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hockeyfan1 said:corsi fenwick said:Brian Burke thought he was going to sign the Sedin twins in their UFA year of 2008 or 09, whenever it was. Then, he was going to trade Thomas Kaberle for Phil Kessel.
But it didn't work out quite that way, did it? Instead, Kessel has come in with the baggage of being part of an ill-advised trade. He has played with Tyler "found wallet" Bozak as his centerman for most of his time with the Leafs instead of the Sedins. Kessel and Bozak have clicked together at times, but not in a way that's building toward team success. No matter what numbers Kessel has put up as a Leaf, it's always been in a vacuum. There's not enough else happening to make Kessel's scoring mean anything.
The rest of the team has been patch-worked together year by year and finally it's coming to a crashing halt. It's not at all surprising that it's happening now.
Kessel is the best player on the Leafs right now, but he's never been the right player to build a team around. Neither is Phaneuf. The best case scenario for the Leafs is to find a way to move these guys on to teams who could really use them.
This idea of building a team around a player, be it a franchise player or your best player, etc., has been done by teams to a certain extent, but not completely or totally.
Take the 1980s Cup-winning Islanders team. Sure they had scoring sniper Mike Bossy, who as we know, was often called a "pure scorer." Bossy was no checker (even though he did get checked -- the eventual cause over the years of his back problems), and he more often than not waited for Trottier to pass him the puck. As dangerous and precise as Bossy was with the puck (whether he was fed the pass or picked up the puck himself), the Islanders at the time had a very well-balanced team with solid goaltending, solid defence, a solid group of two-way forwards and of course some exceptional talent as well as mentioned. Plus, not to mention an excellent system incorporated by Arbour & his assistants.
Take the Cup-winning Gretzky-led Oilers of the '80's. Gretzky used to feed his teammates/linemales a multitude of passes, many them missed. All these potential goals & scoring opportunities missed. So the team began to put in place a system and players who could not only assimilate with Gretzky's style of play, but also those who could adapt and provide the team with what it needed to create a balanced system. The Oilers would go on to have solid netminding, solid defence, a solid group of two-way forwards including incredible #99 himself.
Remember how Mats Sundin was able to make any of his teammates look like scoring geniuses? No, the Leafs never built around Mats, but they could adapt to him and let him do his thing.
Which is why to rebuild the team around Kessel is doubtful on the direction the Leafs seem to be taking. As we've seen, the they have figuratively risen and fallen oommensurate with Kessel's offensive prowess these past two seasons and now all that's remained of it. New system, difficult for a one-dimensionsal such as Phil to adapt to. If the Maple Leafs had had a well-balanced system and team instead of a rag-tag group as you mention, perhaps then having Kessel doing what he does best, scoring goals while being paired with a goad set of quality linemates could then be the exception.
As things stand, IMHO with the Leafs in rebuilding mode, it shouldn't come as no surprise to anyone if #81 will no longer be a Leaf come next season.
corsi fenwick said:Burke made a few nice trades for other players but you don't build a contender through trades and UFA signings in the current NHL. You just run out of resources and you don't quite get what you need, anyway.
L K said:Nik the Trik said:Good to see that the top line rediscovered their moral character.
Kessel got unfat.
And are we are still doing that strange Kessel loves cheeseburgers thing (I still don't understand why this started other than Kessel having a wide face). If so, I don't think it's a coincidence that Kessel puts up 3 points on the day that Hammond doesn't play.
There can be only one!
cw said:corsi fenwick said:Burke made a few nice trades for other players but you don't build a contender through trades and UFA signings in the current NHL. You just run out of resources and you don't quite get what you need, anyway.
Reminds me of Cliff Fletcher finding some of that out in Toronto. Unlike Burke, he got a contending team team together for a couple of runs with a lopsided Gilmour trade. But his policy of draft-schmaft had them unable to replenish an aging roster and take them over the top. In fact, it rapidly fell apart.
It was a different era but the same general pattern in trying to slap a roster together and running out of young assets that Leafs GMs have done in various ways for decades.
cw said:From the Game Day thread:
L K said:Nik the Trik said:Good to see that the top line rediscovered their moral character.
Kessel got unfat.
And are we are still doing that strange Kessel loves cheeseburgers thing (I still don't understand why this started other than Kessel having a wide face). If so, I don't think it's a coincidence that Kessel puts up 3 points on the day that Hammond doesn't play.
There can be only one!
Phil has had something to do with it over the years. It's a mixed bag.
The criticism probably got wider spread when Gare Joyce closely followed the 2006 draft and wrote a book about it and an ESPN article on it that came out shortly after Phil was drafted. Among other things, the book revealed a scouting report that portrayed Phil as needing "to work a little harder in the gym, practise a little harder" which Phil partially agreed with and did not heartily dispute in the book and documented Kessel's poor fitness testing at the 2006 draft combine (which was corroborated by others).
Blue Jackets GM Doug MacLean appears to feel sorry for him. ?If what they?re saying about this kid isn?t true, it?s criminal,? MacLean says. ?Because I don?t know if I?ve ever heard the negative stuff like I have with this kid.?
Understandably, Kessel, his agent were upset by the article. The Bruins looked into it and tried to defend their recent #1 pick. But I saw no public threats of defamation lawsuits, demands for retractions, apologies or specific rebuttals. At the time, the Kessel camp couldn't muster much of a credible assault or defense to change the public record or perception.
