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mjd1001

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Posts posted by mjd1001

  1. Another interesting one, Florida vs Toronto.  If Toronto wins, they assure themselves of playing Florida. If Toronto loses, then there is a chance they could play Boston in round one.

    If I'm Toronto, I might rather face Boston rather than Florida, but to do that, I need to lose to Florida for that chance of facing Boston.

  2. 38 minutes ago, HumanSlinky39 said:

    Maybe I'm a sucker, but I feel much better after hearing KA speak. He was contrite about his own failures and seems to be determined to make it right. Wants a coach with experience which is exactly what I wanted to hear. Doesn't want to hide behind the youth excuse, which was another concern of mind. He said all the right things, but it will come down to action and ultimately results. I feel good after hearing that, now make it so.

    Its an entertainment business. Some fans only care about winning, hardcore hockey all the time. Other fans just want the entertainment/nostalgic aspect of it (bring back Ted Nolan, Bring back Lindy).  Other fans are someplace in the middle.

    Guess, what, they are ALL fans.  You are probably like me, someplace in between those 2 categories...wanting the team to win, but also wanting to feel good about the people involved as much as winning.  Nothing wrong with that, I think that is the press conference we got today, a little bit for the hardcore fan who is pissed at everything, and a little bit for the casual fan who wants to feel good about things.

    • Like (+1) 1
  3. 26 minutes ago, Second Line Center said:


     

    This is probably all right.  And odds of this ending with Adams losing his job in April of 2025 probably are higher than making the playoffs.  
     

    This is why I didn’t really think I wanted Donnie fired at this point.  It’s a sign the GM may not actually have his finger on the pulse but hopefully it was more Pegula saying just wait till the end of the year DG deserves at least that.  

    For those of us who rally think Pegula is involved in more than he should be, how much of Adams press conference today was him taking credit/blame for things that were ultimately Pegula's wishes? How much of it was Adams being the mouthpiece/bulletproof vest for Pegula?  Maybe Adams is an awful GM, but I still think it starts from the top with Pegula, as other have said, he had input into contracts, free agent moves, sits in on meetings...basically everything EXCEPT showing up when a press conference might have the tone of something that would bruise his ego a bit.

    If Adams is in over his head, it might be because Terry wants someone who will do the day to day of the job, but someone who will still be his yes man. Not many other people will take that job.  I still think Adams (or any GM) is partially the Wizard of Oz that is there to distract us from the man behind the curtain (Pegula).

    • Agree 1
  4. 1 hour ago, LGR4GM said:

    2 things. 

    First, your main point is not correct IMO. What they do in the defensive zone, how they exit the zone, and their ability to play offense are all interconnected and the stats show that. I don't have access to it but the Sabres zone exit data from last year to this year is like the difference between Earth and Saturn. They worked very hard to shut down chances but they did not do a good job of getting up and creating chances at all. The sacrificed offense for defense and they are 100% connected in hockey, especially modern hockey which is predicated on breakouts and off puck movement. We saw them many times take away passing lanes and then pressure the opposition into giving the puck away or taking the puck away and then... nothing. Maybe a quick rush with a shot from the outside and that was it. There were many times this year as well where the defense did not pinch and keep pucks in but were immediately flying the offensive zone. I watched it live on several occasions where Owen Power in particular would be within a Benson stick length of the puck and he would not challenge it but immediately start his back skating to prepare to defend the rush. Not a knock on Owen here, I think and basically have confirmation that it was what Wilford and Granato wanted. 

    Second, this isn't about Dylan Cozens and he wasn't bad enough to have such an impact he alone skews the results. More than welcome to look it up but the point is the overall team and one player is not tanking the teams overall data that hard. Cozens cf% drops 0.81, is sf% goes up 0.99, and his xG% drops 3.37%. So yes he is worse but the real issue is in the offensive zone not the defensive zone. his xGA drops 1.31 but his xGF drop 12.59. It wasn't the defense, it was that the offense was so bad it makes the defense bad. 

    First, I think you are incorrect about me being incorrect. How they exit the zone and their ability to play offense is impacted minimally by their positioning in the Defensive zone.  In my examples, it may actually support my point.  If ANY forward, including Cozens, is covering the slot (as per my example) he would be available more readily to take a pass out of the corner from a D-man and head up ice...rather than when they just start vacating zones and chasing the puck, being a step behind the other team and the other team having possession.

