Jump to content

mjd1001

Members
  • Posts

    3,638
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by mjd1001

  1. Increasing goal scoring on it's own won't make the game more entertaining.    For example, today is primarily a game of get the puck low then back out high to the D and hope a long shot from the point either finds it's way in or creates a scoring chance.    That said, while shrinking goalie equipment even further will help increase number of goals, it won't change the way the game is played.   If anything, it will only encourage more shots from the point through traffic as the primary source of goal scoring.... BOOOOORRRRRING!         

    I'd still say that if you increase goals, ANY kind of goals, that gets you half way to where you want to go.  In todays game, when a team has a 2 goal lead, it feels like the game is often over.

     

    Even if the goals aren't any more exciting, I'll start by taking more of them simply to get a 'back and forth' flow of scoring.  Give me goals, any kind of goals...and also work on getting a better flow.

  2. The way the game is played is killing the game, not the network it is carried on.

     

    I read these forums. I want the Sabres to win. I follow stories around the league. I love to look at the stats at the end of the year.  Fantasy General manager is one of my favorite pastimes.  But you know the one thing that is different with me than it was in the past?  I hardly watch the games anymore.  

     

    I find the news, the rumors and the RESULTS of the game interesting...but whenever I try to watch an actual game, I am bored with it.  Its either after all these years....I'm not seeing anything that I haven't already seen....or the game has just gotten really, really boring to watch.  I'm guessing its a bit of both, but mostly that the game is boring.

     

     Give me a 7-4 game with 70+ shots and I'll be happy.  The more goals the better, as long as it doesn't get so out of hand to resemble an NHL all star game.

     

    Honestly, the only way I think I come back and start watching hockey as much as I used to is:  1.  Get the national games on network TV (at least once a week).  2.  Rule changes for a LOT more scoring  3.  Sabres need to be a playoff caliber team.


    True, but's a lot less than the $149 you pay for NHL.TV. Most people have either cable to satellite TV.

    I think that number is getting lower and lower.

     

    Not many, but a handful of people I work with that are 'middle aged' have dropped Cable TV and are going strictly with the Netflix/Hulu/OTA mode. However, my observation is that is a LOT more common with people under 25.  I have a niece that just went to college this year, and we visited her last fall. In the Dorms where she stays, almost everyone there does the Hulu/Netflix thing. I asked her boyfriend what he does about sports (he lives in a dorm in a different building) and he says he just doesn't watch live often..just checks the scores on his phone...and if there is something they want to watch badly enough, they will find a sports bar (or someone who DOES have cable) to watch there.

     

    Bottom line...a lot of those younger folks have no problem watching the NFL (most get it with a cheap antenna over the air) and can watch a good number of NBA games, but MLB and NHL they just watch less and less.

  3. I'm against it.  I mean, I hate the fact that the current stadium is in Orchard park and not in the city...I'd almost say lets build a new one so we can get it downtown.....but I won't go that far.

     

    As long as the current stadium is not falling apart and as long as the fans fill it (for the most part), there is no need for a new Stadium.  And when there does come time for a new stadium, I don't want any public money going toward it.  Now if they want to attach a convention center to the stadium...AND we can accurately seperate the cost of the stadium from the CC, then public money can go to that part of it..but beyond that...no.

  4. I'm not a huge fan of retiring numbers. I don't see the point to it.

     

    Maybe, if you need to, have a 'semi retirement' to honor the player. Retire the number for 5 or 10 years, but then give it back out. I just don't see such a big deal in a number.

  5. I'm fine with charging for the Draft, as long as it isn't 'too much'.  If they don't sell it out, they charged too much. Other than that, I'm ok.

     

    This year, it appears 'selling out' should be no problem.  Sabre fans will come close to filling the place, but the huge number of Maple leaf fans coming down from Toronto probably justifies charging for it.

     

    Just make sure you put on a good, or a GREAT show. Have stuff to do outdoors, make it a MAJOR event. With Sabre and Leaf fans all over, this will be another opportunity to 'raise the bar' and put Buffalo on the map for more NHL events.

  6. I'm going to really miss the name First Niagara Center. To me, it was the best name for any arena/stadium for the area.  Even though it was named after the bank, the fact it had the name "Niagara" in it was great...it had something to do with the region.

