Mike1 said:
They also never really bothered to address their weaknesses. Lack of toughness was not the reason we lost to the Bruins. Our defense hasn't been upgraded, at center we got worse or have committed to the status quo, which was a problem. David Clarkson isn't going to stop this team from getting constantly outshot or prevent them from spending way too much time in their own end.
Not very impressed with Dave Nonis at all. He completely missed the boat on what this team needed. He wasted assets/depth & cap space upgrading what really didn't need upgrading. Why add a goalie when the one you have got you the playoffs? Why give a winger a big 7-year contact when there are a plethora of wingers out there you could signed for less dollars/term & similar production? Why buy-out a center & then keep another one who has a worse offensive ceiling?
This has not been a good off-season at all...it's not like my expectations were sky high. Lord only knows, for the Leafs, they never are.
I disagree with pretty much all of this.
While its true that they haven't upgraded the defensive personnel, aside from a legitimate top pairing player, they are pretty much on par with the rest of the league in that regard. Outside of Letang, who the Leafs obviously couldn't afford, nobody of that calibre was readily available. The off season isn't over but the likelihood of the Leafs acquiring such a player this season is remote.
At centre, I believe the Leafs significantly upgraded. While Grabovski is quite a talented player, where does he fit? You Can't just look at raw numbers when building a team. It takes more than just talent. You have to find the right mix of role players and skill to balance your team. Grabovski was an outcast. He lost his job to Kadri and couldn't fill the role that management believes Bolland can. While Bozak may not have the offensive potential that Grabovski does, he FITS better in his role on that line and with the team in general. It's better for overall team chemistry.
The reason the Leafs got outshot so much last season is because they played so much without the puck. Turnover machines like Grabovski and MacArthur didn't help that cause, and they didn't produce enough offence to make those turnovers something easy to ignore. The idea of acquiring players like Clarkson and Bolland is to possess the puck more, generate turnovers and just generally spend more time in the offensive zone. After all, the easiest way to play defence is to spend the majority of the game with the puck in the other team's end.
Nonis definitely addressed the team's needs. Not all of them, mind you, but that's not really a simple task to complete. I think Nonis was bang on in identifying the Leafs' weaknesses and he did a decent job addressing them. Only time will tell whether or not he was successful.
As for Bernier, he's insurance. Reimer has to fight for his job. Scrivens never really provided a challenge. This can only serve to prove whether or not Reimer is actually a number 1 goalie.