It's hard to understand how/why Rielly is so well regarded by so many Leaf fans, his d has always been questioned and his offensive numbers have usually been good, he has never been the author of his success, he more benefitted from TO's improved team rather than having been a catalyst of TO's improvement. TO lost against Vanc., Rielly did little to influence the game and he makes more than Nylander who I think is TO's 2nd best player. However Rielly did do something that surprised me, he grabbed the puck stopped behind the opposition's net and attempted a pass. The normal Rielly would have skated around the net and blind passed the puck into traffic, basically hoping a Leaf would get it. I think that Timmins could very rapidly replace Rielly offensively and his d probably wouldn't be significantly less than what Rielly can do, now.
Lilly seems to be following in the Rielly exhalation by the press/announcers. He doesn't even have Rielly offensive ability and his d might be marginally better than Rielly. Rielly is -5, Lilly +24, these results might actually suggest that one is better positioned in the pecking order than the other, maybe both should be 2nd pairing and that might be great if they can actually be superior as 2nd pairing d-men but I think the level of forward support decreases from the 3rd line to the 2nd and from the 2nd line to the 1st. Rielly's level of d isn't 1st pairing quality but on TO he's being paid like he's a low level 1st pairing d-man, he isn't, he's a need for shelter offensive d-man or maybe a borderline 2nd pairing d-man with offensive capabilities. Even offensively Rielly leaves us wanting more, if he's deployed against the opposition's 2nd or 3rd lines, his ability to dominate doesn't resonate, he normally continues to be the same defensively challenged d-man, his offense becomes pretty well nonexistent.
I think that if TO doesn't do well in the playoffs again this year Rielly needs to go, he's a part of the core, the same core that has come up short year after year. Rielly has all the tools to be a far better d-man but at 28 I doubt he will ever be able to put them together into making him at least be as valuable as he's being paid.
I find it odd that the same fans that loved to hate Engvall were at the same time willing to die on a hill to support Rielly even tho Rielly was much the same type of player, actually I think Engvall was more valuable as he wasn't overpaid.
Lilly seems to be following in the Rielly exhalation by the press/announcers. He doesn't even have Rielly offensive ability and his d might be marginally better than Rielly. Rielly is -5, Lilly +24, these results might actually suggest that one is better positioned in the pecking order than the other, maybe both should be 2nd pairing and that might be great if they can actually be superior as 2nd pairing d-men but I think the level of forward support decreases from the 3rd line to the 2nd and from the 2nd line to the 1st. Rielly's level of d isn't 1st pairing quality but on TO he's being paid like he's a low level 1st pairing d-man, he isn't, he's a need for shelter offensive d-man or maybe a borderline 2nd pairing d-man with offensive capabilities. Even offensively Rielly leaves us wanting more, if he's deployed against the opposition's 2nd or 3rd lines, his ability to dominate doesn't resonate, he normally continues to be the same defensively challenged d-man, his offense becomes pretty well nonexistent.
I think that if TO doesn't do well in the playoffs again this year Rielly needs to go, he's a part of the core, the same core that has come up short year after year. Rielly has all the tools to be a far better d-man but at 28 I doubt he will ever be able to put them together into making him at least be as valuable as he's being paid.
I find it odd that the same fans that loved to hate Engvall were at the same time willing to die on a hill to support Rielly even tho Rielly was much the same type of player, actually I think Engvall was more valuable as he wasn't overpaid.