    Next, I think I have been in the past, and was in my post saying Cozens was the worst offender but other forwards were offenders just as well.  With that in mind, not sure why you are pointing out to me this isn't about Dylan Cozens?

    If you play a better 'half court' defensive (hockey version of it) not only will you be better in your own zone giving up less chances to the other team, but doing just that might actually HELP your breakouts and your offensive chances.  I wasn't going that far to make that point, I was simply saying the forwards having their heads on in their own zone was/is the issue, and you don't need to 'pull back' on what you do in the neutral zone or offensive zone to fix that.

  5. I think the defense got better this year, but without going into the stats (I like looking at basic/big picture stats but more rely on what I see in association with those stats), I think the improvement started right about January 1 of this year. 

    The bigger thing to me is, the way I think they needed to improve defensively, and the way that I did notice they DID starting in January, should have nothing to do with offensive chances or production.  This teams biggest weakness is/was coverage in the defensive zone...the 'half court' defense.

    Last year, and for a good part of this year, the forwards on this team would have ZERO idea what to do in their own zone.  I am hard on Cozens because I think he is the biggest offender, but there are others.  The defensemen seem to play where they 'should' play in D-zone coverage, but the forwards either just float around or do whatever they want to do.  

    Now again, this may not may not be reflected in the stats you are bringing up, its just an opinion....but when you do watch the replays of the goals allowed by this team, or just watching the game and you see a big save made by UPL to prevent a goal, more often than not that seems to be (or at least WAS) caused by forwards just being awful.   I have stated this many times, but for sake of discussion I will use Cozens as an example.  The puck is in the Sabres zone, the other team has control of it. The D-men are down low either engaging in a puck battle when the puck comes to their side, or covering a spot on the ice near UPL.  The wingers are covering the side boards or the opposing wingers half way up the boards. Cozens SHOULD be guarding the slot.  But what would happen often, for some reason, Cozens just takes off and runs to the boards to chase the puck, often times when a Sabres player is already there....the puck squirts free, now the entire center of the ice, the slot area in front of UPL where Cozens SHOULD be is wide open...the opposing center or a D-man walk into it, puck on their stick, with time to either pick a corner of the net, pass to someone else who is open, or use the D-men and often times Cozens himself as a screen...and there is your goal against.

    Now, as I said, the team is not perfect, but a switch was flipped right around January 1 of this year and they got a lot better.  Cozens is still the biggest offender (why I think and beg for him to be a winger, he can chase the puck all he wants on the boards in the D-zone as a winger without causing damage), but other forwards have done it too.  My main point is...this is an area they have improved on, and they can continue to improve on, and it should have little impact on their offensive zone chances. Play run and gun all you want...your D-zone coverage I mentioned above only matters when the opposing team already has control in your own zone.

    Again, I'm not sure if the stats support what I see above, I'd be interested to see if there is a difference in quality chances allowed with Cozens on the ice vs Tage on the ice (Tage actually does NOT make those mistakes that much in the D-zone) or to see if there is a difference in chances from early in the year to post January....but...this is my contribution to the discussion.

  6. As with many things, there is a bit of a middle ground and a lot of 'it depends'.

    Of the players you mentioned, I'm very confident Thompson, Tuch, Peterka, UPL and Dahlin can be part of that core.  Barring another Injury, I think Tage gets 50 next year and Dahlin is one of the top 10 D-men in the league.

    Power I am just as confident with, but I think he's a year or two away.

    Byrum, Levi, Quinn are hopeful, but too early to tell.

    Cozens, I'm really down on right now.  He is young, he can turn it round, but at the moment, I'm thinking he is closer to a 15-20 goal scorer that is poor defensively and hurts you in your own zone.....rather than a 30 goal scorer that is a good 2 way player.  They are playing for the 2nd of those 2 things, if he is the first, thats not a good player you want to rely on at all.  I really want him as a winger all year next year, and for the team, management, coaches to not think of him as a player that will be a net positive unless he proves it again.

    • Like (+1) 1
  7. 20 minutes ago, JustOneParade said:

    It should also be noted that the staff now has over 12 years of unsuccessful NHL coaching experience. How much more do we need to see?

    A Peca would be (would have been) a good add if joined by a couple seasoned and capable assistant coaches.

    Didn’t realize that about Cooper. Must be an outlier, no?

    Cooper probably was a bit of an outlier, and he has proven to be a good coach.