  7. 1. No major long term-injuries for Sabres

     

    2. Tampa and Florida have at least one major (top 5 player) long term injury

     

    3 One major upside surprise (Reinhart hits 30 goals...sign Stamkos or a top 3 D-man...Moulson returns to 25 goal status...Ennis back at 100% and fits in with 25+ goals)

     

    4. A tad bit of luck in close games.

  8. I really REALLY wanted the Sabres to draft in the top 5 this year.  I beleive, long term, it would be best if they had 3 super-young superstar potential forwards.  However....

     

    There was really going to be no way this team was going to finish last....and I'm holding onto what Tim Murray said in an interview on the radio a few weeks ago....he said that There is a clear #1, then a drop to #2 and #3...then after that he thinks the next big drop is after 11 or 12.  If that is true, then as long as they are before that next drop, they should get a good player.

  9. Sylvester is out and Matthew Collar, Andrew Peters, and Craig Rivet are potentially in. I think this will be a good change up and I hope they also get some more Martin Biron on.

    I like hearing Craig Rivet occasionally, but I think he is WAY too dry to be on everyday.

     

    The show also gets a bit 'crowded' when you have more than 2 hosts. I'd rather see them stay with 1 or 2 hosts, and sprinkle in that third guy occasionally.

  10. Pierre LeBrun offers his take on what teams he feels will have active June/July on the trade market

     

    http://espn.go.com/nhl/story/_/id/14875775/nhl-trade-deadline-was-quiet-action-pick-summer

    Every year in recent memory...EVERY year, we hear that Edmonton is going to make major changes in the offseason. Big trades...sometimes right from the GM's mouth. It doesn't happen.

     

    So, the leadership in Edmonton vows major changes...but they then don't do anything because they expect 'equal' value in return for their current players who they still think too highly of.

     

    Edmonton needs to move out some of their 'stars', and take the best offer available.  Don't trade them to the first team that comes knocking...but shop some of them..and take the best offer. Even it isn't what you want....Big changes now WILL give you a better chance of being a good team in 3-4 years instead of always waiting for the 'perfect offer'.

  11. I strongly disagree. Edmonton needed it, and they love the "recreate the dynasty" story as you saw when they gave Crosby to Pittsburgh. 

     

    Give it a few years. We'll be meeting them in the Finals....and losing. 

    I don't see an Edmonton Dynasty, I just don't. Might they win a Cup?  Sure, but I don't think you'll have long term success.

     

    They just won't be able to fill out their roster as well as other teams.  They are going to have to 'overpay' to get their mid-level players...just like they have been in the past few years.

     

    If they are good, won't that help? Yes. But Edmonton is not a favorite place for players to sign for the city. It doesn't have Toronto nearby (like Buffalo does so many players can play home). Travel is pretty bad in the Western Conference and Edmonton has it worse than many.  The Economy of Edmonton isn't doing all that well right now (or at least as well as it was when oil prices were higher) so its going to be harder to sell all those new Suites at the new arena for the prices they want.

  12. If scoring does increase I think the way the game is played would change.  Leads would be less safe and it would change how both sides respond.

    I like what you are saying.

     

    When people bring up ways to increase scoring, often times they are shot down because they won't lead to more 'end to end' action, and it may result in more 'cheap goals'.  

     

    However, I am all for any and all goals...cheap or not.  What makes the game more exciting for me is knowing that a 2 goal lead means something..but not nearly as much as it does now.  If your team id down 3-1 now...there seems to be a 90% chance the game is over.  I think only 1 out of 8 or 10 times a team comes back from that level.  ANY increase in scoring makes those leads less safe.  I'd still rather have that 3-1 lead than not..but I want to know if I turn on a game and one team has a 2 goal lead...that it is still worth watching.

  13. Given the back half of his season and plays like yesterday's I would be surprised if he's not a finalist.

    Panarin will get some pushback but McDavid and Ghost make it intersting and Larkin is still there.

    Really, Parnarin has to be the favourite, but it's still up for grabs for someone to take it away down the stretch.

    I think if McDavid averages a point per game for the rest of the season, he might get it.

     

    The push from Canadian TV/Journalists/Media will be pretty hard.  

  14. What a huge bonus that would be to get him back into 25-30g territory next year... and Ennis, with a better Eichel and Reinhart and a full season of Lehner.   Let's not get carried away.

    There isn't much of an advantage of buying him out financially, and you can't trade him.

     

    25-30 goals would be great...but for him to not be buried in the minors, I think you need to get him approaching 20g (15-20) over a full season...with him playing a very good, responsible defensive game.   I don't think, at this point, you can expect more than that, and I'm not sure we are going to even see that.

