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Marvin

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Everything posted by Marvin

  1. This was the downside of ever putting Eichel and Reinhart on the same line. It looks to the players on the bench like, "we just have to keep it close and the The Chosen Ones will see us through." This part is on the coaches. IMHO, the most influential reason that the Sabres have not had depth scoring since the year Zemgus was drafted until this season is that the Sabres have not iced 4 lines of actual NHLers since Zemgus was drafted until this season. This part is on the GMs. Cast your mind back to Housley's second season. How did that team work? Sobotka's line and/or Mittlestadt's line would get caved in, then the LOG line would get the puck up ice and Skinner-Eichel-Reinhart would come out. Then the cycle would often repeat. Little wonder there was almost no depth scoring on those teams. Go back now to Bylsma's teams. Defence flip the puck out and the other team would come back into the zone. Either of the top 2 lines would come out, both would rush the puck and get shots. Then one of the bottom 2 lines with any of our sub-par defencive pairs would get run over and hemmed in until the next panic clear of the zone. I won't bother to reiterate Kreuger's buffoonery. Look at how those teams worked: the top line(s) were expected to score and everyone else just hoped to survive. They were badly constructed by the GM and then mishandled by the coach.
  2. This team is also grittier than recent teams. Even though they lost last night, previous teams over the past few years would have folded when they went down 3-1. This team battled back to 4-4.
  3. That's my point. RJ is actually announcing. Dunleavy drove me nuts last night.
  4. Listening on the radio. Dunleavy needs to learn to actually announce the game and not talk with Ray during play. And Ray needs to shut up when play starts. In particular, Ray must stop pontificating and re-iterating during play or keep conversations going during play.
  5. Whoops -- read one place too far. But your point is correct: we need to take C's more often higher in the draft.
  6. The Illuminati. I don't know why this isn't obvious. 🙂
  7. One thing about the 2006-2012 drafting that is forgotten: the Sabres only drafted one centre the entire time: Luke Adam. We also often forget the numerous picks Darcy sent away to buy at the deadline for players we often did not keep. That doubled the problem because we didn't get to draft AND we didn't have the extra roster spot being held by one more holdover. That compounds the offence of bad drafting.
  8. He's the bottom of the barrel? (No sound here.)
  9. FWIW, I had heard that only a few teams (at most 5) were OK with ADR.
  10. I just hope he lives out a decent life. If he gets back to near 100% and does not get badly hurt, that's a bonus.
  11. I agree, but it looks like no one wants most of our UFA's. Maybe a cap crunch can work in our favour to move the parts which are not going to stay around.
  12. I honestly don't see much turnover. Based on the desired players on trade boards, they basically won't trade the people other teams would want for mere picks.
  13. This is where I am. Terry Pegula became billionaire in part by normally listening to his experts and following their advice. He did that here too.
  14. That's not "the worst." They are well-meaning incompetents by this description, which is demonstrably true. But why assume pettiness and malice with Eichel? First, it's Pegula's money. Second, the insurers did not support ADR by refusing to cover it. Third, the doctors they consulted opposed ADR. Why is saying "no" not just a rational decision? Sure, his relationship with Eichel might have biased his position on ADR, but IMHO, the Pegula's actions are 100% defencible from a medical and actuarial point of view. Until I see evidence to the contrary, I assume that Eichel and Pegula acted in what they perceive to be their own best interests which happen to be pi radians (180°) opposed.
  15. Why is virtually everyone on this board assuming the worst of the Pegulas with Eichel? I know the Pegula era started off with the misbegotten tank and we are living with the worst case scenario, but are they as malicious, petty, and hot-tempered as people here think? If so, what evidence do you have that is from a disinterested party? Hockey talking heads don't count because they have a clear interest to curry favour with players and agents.
  16. What do you get when you cross an elephant and a rhinoceros? Eliphino. Seriously, I assume they were deferring to Jack and hope their actuaries are correct in their models. They may also have a higher tolerance for risk than the Pegulas do. Also, I imagine Pegula's thought process was, "we will be trading Jack Eichel and my hockey team is not going to get the benefit of Jack Eichel. Thus, why would I take the risk and be on the hook legally if it leads to a permanent injury to him when he is playing for someone else?" Selfish, but logical. CAVEAT: Because I have been the first person who has done a lot of things, I would not want a player on my team to be the first hockey player to get a surgical procedure. It is just my temperament. So the doctors' opinions would over-ride hockey decisions for me, no if's, and's, or but's.
  17. I would have done absolutely positively the same thing that the Pegulas did once the medical advisors said that it was too risky. As a non-medical specialist, I defer to them 100%. And I would have gone down with that ship. It is because the worst-case scenario is so bad that I would not want any part if it -- even if he were staying with the Sabres. That's how bad it is to me. There is nothing personal in that analysis. IMHO, there is no reason to ascribe malice to the Pegulas in this case because the percentage thing to do is what the Sabres did from the point of view of their experts. If the Pegulas are going to over-rule the experts, then what the hell are they on the payroll for? Yes, I understand the morality of the issue. But if Jack wants it, he can get it, pay for it, and take all the risk. That's how my employer and insurance treats me -- so I want the treatment, pay for it, and take all the risk. I do not see why the Sabres and their insurers should change the rules for him. In fact, I am glad they treated him the way they would treat me because it is eminently fairer than making an exception.
  18. It brought in a new poster. For that, I will debate.
  19. That was the first Buffalo Braves playoff game in 1974. I saw it from my last row seat near the left baseline on the YouTube Videos of the Braves. I knew one of the guys who helped design the raising of the roof of the Aud to put in the Oranges. My first time up there when they expanded capacity to 16,325 seated (+ 108 Standing Room) I commented to him later that month that I felt like a dare-devil skier. (The last row of the Oranges behind the visitor's net was all I could afford once a year.) Still, according to an article in the Buffalo News back when Marine Midland Arena opened, the top of the Oranges was still closer to the ice than the first row of the upper bowl now.
  20. I like your user name.
  21. I was at a couple of those games too. Not far above beer league.
  22. I am just glad he is on an upward trajectory.
  23. For those who don't know: https://buffalonews.com/news/local/history/bn-chronicles-slap-shot-scenes-inspired-by-north-tonawanda-based-team/article_b6c9faf6-3f3d-11ec-bbbb-bf0006e5d7bb.html?fbclid=IwAR31LbzmizelhKs_sKol1Urob4NoIVsuOX2_N_bf-LbdvYtT0Oq0a6fEljw
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