DobberProspects

Looking Ahead: Hendrix Lapierre

Image courtesy of Le Journal de Montreal

 

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Hendrix Lapierre (C)

Junior Team: Chicoutimi Saguenéens (QMJHL)

Birthdate: 02/09/2002

Age:  17.60 years

Height/Weight: 5’11″/172 lbs

Handedness: Left

 

Strengths:

Playmaking:

Puck Skills:

Scoring:

Intelligence:

Two-way ability:

 

Weaknesses:

Skating:

Even-Strength Production:

 

Summary:

Lapierre is a highly gifted playmaker that can create offence for his teammates in a wide variety of ways. His vision is outstanding, and he does an extremely impressive job completing difficult passes. His intelligence and ability to pick apart defenses is among the best in the draft, and that skillset should transition well to better competition at the NHL level.

Looking purely at ceiling, I can see an argument for the Quebec-native as high as the top 7. Unfortunately, a few of his weaker points could limit his odds at realizing that upside.

His skating is the technical issue, but the real problem is his reliance on the man advantage for a good portion of his point production. Let’s dive into that disparity between even-strength and 5v4 production.

To start: does this split even matter, or should we just be looking at all-situations numbers with no regards to game state? Logically, you’d think it would– it’s more difficult to produce at even-strength than when you have a numerical advantage, so those 5v5 points should be worth more.

We’re looking at this in the context of trying to project Lapierre’s NHL future, so naturally, we should look at how different kinds of production translate to the NHL level.

 

We’re going to simplify this by moving to primary points– removing some of the noise of secondary assists from the equation. Looking at this chart, we can see that even-strength primary points are roughly twice (0.25 vs 0.12) as predictive of future NHL scoring than the powerplay variety.

We can use our findings here to form a basic weighted metric to evaluate Lapierre’s specific situation. We’ll use a 2:1 weighting system, where EV points are worth twice as much as those that come on the powerplay.

 

By total primary points per game, Lapierre ranks in the 98th percentile of 2020 eligible CHLers. Looking at our weighted metric, he appears in the 95th percentile. That doesn’t seem like a major difference, but Lapierre goes from being the fifth best draft eligible CHLer under P1/GP to the ninth best. When we’re talking about a potential top 10 pick in Lapierre, that four player difference is quite meaningful.

We still have a full season to play before the 2020 NHL Draft, so Lapierre has 68 QMJHL games over the next several months to improve his even-strength production and bury this concern. But if Lapierre can’t, it should impact his draft stock. Will a team really want to use a top 10 pick on a powerplay specialist?

 

If he can put this worry to rest, Lapierre projects as a capable top-six centre that will impact the game in all three zones. If his reliance on the man advantage continues, he may be more fit for a lesser role at even strength while still receiving top powerplay duties. There’s a lot to like either way, but one of those options is a lot more versatile and valuable than the other.

 

Sam Happi

 

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