  15. I really think they need bigger moves than they even think they do.

     

    Sure, mgmt in Edmonton is saying they need a shakeup, but they say that every year. THIS might be the time where they have to trade assets and not worry about getting fair value.  I'm not saying to get robbed blind...but move 3-4 of your major guys just to 'start over, so to speak.

     

    You keep McDavid...you keep ONE of the rest of the core, maybe 2. You get the best you can for the rest. What is the worst that is going to happen? Next year your team on paper isn't going to look as good as it does on paper this year? 

     

    Really, identifiy ONE of the core you have not to keep with McDavid...trade the rest of the 'core' for whatever you can get...then basically give away the trash you don't want.

  16. McDavid absolutely is helping Eberle and Pouliot, but for some reason Hall and Drai fell off the face of the earth when he got back. And their defense corps is the worst I've ever seen in my life.

     

    He looks miserable in post game interviews, just like he did when the camera saw his face the moment Edmonton won.

    Possible some players on the team are 'sitting back' and not trying as hard since he has returned to the lineup..figuring he will carry the load?  No matter how good he is, I can't see teammates taking that approach...but this is Edmonton.

  17. I'm OK with a few more 'lame goals'.  I just want more goals..period. As long as we get some 'skill goals' mixed in with those extra 'lame goals' bring it on.

     

    I'd rather watch a 'clumsly' 6-5 game than a well-played 2-1 game. Does that make me a casual fan...not a hard-core...appreciates the game fan? Probably. But that is what I like to watch.

  18. Thought about this a while because it keeps getting brought up. Both at work and on talk radio....the topic comes up a lot "how good would Edmonton be had McDavid not gotten hurt" or "would they be in playoff position" or "would they be in a position to have a much smaller chance at the lottery?"

     

    So, I don't know.  But what we can do is take the Oilers record in games he HAS played and compare it to when he hasn't.  That doesn't account for Schedule, injuries of teammates and other things, but it is the best we have.

     

     

    Currently, Edmonton is the worst team in the league...50 points for the season..averaging 0.82 points per game for the entire year.

     

    In games McDavid has played:  8W - 15L - 1otl.   17 points in 24 games, 0.71 points per game.  (projecting to 58 points over an 82 game season)

    -As a team they are -15 in goals, or -0.63 per game

     

    In games without McDavid:  14W - 18L - 5otl.   33 points in 38 games,  0.87 points per game.  (projecting to 71 points over an 82 game season)

    -As a team they are -22 in goals, or -0.58 per game

     

    That is a pretty big difference. Does that mean McDavid isn't a good player? Of course not..he really looks to be the best rookie in the NHL in a long, long time. But what it does mean is that team is so bad that it is likely that...if he never got hurt...they would probably be in the same position.....and are also likely to get another top 2-4 pick in this years draft (if not outright winning the lottery again.)

     

    My personal conclusions:

     

    -McDavid is probably the most talented offensive rookie since Crosby/Ovechkin arrived, and might be better than them

    -McDavid isn't really helping is teammates much, making them better overall 2-way players YET.

    -McDavid isn't a good two way player YET.

    -The Oilers are a pretty rotten team top to bottom, It doesn't appear much can save them.  They don't need to trade one or two pieces, they need to purge that roster. 

  19. That's where I am.  I know I posted it elsewhere, but you have to go back to 2005 to find an impact player at that spot.  May as well take a flyer on a goalie you like.

     

    All that said, it seems he has some maturing to do--gotta be able to shake stuff off--but I like some of his fundamentals a lot.  His positioning is very good, and since Chz pointed it out in another thread, I've taken notice of how he redirects the puck after rebounds, and I like it.

    I think that is where I come down on this (at least partially).  You get very few top 6 forwards, top 2 D-men from that point in the draft.  So, strictly from that point of view it was worth taking a shot on a starting goalie.

     

    HOWEVER, if you would packaged that pick with next years #2, how much higher in this draft could you have moved up?  Or could you have flipped it to someone else for a future #1 and played the lottery with that pick in future years?

  20. Anything stand out to anyone? And is it still too early to say ANYTHING about him longer term at all...or can we get some initial reaction to his play...good or bad?

     

    He has faced a lot of shots per game. He's facing about 33.5 per 60 minutes...the TEAM that allows the most shots per game in the entire league is Ottawa, and they allow 33.1

     

    Saver percentage as of today is .924...which is above average.  If he qualified for League leaders, he would be tied for 8th with Jake Allen, Luongo, and Lundqvist.  The league leader right now is Brian Elliott at .933.

