A self-evaluation from the 5-foot-11, 191-pound blueliner produced an honest look at the positives and negatives that he's experienced in his short time at the top level of the sport.
"I think I've played pretty decent. There's some stuff I need to work [on] to get out of my game-- unnecessary turnovers, being hard on the puck in every situation--but overall I think I've played four pretty good games," Lindholm said following practice on Wednesday. "I think I've been breaking out the puck pretty well, using my skating ability, closing gaps and I've been trying to play my game and not change anything. I still play hard on the body."
There's always an adjustment period for a player making the transition from the American Hockey League, and most skaters typically say that it has to do with the speed of the game. For Lindholm, the difference in pace, time and space was expected. He knew that errors would prove calamitous, so there's little shock when something happens.
"I don't know if it surprised me, [but] I had the mindset coming in that if you make mistakes, you're going to get punished," he said. "That's a big difference from the AHL to here, making turnovers, making mistakes, you get punished right away."
A product of the Swedish Elite League, Lindholm made the jump to the North American game at the start of the 2016-17 season. He skated in 59 contests with the San Antonio Rampage, Colorado's AHL affiliate in Texas, prior to his recall and used his experience competing against men to find a nice groove on the squad's top defensive pairing.
"I've been playing at high speed and with big guys growing up, guys who are bigger and heavier than me," Lindholm admitted. "So obviously coming into North American pro leagues, that has helped me a lot."
Another thing that has contributed to his success is his ability to skate. The kid can fly up the ice, transition in a hurry and explode into an engagement in an instant. Clearly, that skill is Lindolm's most honed talent.