Myers:There's no doubt you have to be aware of Matthews whenever he's on the ice, but I'm going with Jason Robertson as the most dangerous shooter right now. The way I gauge a shooter, right or wrong, is how easy they make it look. Robertson is the epitome of that right now, with 41 points (23 goals, 18 assists) and four game-winning goals in 25 games. He gets his shot off so fast, this quick flick that is strong and true in its aim. Neither hesitates to shoot -- Matthews has 112 shots on goal, one ahead of Robertson -- but Robertson's shooting percentage is 20.7 compared to Matthews' 10.7. It also cracks me up that Robertson missed just about all of training camp waiting for his latest contract. Not that he probably wasn't shooting on his own while it was getting done, but it's obviously different being on the ice against your opponents. He's picked up where he's left off last season and has become one of the most prolific scorers in the NHL.
Morreale:I agree with Tracey that Robertson has made scoring goals look easy so far, but is his current scoring pace sustainable? Robertson is scoring 0.92 goals per game and that, in my opinion, is unsustainable. After all, Matthews averaged 0.82 goals per game when he became the first to score 60 in a season since Steven Stamkos (60) in 2011-12. Matthews is scoring 0.46 goals per game and I'm betting he'll start to pick up the pace over the second quarter of the season because he's already provided a history of scoring dominance. Since entering the NHL in 2016-17, Matthews leads active players in goals (271) and goals-per game (0.63; minimum five games). Let's also not forget, Robertson plays left wing while Matthews is given more responsibility as a center, and the latter has a 52.0 face-off winning percentage. I take Matthews in the end.