OldTimeHockey said:
Potvin29 said:
OldTimeHockey said:
The fact that some assume that the reason this team played the style they did, despite being able to play a better style, is nuts.
This team was shaped to take advantage of their core skills. As a coach, you give your team the best chance to win based on the teams talents or lack there of. With a weak defense and a huge question in goal, playing as defensive as possible was the only way this team could win games. If anything, I applaud Carlyle for implementing this system.
What evidence is there that they played a defensive system? It certainly didn't appear that way to me anyways. They were among the worst in shots against, and among the worst in shots for/against ratio. Those aren't hallmarks of playing as defensive as possible, IMO. Even with a team not loaded with defensive stars, a coach could implement a team-wide defensive style, but I don't see where Carlyle did that. He got improved goaltending and an improved penalty kill from past seasons, but otherwise I didn't see a whole lot different in the overall style.
Regardless of what style they played, the fact remains that a coach designs a team's play based on the talent he's given.
And TML fan, I don't think the Leafs necessarily came to the realization that they were playing wrong all season long while in the playoffs. I think their 'success' in the playoffs can be viewed as a team that played very inconsistant over a 7 game series and got lucky that the team they were playing against played horrible. I saw no real change in how they played in the regular season and the playoffs.
The first sentence you wrote is meaningless. Coaches are
supposed to do that, but that they do isn't intrinsic in their designing play and whether they do is something people debate on forums like these. In such a debate, the style a team plays isn't to be dismissed with a 'regardless' -- it, measured against the abilities of the roster, is precisely what you look to to sort things out.
As to the last sentence: ... really? You didn't notice the quicker transitions up ice? The team's increased speed? The broken cycles and efficient movement out of the defensive zone? The fact that the Leafs had the puck on their sticks more often than during the regular season? The times the puck was sent back to Gardiner and Franson to settle things down and organize an attack? Their ability to slow and neutralize Boston's forecheck? That the team was controlling play for stretches longer than they did during the regular season?