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CarltonTheBear said:TML fan said:I'm just gonna beat the "should have traded JVR" horse one more time, but I think it's pretty telling that he can't get off that Bozak line even with the injuries.
I mean get annoyed about not trading JVR all you want, but what does Matthews' injury have to do with his spot in the line-up? Him, Hyman, and Marleau have their spots essentially cemented. There's no point swapping them around now.
herman said:https://twitter.com/kristen_shilton/status/971442583598764033
Hainsey hates talking to reporters, but I love it when he does.
TML fan said:There's every point. You should want your better players to play more in the absence of your best players. I get why Hyman is where he is when Matthews is healthy, but not now.
CarltonTheBear said:TML fan said:There's every point. You should want your better players to play more in the absence of your best players. I get why Hyman is where he is when Matthews is healthy, but not now.
Well JVR is playing more in Matthews' absence. Prior to the injury JVR was averaging 14:37 per game. In the 10 games immediately before the injury JVR was averaging 14:20. In the 5 games since the injury he's averaging 16:16.
Strangelove said:herman said:https://twitter.com/kristen_shilton/status/971442583598764033
Hainsey hates talking to reporters, but I love it when he does.
Except the bigger question is why Hainsey was blindly wiring it up the boards when Rielly was standing directly beside the ref wide open. That's actually a play that requires some discussion, I would have thought.
herman said:CarltonTheBear said:TML fan said:There's every point. You should want your better players to play more in the absence of your best players. I get why Hyman is where he is when Matthews is healthy, but not now.
Well JVR is playing more in Matthews' absence. Prior to the injury JVR was averaging 14:37 per game. In the 10 games immediately before the injury JVR was averaging 14:20. In the 5 games since the injury he's averaging 16:16.
That might be a function of us chasing the score more during this stretch.
Crucialness Key said:Strangelove said:Except the bigger question is why Hainsey was blindly wiring it up the boards when Rielly was standing directly beside the ref wide open. That's actually a play that requires some discussion, I would have thought.
The way it seemed to unfold to me:
(1) Hainsey sees the ref against the boards, and a clear pass to Morgan along the ice.
(2) The ref sees Hainsey about to pass and assumes he'll go along the boards.
(3) Hainsey decides to pass AWAY from the boards at the EXACT SAME TIME that the ref decides to leave the boards to not obstruct the "ring-around-the-boards" pass
(4) Aaaaand so the pass hits the ref. Just bad luck, it was that kind of game.
Frank E said:So I looked at the roster of the current Solar Bears:
http://orlandosolarbearshockey.com/team/roster/
Is Dzierkals and Piccinich the only Leaf draft picks on that team?
Frank E said:So, I'm reading that it's looking like the Leafs will establish a ECHL affiliate on The Rock.
https://www.pensionplanpuppets.com/2018/3/7/17091900/maple-leafs-affiliate-st-johns-echl-team-is-out-of-limbo-and-about-to-be-a-reality
In that article, it is suggested that the Leafs will have some say, like the coach and some personnel (like they do today with Orlando), and that they want to use the affiliate as a step in the development of some players...I heard that last one before.
It appears things may be different with this new team:
The Leafs plan to use St. John?s as an entry point into their system, not only for players but for coaches and support staff (therapists, equipment managers).
Crucialness Key said:Strangelove said:herman said:https://twitter.com/kristen_shilton/status/971442583598764033
Hainsey hates talking to reporters, but I love it when he does.
Except the bigger question is why Hainsey was blindly wiring it up the boards when Rielly was standing directly beside the ref wide open. That's actually a play that requires some discussion, I would have thought.
The way it seemed to unfold to me:
(1) Hainsey sees the ref against the boards, and a clear pass to Morgan along the ice.
(2) The ref sees Hainsey about to pass and assumes he'll go along the boards.
(3) Hainsey decides to pass AWAY from the boards at the EXACT SAME TIME that the ref decides to leave the boards to not obstruct the "ring-around-the-boards" pass
(4) Aaaaand so the pass hits the ref. Just bad luck, it was that kind of game.
herman said:Crucialness Key said:Strangelove said:Except the bigger question is why Hainsey was blindly wiring it up the boards when Rielly was standing directly beside the ref wide open. That's actually a play that requires some discussion, I would have thought.
The way it seemed to unfold to me:
(1) Hainsey sees the ref against the boards, and a clear pass to Morgan along the ice.
(2) The ref sees Hainsey about to pass and assumes he'll go along the boards.
(3) Hainsey decides to pass AWAY from the boards at the EXACT SAME TIME that the ref decides to leave the boards to not obstruct the "ring-around-the-boards" pass
(4) Aaaaand so the pass hits the ref. Just bad luck, it was that kind of game.
I am of the coaching philosophy that you really only have to tell a player something in-game if you know he or she doesn't know what they're doing wrong. And in those cases, I'd be more inclined to tell them what to do differently next time, rather than what they did wrong. In this case, there isn't anything to say for an in-game discussion, other than maybe, 'try hitting the ref in a softer spot to deaden the pass for Mo'.
OldTimeHockey said:herman said:Crucialness Key said:Strangelove said:Except the bigger question is why Hainsey was blindly wiring it up the boards when Rielly was standing directly beside the ref wide open. That's actually a play that requires some discussion, I would have thought.