    But it probably helped him 'ease' into the league when his first full season, he had a Stamkos in the prime years of his career, Kucherov entering the league, a young Alex Killorn who was already a good and productive 2 way player,  Hedman with a few years experience approaching norris trophy level play, Martin St. Louis still scoring at a nearly 40 goal per 82 pace, and Ben Bishop giving you Vezina level goaltending (he was a finalist), oh, and you had the 2nd and 3rd place guys in rookie of the year voting (Palat and Johnson)

    Again, Cooper is a great coach, but he was eased into the league with probably the best scorer at the time (Well, Stamkos and Ovi were neck and neck then), a HOF player still producing and a great leader at the top of your roster, great goaltending, a guy who was turning into the best D-man in the league, and 3 high talented rookies at the bottom or our roster.

  8. 1 hour ago, PASabreFan said:

    How do you weight that period of time when you say it really mattered against how those same players played through the first x number of games?

    At the end of the season, whether you make the playoffs or not, a game you lose by 2 points in October counts the same in the standings as a game you lose by 2 points in March.  However, as the season goes on, due to decreasing number of games left, each 2 points 'from that point' matter more in terms of your percentage chance of making the playoffs later in the year as they do earlier...meaning if you look at analytical derived playoff percentage, or simply mathematical calculated chances of making the playoffs, each game matters more to those percentages as you get close to the end of the year.    The way I look at is similar to a playoff series...there is less pressure on you going into game 2 down by one game, as there would be into game 6 down by one game.

    So to answer your question, the stretch later in the season there was/could be viewed as having more pressure to win NOW, each game was more critical to your chances (on a percentage basis) than it was earlier in the year.  Its basically my way of looking at it as...when there is much less margin for error, when you can't just 'float' and 'take a day off' because you 'aren't feeling it' how do players respond.

    I'll admit that in judging a players ultimate worth to a team, you are much better judging the entire season, a larger sample size is almost always better than a smaller one to me.  But in theory, those group of games I referenced in my original post, where the ones you could say there was a bit more urgency to and it might tell some people something about who has that 'extra gear' to produce more in that situation.

  9. Looking at the last month-to-month in a half of the season....from early March when the Sabres got back into the playoff race, until they were eliminated...5 players really stepped up and played their best hockey of the season when it mattered:  Thompson, Tuch, Peterka, Dahlin, and Power.  If you think part of leadership is who played the best when the pressure was on the most (not that it was ALL that much pressure, but for this team yeah), to me it was those 5 guys.

    Who were no-shows?  Skinner, Cozens, Greenway and Krebs (not that you expect the last 2 to be a leader anyway). But those are the guys that really didn't add a thing to help this team get into the playoffs.

    Again, not sure how much anyone takes those things into effect, but there was a HUGE gap in play between the 2 groups.  The first group exceeded their own performance earlier in the year by a lot....the 2nd group (at least their performance) was akin to them running into a corner and hiding.

  10. 1 hour ago, FrenchConnection44 said:

    I meant he didn’t write anything within the content that showed any evidence related to the title. It was just rehashing the problems. 

    Yeah, wasn't much in there.  Its kinda like the joke about the weatherman in the summer saying the forcast will be partly sunny with a slight chance of rain, with variable winds.   Kinda hard to get that one wrong.  The Sabres could trade a single prospect, or a few draft picks and pick up a mid level vet....and make a couple assistant coaching firings/changes....and he could come back and say "Exactly what I predicted in my article"

    • Like (+1) 1
  11. I'll follow the draft when it occurs like always, and read about who the Sabres picked, but this year, I have really zero else for it other than just waching it because that is what a fan of a team does.

    I know unless they are picking first or 2nd overall, most guys don't make the team, or don't have a game changing impact for years....but in the past that never stopped me from following it, caring about the draft.  This year...is like I don' care for some reason. They could trade away their top 3 picks and I'd be like 'oh well'. I'm not quite sure why.

  12. 43 minutes ago, PASabreFan said:

    Is it fair to say Cozens has not been the same since suffering the concussion?

    You may have a point, a concussion could do that to you and sometimes it takes a while to come back, like a lot of rest.  On the other hand, he wasn't exactly lighting it up on the stat sheet to that point. Through 11 games up to then, he had 3 goals and 7 points...in terms of production a step down from the year before and only a tiny bit better of a rate as he did after the concussion.

