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Potvin29 said:Zee said:Hell they were one last season and I think the roster is no worse than it was before.
9 points out isn't really a bubble playoff team.
Zee said:They were a playoff team for about 70 games until they lost Bernier to injury and he couldn't come back healthy enough. The 2-12 finish made them look worse than they were.
bustaheims said:Zee said:They were a playoff team for about 70 games until they lost Bernier to injury and he couldn't come back healthy enough. The 2-12 finish made them look worse than they were.
No, good stretches in October and January/February made them look better than they were. That same team went through a stretch of 33 games from the beginning of November to mid-January where they won 5 in regulation or OT. The record they ended up with at the end of the season was a pretty fair representation of their overall play this past season.
bustaheims said:Zee said:They were a playoff team for about 70 games until they lost Bernier to injury and he couldn't come back healthy enough. The 2-12 finish made them look worse than they were.
No, good stretches in October and January/February made them look better than they were. That same team went through a stretch of 33 games from the beginning of November to mid-January where they won 5 in regulation or OT. The record they ended up with at the end of the season was a pretty fair representation of their overall play this past season.
Zee said:I disagree that the Leafs were as bad as that 2-12 finish suggested. Hell even if they were still under 500 for the final 14 games at 6-8, they would have missed the playoffs by 1 point which by my definition is a bubble playoff team.
bustaheims said:Zee said:I disagree that the Leafs were as bad as that 2-12 finish suggested. Hell even if they were still under 500 for the final 14 games at 6-8, they would have missed the playoffs by 1 point which by my definition is a bubble playoff team.
But, they didn't, so they weren't. Yes, they underachieved during a 3-13 stretch to end the season, but they also overachieved during the stretch the preceded it. As they often do, things evened out, and the record the Leafs ended up with was the one they deserved based on the way they played all season. When you allow the most shots in the league in 20 years, you deserve a record that puts you well out of the playoffs, and that's exactly what the Leafs got. A team that finishes in the bottom 5 in the league in GA/G is not a bubble team. A team that gets outshot by an average of 8 shots a night is not a bubble team. Where the Leafs were in the standings in the middle of March doesn't matter. Only the numbers at the end of the season do - and, as I've said, their end of season record accurately depicted the way they played for the entire season.
BlueWhiteBlood said:I liked some of the guys that left, but we did need more competitive players, Shanahan is right about that.
Potvin29 said:BlueWhiteBlood said:I liked some of the guys that left, but we did need more competitive players, Shanahan is right about that.
What do you mean by that?
Bullfrog said:Intensity?
BlueWhiteBlood said:Potvin29 said:BlueWhiteBlood said:I liked some of the guys that left, but we did need more competitive players, Shanahan is right about that.
What do you mean by that?
Maybe competitive was the wrong word. Management calls it "compete level". Consistent could be a better word. I suppose experience comes in there somewhere also.
It's hard to quantify something like that, but I just felt that the same effort wasn't there all the time and that, for what I thought the talent level was at, left me wanting on many occasions. Desire, drive, never-give-up attitude, I don't know what else to call it.
Potvin29 said:BlueWhiteBlood said:Potvin29 said:BlueWhiteBlood said:I liked some of the guys that left, but we did need more competitive players, Shanahan is right about that.
What do you mean by that?
Maybe competitive was the wrong word. Management calls it "compete level". Consistent could be a better word. I suppose experience comes in there somewhere also.
It's hard to quantify something like that, but I just felt that the same effort wasn't there all the time and that, for what I thought the talent level was at, left me wanting on many occasions. Desire, drive, never-give-up attitude, I don't know what else to call it.
Are we sure it's not just a more palatable way to say the team didn't play very well? The team didn't play particularly well in the shortened lockout season but made the playoffs and you have Leafs brass talking about getting to the 'compete level' of that season again. To me, if this team had played the exact same way as they did this past season but somehow made the playoffs, 'compete level' would not have been brought up.
IMO it's a way for them to make it seem like it was an issue of effort rather than execution because effort would seem to be an easier thing to diagnose, fix, and sell the fans on than the latter.
Frank E said:Potvin29 said:BlueWhiteBlood said:Potvin29 said:BlueWhiteBlood said:I liked some of the guys that left, but we did need more competitive players, Shanahan is right about that.
What do you mean by that?
Maybe competitive was the wrong word. Management calls it "compete level". Consistent could be a better word. I suppose experience comes in there somewhere also.
It's hard to quantify something like that, but I just felt that the same effort wasn't there all the time and that, for what I thought the talent level was at, left me wanting on many occasions. Desire, drive, never-give-up attitude, I don't know what else to call it.
Are we sure it's not just a more palatable way to say the team didn't play very well? The team didn't play particularly well in the shortened lockout season but made the playoffs and you have Leafs brass talking about getting to the 'compete level' of that season again. To me, if this team had played the exact same way as they did this past season but somehow made the playoffs, 'compete level' would not have been brought up.
IMO it's a way for them to make it seem like it was an issue of effort rather than execution because effort would seem to be an easier thing to diagnose, fix, and sell the fans on than the latter.
I might argue the the lack of effort or intensity is part of the lack of execution.
Potvin29 said:Are we sure it's not just a more palatable way to say the team didn't play very well? The team didn't play particularly well in the shortened lockout season but made the playoffs and you have Leafs brass talking about getting to the 'compete level' of that season again. To me, if this team had played the exact same way as they did this past season but somehow made the playoffs, 'compete level' would not have been brought up.
IMO it's a way for them to make it seem like it was an issue of effort rather than execution because effort would seem to be an easier thing to diagnose, fix, and sell the fans on than the latter.
Zee said:The upper management can talk about compete level all they want, but the firing of the assistants and the talk about the "swarm" defense not working leads me to believe they'll abandon Carlyle's old coaching philosophy. I fully expect the Leafs to attempt to play a more possession style game, which would lead to not getting widely outshot every game. If they're able to make that transition, the results should get better, and all of a sudden "compete" isn't an issue.
Zee said:The upper management can talk about compete level all they want, but the firing of the assistants and the talk about the "swarm" defense not working leads me to believe they'll abandon Carlyle's old coaching philosophy. I fully expect the Leafs to attempt to play a more possession style game, which would lead to not getting widely outshot every game. If they're able to make that transition, the results should get better, and all of a sudden "compete" isn't an issue.