The way it seemed to unfold to me:
(1) Hainsey sees the ref against the boards, and a clear pass to Morgan along the ice.
(2) The ref sees Hainsey about to pass and assumes he'll go along the boards.
(3) Hainsey decides to pass AWAY from the boards at the EXACT SAME TIME that the ref decides to leave the boards to not obstruct the "ring-around-the-boards" pass
(4) Aaaaand so the pass hits the ref. Just bad luck, it was that kind of game.
I am of the coaching philosophy that you really only have to tell a player something in-game if you know he or she doesn't know what they're doing wrong. And in those cases, I'd be more inclined to tell them what to do differently next time, rather than what they did wrong. In this case, there isn't anything to say for an in-game discussion, other than maybe, 'try hitting the ref in a softer spot to deaden the pass for Mo'.
Exactly and Hainsey is saying exactly that. There's no need to tell me not to hit the ref. I'm a bonehead and should of known better.
OldTimeHockey said:herman said:Crucialness Key said:Strangelove said:Except the bigger question is why Hainsey was blindly wiring it up the boards when Rielly was standing directly beside the ref wide open. That's actually a play that requires some discussion, I would have thought.
The way it seemed to unfold to me:
(1) Hainsey sees the ref against the boards, and a clear pass to Morgan along the ice.
(2) The ref sees Hainsey about to pass and assumes he'll go along the boards.
(3) Hainsey decides to pass AWAY from the boards at the EXACT SAME TIME that the ref decides to leave the boards to not obstruct the "ring-around-the-boards" pass
(4) Aaaaand so the pass hits the ref. Just bad luck, it was that kind of game.
I am of the coaching philosophy that you really only have to tell a player something in-game if you know he or she doesn't know what they're doing wrong. And in those cases, I'd be more inclined to tell them what to do differently next time, rather than what they did wrong. In this case, there isn't anything to say for an in-game discussion, other than maybe, 'try hitting the ref in a softer spot to deaden the pass for Mo'.
Exactly and Hainsey is saying exactly that. There's no need to tell me not to hit the ref. I'm a bonehead and should of known better.
L K said:OldTimeHockey said:herman said:Crucialness Key said:Strangelove said:Except the bigger question is why Hainsey was blindly wiring it up the boards when Rielly was standing directly beside the ref wide open. That's actually a play that requires some discussion, I would have thought.
The way it seemed to unfold to me:
(1) Hainsey sees the ref against the boards, and a clear pass to Morgan along the ice.
(2) The ref sees Hainsey about to pass and assumes he'll go along the boards.
(3) Hainsey decides to pass AWAY from the boards at the EXACT SAME TIME that the ref decides to leave the boards to not obstruct the "ring-around-the-boards" pass
(4) Aaaaand so the pass hits the ref. Just bad luck, it was that kind of game.
I am of the coaching philosophy that you really only have to tell a player something in-game if you know he or she doesn't know what they're doing wrong. And in those cases, I'd be more inclined to tell them what to do differently next time, rather than what they did wrong. In this case, there isn't anything to say for an in-game discussion, other than maybe, 'try hitting the ref in a softer spot to deaden the pass for Mo'.
Exactly and Hainsey is saying exactly that. There's no need to tell me not to hit the ref. I'm a bonehead and should of known better.
I think there is a good argument to suggest that Hainsey's default decision of fire the puck out of the zone is a problem though. Hainsey, Polak, and far too often Zaitsev do this. They have a guy they could make a pass to but instead fire the puck along the boards to try and clear it. At best it is a turnover to the opposition in the neutral zone, and at worst it gets stopped at the blueline and its a change of possession in the defensive zone.
herman said:Frank E said:So I looked at the roster of the current Solar Bears:
http://orlandosolarbearshockey.com/team/roster/
Is Dzierkals and Piccinich the only Leaf draft picks on that team?
The players you've identified are correct. That grammar ain't right though.
L K said:I think there is a good argument to suggest that Hainsey's default decision of fire the puck out of the zone is a problem though. Hainsey, Polak, and far too often Zaitsev do this. They have a guy they could make a pass to but instead fire the puck along the boards to try and clear it. At best it is a turnover to the opposition in the neutral zone, and at worst it gets stopped at the blueline and its a change of possession in the defensive zone.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:herman said:Frank E said:So I looked at the roster of the current Solar Bears:
http://orlandosolarbearshockey.com/team/roster/
Is Dzierkals and Piccinich the only Leaf draft picks on that team?
The players you've identified are correct. That grammar ain't right though.
Not true. Frank was engaging in a rhetorical device known as an "implied ellipsis," which means that you?if you only had offered your full attentiveness as a reader/listener?should have been able to discern his subconscious utterance by filling in the following omitted words:
"Is [the duo of] Dzierkals and Piccinich [equivalent to the unique set of human individuals that constitutes both severally and in its entirety] the only Leaf draft picks on that team?"
It's all so obvious. Try to get with the program, man.
L K said:I think there is a good argument to suggest that Hainsey's default decision of fire the puck out of the zone is a problem though. Hainsey, Polak, and far too often Zaitsev do this. They have a guy they could make a pass to but instead fire the puck along the boards to try and clear it. At best it is a turnover to the opposition in the neutral zone, and at worst it gets stopped at the blueline and its a change of possession in the defensive zone.