing so relative to the team, too, so any defenses of “Oh, but the whole team is a bit worse!” are flat-out wrong.

SUM IT UP

Why is Jiri Hudler’s shooting percentage so much worse than last season? Because he’s a perimeter player. He’s shooting a lot less than last season, and when he does he’s staying to the outside so the shots are a lot less likely to go in.