    Maybe an offseason of rest will help.  I still would like to see him being a winger next year though.

    • Like (+1) 1
  13. 38 minutes ago, Pimlach said:

    Sure looked like Florida coasted to victory. 
     

    I think Adams better see and realize that Cozens is playing like an average 3C.   He better find a center to help this team tget better next season.   There is a big hole to fill.  

    I was all over Cozens earlier in the year. I think as much as many complained about him, I can't imagine anyone doing more complaining than me (not just the scoring, but his 200 foot game).  A couple months ago, I thought he turned the corner, the scoring 'kinda' came back, and his overall game got better too. But now the last 2-3 weeks, I feel he has regressed almost all the way back to earlier in the year.  

    I get he is only 23 years old. He had the talent to score over 30 goals as a 22 year old, so he could/might be a guy that blossoms into a 40 goals scorer when he is 25 or 26. I get that, but right now I think he hurts this team more than he helps.  I posted this elsewhere the other day, but since the Sabres beat Vegas 7-2, THAT moment was the moment they were on a roll, had the best chance of getting back into the playoff race.  The next few weeks were the make-or-break stretch for this team, who would step up and play well? Since that game, Cozens has 1 regular goal in 20 games (2 counting the empty netter the other night) only 4 assists in those 20 games, is a negative player too.  I don't think you could come up with a worse stretch of play from a top 9 forward on your team in a crucial stretch.

    (for comparison sake, Thompson has played in 19 of those 20 games, has 11 goals, 21 points and is a plus 10)

    So yeah, I'm legit worried about Cozens again.  I'm not going to be shocked if he gets back on track because he still is young, but he's not a good player right now.  First thing I do next year if I was coaching is move him off center and get him on the wing. I know you need Centers, but right now, he's not a good one.

    • Like (+1) 1
    • Agree 1
  14. On 3/15/2024 at 1:16 PM, JujuFish said:

    Went to my first IMAX to see Dune Part 2. That was a fun experience, and the movie wasn't half bad either.

    The last time I was at an Imax was for Top Gun Maverick.

    I get the big screen, the more powerful sound.  But to me it's kinda like 3d....it's kinda fun to get the 3d effect, or the louder sound, the huge screen for the first few minutes, but I 'adjust' to all of that 5 minutes in and then don't notice much of a difference.  Its kinda like what happened with a TV in our house.  We don't have so much a 'man cave', but we have an extra room in the house where I keep my computer and have a TV in there, a nice chair and couch, etc.  its a small room, but I used to have a 65" TV in there with a surround sound system.  Don't ask me why, but when the Tv started 'acting up', I replaced it with a 50 incher and a basic soundbar (no subwoofer even).  At first I was like...why did I do this, its not as good, but by 2 days later, I was totally fine with it and didn't even miss the old tv or sound system.

    As for as Dune, I'm going to give it a try again. I remember years and years ago seeing the original, and wasn't a fan of it.  When the remake came out a few years ago, I thought about going to the theater to see it and didn't...then when it was available at home I watched it for about 20 minutes and didn't get into it and never finished it.  I think its just the type of thing I have to commit to, so in the next month or so I WILL watch the first one (from a few years ago) all the way through, and then get ready for Dune 2.

  15. 39 minutes ago, Thorny said:

    Most don’t have NMC, I don’t know how many times i need to correct this. You can keep saying it, but it doesn’t make it true 

    ~ 75% of players don’t have NMCs. The league isn’t divided into the good 25% and the bad 75%. There are oodles and oodles of options through trade if you are also adequately utilizing the drafting and FA components of team building 

    Edit - also, can you lay off your gaslighting routine for one day? Yikes.“Yelling about it on a message board isn’t going to make a difference, the smart fans accept it can’t have been better”. Stahp. It’s a *league relative* comparison. Adams and the Sabres have been bad *relative to their peers*. If you want to cry about how all those other teams are operating under different standards than we are, even when it’s not true, because it helps you sleep better, knock yourself out. But please, please save your *utterly* nonsensical “look, you just don’t get how hard it is” take for people who have no interest in intelligent hockey conversation 

    Look in the mirror buddy.  Personally, the 'gaslighting' you are bringing up, it happens to me in responses a lot more than I dish it out.

    Some people...like you...I just don't get. Again, look in the mirror a bit before you post, you may see the very thing you are complaining about.