     

    In 11 starts, he is 3-4 with 1 shootout loss.

     

    Anyone have any concrete opinion yet?

  21. So there is marked improvement though not nearly enough.

     

    I'd have to agree with you.

     

    Whenever the Sabres go on a couple game losing streak, we hear callers on local radio say something to the effect that "they are barely better than last years team", which isn't true.

     

    Not only are they going to beat last years team by almost 20 points...the +/- goal differential is so much better.

     

    That isn't saying we should be happy with the team, but I think this is what should be expected.  Next year should be slightly better, and I think you are looking at 2016-2017 before we see a serious push into the playoffs.

     

    A reasonable expectation for next year should be close to even +/- goal differential and to be near 85 points. (we can hope for better though)

  22. We are now closing on on being 3/4 of the way through the season, so I thought I'd look at some simple projections based on where certain players (and the team) is based on a full 82 game season projection:

     

    -The team is on pace for 73 points (They had 54 last year).  They are on pace to be a -40 in goal differential (they were a -113 last year)

     

    As for individual players 'pace' based on what they have done so far projected over a full 82 game season:

     

    O'Rielly  25 goals, 44 assists, 69 points

     

    Eichel   23 goals,  31 assists, 54 points

     

    Ristolainen  12 goals, 37 assists, 49 points

     

    McGinn   18 goals, 19 assists, 37 points

     

    Reinhart   25 goals, 12 assists, 37 points

     

    Foligno  10 goals, 13 assists, 23 points

     

    Moulson  6 goals, 13 assists, 19 points

     

    Girgensons   9 goals, 11 assists, 20 points

     

     

    So, Foligno is what he is now...but is he good enough that you want him to stick around as a 3rd line winger?

     

    Most want McGinn back, and I agree. However, is he worth paying $3.5 - $4 Million a year..especially when he is likely to move down a line in the next year or two...maybe giving him less production?

     

    Moulson is going to get bought out, Right??

     

    Is Girgensons just having an 'off year'?  Is he a 8-10 goal scorer? 15? or should we eventually expect 20 out of him?

  23. I know a bit off topic, but speaking or rink size...and about what is wrong with the game "players getting too big and too fast" check out this article that is almost 30 YEARS OLD where people were saying the same things as they are today:

     

    Full article here:  http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1987-10-18/sports/8703190117_1_hard-checks-and-fights-bigger-rink-nhl-fans

     

     

    Some interesting parts of it: (remember, this was from 1987, there are some quotes from Sabres coach Ted Sator:

     

    NEW YORK — Mark Messier says the evolution of National Hockey League players has rendered the league`s rinks obsolete.

    ``The NHL doesn`t have any choice but to go to a bigger ice surface, and I feel the sooner the better,`` the Edmonton Oilers center said. ``The game is just too fast now, and the players are too big.``It`s like a pinball game out there. You`d see a lot better hockey on a bigger rink, and the fans would enjoy it more. There would be more of the skill-control game. Players are getting hurt too often on the small ice surface.`

     

     

    The only elements of the game that draw as much fan reaction as goals are hard checks and fights. The league has been slow to institute measures to curb fighting, so why should it want to reduce collisions?

    ``I think you see better hockey on smaller rinks,`` Boston Bruins General Manager Harry Sinden said. ``You see more contact. A lot more. You see a lot more goal-mouth action and not nearly as much open-ice play, which creates a different game.``

     

     

     

    ``In my opinion, NHL fans would be bored to death by Christmas,`` Sinden said of watching games on larger rinks. ``Having gone over there (Europe) and watched a number of games, that`s exactly what happened to me. Occasionally, if the Soviets are playing, you`ll see a hell of a game, but to try to watch that kind of hockey for two weeks, you`d be bored to death.``

    pixel.gif

    Bobby Clarke, who played for and now is general manager of the Philadelphia Flyers, agrees with Sinden. As a player, Clarke made a living mucking in the corners.

    ``If you`ve ever watched European hockey, it`s boring hockey,`` Clarke said. ``Nothing happens. There`s very few shots on net, and there`s a lot of fooling around in midzones.

    ``My feeling is that we could make the midzones smaller and bring the goal line out farther and not have offsides for a two-line pass. That might open it up some.``

     

     

     

×
×
  • Create New...