Krueger specified offensive pace and defensive aggressiveness as two areas he is looking to evaluate in early practices. Playing with pace is as much about execution as it is about foot speed, and the returns have been promising in the early going.
"Increasing the pace means your skillset has to increase to maintain possession offensively if you're demanding pace," Krueger said. "That's what excited us yesterday and today. With the increased pace, they were still making plays. There was still the skill to be able to deal with it."
Defensively, Krueger repeatedly emphasized aggressive gapping as one of the tenets of his system last season and now hopes for continued growth in that area. When the Sabres run 5-on-5, 3-on-3, or even 1-on-1 drills, that's what he's looking for.
"Any of those even-up drills you're seeing, we're really assessing the ability of the players to gap up, to close those areas off, and to be more aggressive than we were last year when it comes to defending," he said. "And that needs to happen as a group, but we're taking elements of it in practice."