    Oh, and you must be SO ANXIOUS to get that last paragraph in that you didn't even take the time to understand the very part of my post you are complaining about. I was talking about no trade/movement clauses not for veterans..but for vets who are Good/VERY good players.  The very point of my post was you can get the type of vets the sabres have been getting but they need BETTER ones. Adams has brought up HIMSELF (and media following the team) that it IS an issue getting some GOOD players to come here. 

    Let me borrow your own words....You can keep SYING it, but that doesn't make it UNTRUE.

    Ones that are going to trade significant assets for, and a greater percentage of those have no trade/movement clauses. Oh, yeah, you totally ignored the part where I also included free agents (good ones) who a no movement clause isn't involved, but still have the choice of whether they want to come here or not.

    I guess you maybe were tripping over your soapbox in the time you should have been putting both of those points together.  

    Its tiring for me having people come at me without even taking an entire post into context, or tell me how to post or not to post based on their preferences, when I routinely get yelled at/swore at in some other posts for simply not laying rose petals at the feet of other posters who disagree with me. You guys got to grow up a bit with attacking other posters and the language you use, unless you want it right back at you. Yes, that applies to me also, I get it, but it applies to everyone else too.

    • Thanks (+1) 1
  16. On a non-game related note, a road game in Florida is one of places I have been to. The Arena itself is "OK" but overall not a great experience.  Its kinda in the middle-of-no-where.  There is a big outlet mall near it, but nothing else near it.  Most other cities, when you go to a hockey/basketball arena, you can walk around the city, within a block or two there are restaurants and bars and places to explore. This is more like a football stadium, just an arena surrounded by parking lots.

    Its just very odd to me, its like they said "South Florida, you want a hockey team, there you go, the arena is far away from where everyone lives, and there is nothing to do around the arena, but there you go".

  17. On 4/11/2024 at 8:38 PM, Thorny said:

    It’s not even leadership, it’s more appropriately described as simply experience.

    Why is being a young team considered a significant positive by some? Because you expect young players to get better. Right. So older players are better players, generally. So perhaps icing more older players would lead to better performance. It’s really that simple. We need a good coach to help with that progression, but even if you get the help that progression isn’t instant, and it can’t be avoided. The experience has to take place. The idea seems to be to more less just wait on it.

    So, by all means, change the coach. A good one will help that next stage become realized. But we are still talking in terms of in undefinable future if we aren’t willing to add more experienced players to the roster in the now 

    Adding experience is something that needs to be done, but done in a certain way.  You have added experienced guys to this roster over the entire length of the drought, and it hasn't 'worked out'.  You added Johnson this year, with a ton of experience (winning) and pedigree.  Taylor Hall had experience. Laugh if you will, but Cody Eakin had played for 4 previous teams, was a multiple time high-teen to low 20 goal guy, regarded as responsible defensively, and had almost 600 games of NHL experience (including multiple playoff series). Eric Staal was brought in. There are many other examples.  BUT, There is a difference between bringing in a Veteran, a 'decent' Veteran, or an actuall GOOD veteran.  Those guys may not have been awful, or they had decent resumes, but they weren't "good".

    The Sabres have had their share of Vets at the end of their careers just holding on, and a few Vets that were 'decent'.  What they haven't had is GOOD vets in the middle/prime of their career.

    The problem many of us don't want to accept is....if those guys are free agents, Buffalo is WAY down on their list of places to go.  If they are available for trade, MOST Of those guys have/may have no trade/no movement clauses and Buffalo is on that list.

    Wishing the Sabres to get them, or yelling on a message board that this GM is awful becuause he won't get them...that doesn't make it happen.

    You don't just want veterans for the sake of having veterans. Been there, done that, you aren't getting the 'right' guys.  To get the ones that matter, they have to WANT to come here.  As much as many don't like to admit it, that is the challenge, and WANTING Adams to just 'get one' isn't going to make it happen. Adams actually WANTING to get one won't make it happen.  Firing Adams and bringing in a more experienced GM isn't going to make it happen.

    • Disagree 1
  18. On 4/12/2024 at 11:23 AM, GoPuckYourself said:

    Power looked like he belonged in his short time when he first arrived, not once did I think of him as a liability out there.

    Fast forward to this season and it was clear as day he struggled with physicality, turnovers especially in our own zone plus he never really seemed comfortable or confident back there.

    I really hope he works on his overall game because he has the size and skating ability to be elite but so do so many out there that haven’t made it. He’s still young and has time so I haven’t given up hope yet!

