Quote:
Originally Posted by Jimdon
I've seen an awful lot of bad decision making in Brodies part this year that cannot be blamed on the other players on the ice.
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If you rewind the play, it probably can. People only remember what happened right before the goal, but goals against usually start a while before that, usually multiple zones away, often on the opposite side of the ice from where the final mistake was made.
Shift-for-shift, teams are constantly making easy exits, entries and dump-ins onto Hamonic's side of the ice. Then Brodie gets hit with suicide passes by Smith and Hamonic and makes mistakes. Brodie hasn't played to his full potential either, but people are too quick to overlook what Hamonic did or didn't do on most of the same plays.