In addition to individual production, Kuhlman is also the third best forward at tilting the ice Seattle's way in terms of his team getting the majority of shot attempts when he is on the ice. That happens in two ways.
First, Kuhlman is a defensively minded player. According to HockeyViz.com, when Kuhlman is on the ice, offense against the Kraken drops almost 10 percent below league average. But, second, and maybe more interesting, is Kuhlman's ability to turn play the other way and get on the attack after solid defending.
"You can play (Kuhlman) in a lot of different situations," Dave Hakstol said. "He's very reliable defensively but not just because he's defending. He's a guy that can get you out of your zone and make the other guys on the other side have to defend. So, if he can make the others teams' good players defend, more often than not, that's a real plus."
The play below is a good example of just that. In St. Louis, Kuhlman starts the initial breakout. That gets thwarted, but he stays on the puck and regains possession, moving it through the neutral zone, fighting again for possession, and earning his own scoring chance.