    I still think Power has 2 issues right now in his game:

    -He struggles with confidence.  When the Sabres are playing 'lesser' teams or 'non-superstar players' he doesn't have this. But its like...when you put an elite player on the ice, he gets a little awe-struck. Now I know one might say against elite talent on the ice ANYONE will not do as well simply because the players on the other team are that good. But, its a little beyond that.  I have noticed that with the puck on his stick carrying it out of the zone, he will carry it a bit more, or look to make a better pass most of the time, but when there is a 'superstar' on the other team on the ice, he will get rid of the puck quicker, or make a really quick, short, sometimes clumsy pass. The key is, that is even when he isn't being pressured. He doesn't seem to want the puck as much in those situations.  This is anectdotal, I have no stats to back it up but it seems to happen enough that I notice it.

    -Physically, he seems to struggle more against smaller/faster players. Austin Matthews is great, but not exactly a small nimble speedster. I don't seem to remember him really getting 'turned inside out' by Matthews over and over.  But its the small guys, the quick, darting/water-bug type skaters he doesn't handle much.  He has the size, an the reach where I'm sure he can and will learn to denend them better, but he isn't there yet.

    So again, I dont' have any stats to back this up, but from watching him play, its just the 2 things I think he needs to work on the most...from just observation and my own personal 'eye test'.

    • Like (+1) 2
  19. 17 hours ago, bunomatic said:

    When Terry opens the purse in regards to the self imposed cap on this team I will believe he is serious about making the playoffs and possibly winning a round or two. The serious teams almost always ice a lineup that is hard up against the cap. We see it every year from Vegas with cap manipulation. Why not us. At some point it has to be about now. F*** the future. When Terry hires an experienced GM and coach and gets out of the way then I’ll know he’s serious about making the playoffs and possibly winning a round or two. When this team raises its expectations from just making the playoffs by sqeeking in to making it in early and making some noise then I suppose at that point old Terry has figured it out. 

    Pegula's current thinking seems to be NOT to pay money to make the team good, but rather to wait UNTIL the team is good and THEN pay that money as a reward.

    Maybe he was always more of a businessman and less of a fan than many of us thought.....however...he seems to be operating the Sabres MORE to make money/not lose money first, and to 'compete on the ice' second.

    Personally, I'm less upset about the spending on the roster, and more so on the coaching staff, development staff, arena, etc.  I'm not saying he is making evergy single decision, but rather he put a 'hard cap' on various parts of the organization (player development, arena upgrades or experience, media and promotions, everything) and just told those parts of the organization....this is all the money you have NO MORE, now make it work within that budget.

    • Like (+1) 1
  20. 6 minutes ago, LGR4GM said:

    Last year lindy didn't do anything. Burnette did, that's why Florida under him was great, and now Nashville under him is great. Lindy isn't the genius, Burnette was and he's not available. 

    I never said Lindy was a genius, I said he is better than he is given credit for. Again, a young team, no legit goalie, his main stars missing games due to injury, and the team got worse when he got fired.  

  21. 10 minutes ago, Porous Five Hole said:

    I understand what you are saying. I’m trying to keep the convo focused on coaching, so it is ok if you don’t agree or don’t reply.  

    The Sabres have tried literally everything at the head coaching position through these rebuilds. 
    The old standby/old favorite Nolan, Stanley Cup experienced Bylsma (after getting stood up by Babcock), the consensus up and comer Housley, the outside the box hire of Krueger, and what I would call the experiment of Don Granato and his development focus and minor league history. 

    I hear your aging up point, but I expected that this season. That may be on the coach.  

    I have defended Meatballs and I think ultimately the failure is on the GM.  But the sword will fall on the coach and an experienced guy will be brought it. 

    I just posted this in another thread in more detail...but if you want a coaching change I'd bring Lindy back.  He led team with probably a younger core than the Sabres to 112 points and a playoff win last year (with no legit goalie) and he had the Devils 'in the mix' this year with still no goalie, and with Hughes, Hirschier, Meier and Hamilton (probably 4 of their top 6 players) missing games due to injury.  Since he got fired, the team has done worse.

    To me that shows, despite some saying he can't coach a younger team, that he CAN adjust and coach a younger team, and his success shows the game has 'not passed him by'

    I'd want him back for 2 years (or so) and give that a shot.  Again, that is IF Granato is let go.