The kicker was that Kessel's response to the July 2006 ESPN article was to show up a little chubby to training camp the following September. That raised a few more eyebrows in the Boston media and basically cemented the perception.
Those were followed by other anecdotes or video clips over time that didn't flatter his conditioning.
Now, the other side of the mixed bag is: there's no way a player can have the explosive speed and shot Kessel does and be totally out of shape. One cannot be 4th in NHL goal scoring over the past four seasons and be in terrible physical condition. It is just NOT possible. I think Cox reported good fitness test results this past September.
So both things have been shown to exist somewhat at the same time. Phil kind of has physical talent to spare and arguably isn't as good as he could be because he isn't in the best possible shape he could be. It's an aspect about him that confounds.
When a player follows the above with comments like this:
Kessel: ?I skated 10 times maybe all summer?
?Honestly, I skated maybe?I don?t want to tell you this?but I skated 10 times maybe all summer,? Kessel revealed to reporters Thursday in Toronto as training camp opened.
Kessel said he spends most of his summer ?living a normal life? by relaxing, golfing, hanging out with family and friends and fishing. He added that one of the highlights of his off-season was catching an 11-foot, 450-pound shark.
?I don?t talk hockey or have anything to do with hockey in the summer,? Kessel explained. ?I probably take a month off. I live in Florida in the summer, so I go down there and golf and fish and do that kind of stuff and get away, and then I?ll start working out again.?
When asked about the team?s fitness testing, Kessel said he?s not worried.
?I think I?ll be fine in that,? he said. ?It?s easy.?
Kessel said he?ll use training camp and the pre-season as a means to get into hockey shape.
?It?s pre-season, so it?s time to get used to the games and get more in shape and kind of get a feel for the game a little bit again,? Kessel said. ?It?s been a while since I?ve played.?
While Kessel is sometimes ribbed for his not-quite-Herculean physique, he has proven to be one of the elite scorers in the NHL.
... I think in this hockey media crazed market, making comments like those is just asking for it. Not too smart. Raises doubts. Misleads one from his true fitness levels. And fuels the hamburger cracks and ridicule.
A bunch of this is Phil's fault or responsibility.
TDotMassive said:Good gosh... maybe you could get away with that in the 70s or 80s, but not today. To be that lackluster about his own training and conditioning is remarkable. All the jokes about "French Fry Phil" and "Krispy Kreme Kessel" are true... I used to try to defend Kessel, but really this season it's been tough, and to read this is shocking. Wow!! We cannot trade this guy fast enough...
Nik the Trik said:The only thing what you quoted should serve as a lesson to players on is that in this market you should never be honest with the media because there are dopes in this fan base who, when looking for scapegoats will make mountains out of whatever molehills they can.
Joe S. said:You know CW it pains me to say this, but reading your posts lately reminds me a lot of what we used to read from sundin detractors back in the day.
Chris said:I know many here disagree, but I don't want that kind of attitude around a rebuilding team, regardless of how much raw talent comes with it.
Chris said:It will be interesting to see what Shanahan et al do as they have access to much more information than any of us. That includes you, Nick
Burke spoke glowingly of Phil Kessel?s attitude and attempted to dispel the common belief that he?s aloof and disinterested in interviews. He explained, almost sheepishly, that Phil Kessel was plagued with shyness due to teenaged acne. During the pre-draft interviews of top prospects in 2006, Burke was left with an incredibly bad impression of Kessel, who wouldn?t look anyone in the eye and kept his head down throughout the interviews.
Burke said his opinion of Kessel changed during the World Championships in Halifax in 2009. Burke was GM of Team USA?s entry, and Kessel had just come off his 36 goal campaign with the Boston Bruins. While training for the event in Maine, Tim Gleason approached Phil Kessel to invite him on an ocean fishing trip with the rest of the team. Kessel explained to Gleason that while he loves to fish, he gets seasick on rough water and would feel awful all day.
Yet Kessel took part on the fishing trip, sucking up seasickness, for the sake of espirit de corps and team building. Kessel felt obliged towards his teammates regardless of his personal comfort. Burke remarked that he was impressed by such a team-first attitude from a young guy.
He also touched on Kessel?s maturity. After getting knocked out early in the tournament, there was a chartered flight for the team to Boston at 6 in the morning. Only 8 players decided to make that flight, and only two ? Kessel and Gleason ? showed up sober, well rested and dressed in suits. Kessel approached Burke, apologized for the team?s unsuccessful run and expressed a sincere distaste for not medaling in the tournament. It was then, Burke said, that he wanted Phil Kessel to play hockey for him.
Nik the Trik said:Chris said:I know many here disagree, but I don't want that kind of attitude around a rebuilding team, regardless of how much raw talent comes with it.
How many people on this board do you think in the last two months have put forth that they very much want Kessel on the team next year?
Chris said:It will be interesting to see what Shanahan et al do as they have access to much more information than any of us. That includes you, Nick
Bad news for Nick, I suppose.
Joe S. said:I appreciate your response CW - and I can't offer much counter points to it. I will says this - I am not happy. If anything I care less now than I ever did about this team. I haven't watched a full game this season, and I haven't watched anything since the first few games after Carlyle was fired.
So I don't really have much of a leg to stand on when it comes to anything that's going on with the team over the last half of the season.