Grading the skills that make Taylor Hall one of the league's best
Taylor Hall is one of the NHL's most prolific producers. The New Jersey Devils winger is coming off a 93-point, MVP season and spent his summer perfecting his game to cement his status among the league's best.
What's brought Hall so much success, despite injury issues early in his career, has been his determination to improve upon his most valuable skills.
"There was never a moment that I thought about quitting through all those injuries ... I knew this is the career I wanted and I was willing to do what it took to get better so that nothing stood in my way," Hall told Under Armour at a recent photo shoot.
High-end year-to-year production is what separates the true superstars from the statistical outliers; as a player, Hall has the toolbox to be the guy season after season. Below, we analyze and grade three traits that make the Hart Trophy recipient one of the NHL's most dynamic talents.
ScoringHall's 19-goal scoring increase from the 2016-17 campaign played a major factor in his MVP season. He notched a career-best 39 tallies last year, including 27 in 40 games as the calendar flipped to 2018 - the second-highest total across the NHL.
The 26-year-old's offensive arsenal doesn't feature the booming one-timer like some of his goal-scoring peers. Instead, he uses a deadly wrist shot to burn opposing netminders with pinpoint precision. Hall creates offensive opportunities for himself with blazing speed to help push defenders back, then takes advantage of the extra space by capitalizing on his scoring chances.
Off the rush, at even strength, or with the man advantage, Hall's a threat to score at all times. He's also clutch, bagging five game-winning tallies since Jan. 1.
Grade: A
PlaymakingJim McIsaac / Getty Images Sport / GettyWhile his goal-scoring surge attracted most of the attention, Hall remained a premier playmaker over the course of his Hart Trophy campaign, finishing the season with 54 assists, including 20 helpers in 26 games over the course of a historic point streak that ran from January to March.
Hall manufactured chance after chance for his teammates, particularly with the man advantage. He ranked fourth league-wide with 16 assists from January onward to help lead the Devils to the NHL's 10th-ranked power play, marking the first time since the 2004-05 lockout that New Jersey operated on the man advantage at a 20 percent clip or higher.
Grade: A
SkatingUnder Armour NewsroomSince his days as a highly-touted prospect in junior, Hall's greatest strength has been his speed. Few can match his highest gear in a straightaway race, and his ability to handle and distribute the puck without slowing down is essential to what makes him such an offensive threat.
"Every time he's got the puck, he's not trying to slow down to make a play, he's speeding up," teammate Travis Zajac told Sportsnet's Ryan Dixon. "I think there's only a few (NHLers) who can really do that, and he's one of them."
This, too, is a result of Hall's determination. He's been hard at work since he was nine years old.
"When I was (a) kid, it was a lot of fun playing ball hockey, roller hockey, street hockey, and on my backyard rink," Hall told Under Armour. "As I got older, I started training, I started running, and I started doing push ups and sit ups when I was 9 years old. In my teens, I got more serious and started weight training and having a more concrete schedule of workouts."
Today's NHL is all about speed, and Hall's wheels are a benefit to the Devils in all areas of the rink. He can fly through the neutral zone in transition, hound loose pucks in the offensive end, and take chances while knowing in the back of his mind he has the necessary speed to get back on defense if need be.
"I've never been the guy who just relies on his current skills," Hall said. "I work to improve myself every day."
It shows.
Grade: A+
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