  22. 1 hour ago, Porous Five Hole said:

    I saw a lot of people pining over the organization losing Mike Peca as a coach last offseason.  
     

    If Meatballs and staff are canned, how about Lindy Ruff gets a two year deal to be head coach with Peca brought in as his assistant/head coach in waiting?  

    I like that plan

    I love Lindy. If a change is made, I want him to come back and he is my first choice, but he's not a long term solution.

    2-3 year deal for him, and maybe you can get a quality, highly rated assistant by letting him know Lindy isn't going to be here for 10 years, and if the team improves, that assistant (or assistants) will be in the running for the next head coaching job.

    Last year Lindy took a very young New Jersey team (4 of their top 5 scorers were 24 years old or younger), got them 112 points, and won a playoff series over the Rangers without a legitimate NHL goalie.  This year, he was fired after leading the team to 64 points in 61 games, some games without probably his 3 best forwards for periods due to injury (Hughes, Meier and Hischier) and best overall D-man for most of the season (Hamilton). His 'replacement' has gotten 15 points in 18 games, worse than Lindy.

    When you look at the big picture, Lindy has ties to Buffalo. He took a young team to a great record this year, and since he got fired, the team he coaches has performed worse.   If you are making a change, offer it to him.

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  23. 2 hours ago, Kruppstahl said:

    That's not their thing.  They're skill guys mostly.  The skill guys didn't do that stuff back in the '80s or '90s either. It was always the other guys who took care of that sort of thing.  Our problem is "those other guys" don't exist on our current roster.

    What makes me laugh is the idea that Jordan Greenway was supposed to improve that situation.

    He is a GIANT out there and looks like a naturally very solid/strong guy.  Problem is he plays like he's 5'7"  and 160 lbs.

    If he had the feistiness of Krebs, he'd be a monster.  

     

     

     

    Greenway and Cozens I am thinking the same way about today.

    I wasn't happy with their play most of the year. Then in January and February, the started to look a LOT better.  I took that as them 'turning the corner' in their play.  But recently, they have regressed to their production level of the first half of the season. 

    I took them having a 10-15 game stretch of good/productive play and projected it forward thining that is who they were.  My mistake. Bad players or players having bad seasons, even they have good stretches in those seasons. I mistook a handful of games for them actually playing well long term.

  24. 4 minutes ago, Porous Five Hole said:

    So this kinda blew my mind. Don Granato is the fourth most tenured head coach in Sabres HISTORY. They stood by the guy, but it is absolutely defensible to move on.  

    As I have said over and over, I'm not on the fire Granato bandwagon.  Its not that I am assured he is a great coach, I think he is "OK". But my problem is, put most coaches in the Sabres position, with what I THINK is a somewhat 'meddling' owner, a desire to allow assistant coaches that are good to go elsewhere and replace them with lower priced guys, and an overall lack of Pegula willing to put up assets/dollars to push this franchise forward.....well...I'm not sure any good coaches will want the job, and any other 'average' coaches won't do much better with the assets to back them up.

    You could change coaches and they might improve next year, but that would be more because the team is 'maturing' and 'aging up' if it does happen.  Before a head coach or GM change happens, I want to see a greater comittement from ownership to support the franchise in other ways (assistant coaches, development, etc.)

  25. 5 minutes ago, spndnchz said:

    It’s been a bit but my last fan appreciation night was me starting the chant “Dar-cy Dar-cy” with a guy telling me to shut up. And then the whole section started in on it.  We could see him up in the Sabres box. He left lol. I think the news picked it for an article. 

    I’m a bit confused/concerned about where to start with this group 

    Since the last time the Sabres made the playoffs:

    7 head coaches. 18 first round draft picks. 10 top-10 picks, 4 1st or 2nd overall picks. 4 general managers. 6 or 7 head coaches of their AHL affiliate (development). I don't even know how many changes in upper management (Ted Black, Pat Lafontaine, Kim Pegula...others? I don't even know anymore)  A decaying arena. 20+, maybe more, trades involving all stars or former first round players going in or going out.

    ONE owner. Zero playoffs in 13 years.  After Pegula said the reason for the franchise existing was to win the Cup, The team has not started a single season with him as an owner even making the playoffs.  Probably the longest/worst stretch of lack of success in all of modern professional sports. One owner, Overseeing it all.

    I'd start with the owner.  But that is the one position that hasn't changed and is least likely to change.

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