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Carlyle Extended/Randy's Revenge

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tusket said:
Bookmark this comment:
The Leafs will be much improved next season. I think the new assistant
(special) team coaches they bring in will really help.

Ah, optimism, what it can do!  :)
 
princedpw said:
Mostar said:
2badknees said:
I don't see why folks here should care if he got an extension, even if they don't like him. It means nothing. MLSE can let him go after training camp. It isn't my money, and it isn't cap money.

If a top coach is available at some time in the future, and he has a number of options, I'm sure he'll consider how professionally the last guy was treated by each organization. Hence the extension. Good move by whoever is running the team, I can't tell anymore.

I agree. I'm surprised but not terrified. This is easier to fix than a bad player contract

Well, we've got several of those too.

That's what terrifies me.
 
bustaheims said:
Nik the Trik said:
It's a poor carpenter that blames his tools but it's a reasonable carpenter who knows there's only so much you can do with plywood.

A reasonable carpenter looks at the tools and supplies available to him, and doesn't try to build a bomb shelter when what he's presented with is clearly meant for a tree house.

A blind carpenter picked up his hammer and saw.
 
Nik the Trik said:
L K said:
Well sure.  And a good carpenter would recognize that what he was doing with plywood isn't appropriate for plywood and might consider adjusting his approach.

Well, as someone who knows a thing or two about that sort of thing I don't think that's true. If Carlyle was hired to build a champion but doesn't have the pieces for a champion, should he really decide that what he needs to do is mold the team to mediocrity? Or should he try to mold the team to the championship model that's worked for him and, when it fails, begin to address the more pressing issue of the lack of talent on the team?

I'd agree with you, I guess, if I really was disappointed that the Leafs didn't squeeze into one of the Wild Card spots or saw the fact that they're may not squeeze into that spot next year as being really disheartening. I will genuinely take spectacular failure over that.

My big issue is more that it was lines 1 through 4 that had similar issues with getting the puck out of the defensive zone and maintaining puck control in the offensive one.  I agree that the goal shouldn't be a team that barely squeezes into the wildcard spot so bigger changes to roster need to be made regardless of who is running the show. 

Where I have a problem is that Carlyle saying it's the roster that's wrong and not me, ignores the fact that he couldn't do anything with a very good Anaheim team right before he came to Toronto.  That Anaheim team had the exact same issues with puck possession and getting hemmed in their own zone.  I mean if Carlyle had won anything recently I would agree that what worked in the past should be applied, but honestly, we are talking about a guy with 1 playoff series win in the last 8 years.  That isn't exactly my idea of a system of success any more than the Leafs playing run and gun with their head up their rear end in the defensive zone.

The roster needs big changes I just personally think one of those changes should be the coach who ran that ship.  And I understand that the Leafs have a warchest that can handle firing guys with contract years left, but it just strikes me a funny that Randy is such a great coach but you need to justify his existence in the organization to sell him to your players?  I'm just having a hard time rationalizing that argument by Nonis/Shanahan.  Did the Blues tune Hitchcock out this year because he was in the last year of his contract?  Is Detroit going to miss the playoffs next year because Babcock is in his last year of his contract?
 
Simmon's take...

http://www.torontosun.com/2014/05/08/maple-leafs-feel-theres-still-life-in-randy-carlyle-yet
 
So I am dumbfounded. Not only did he not get fired, but received an extention. Only in Toronto can a coach be below average at his job and keep it. Maybe we can bring Muller in to work on our defensive game and special teams.
 
RedLeaf said:
Simmon's take...

http://www.torontosun.com/2014/05/08/maple-leafs-feel-theres-still-life-in-randy-carlyle-yet

Love how Simmons doesn't see the irony of bringing up Getzlaf. 

"Two years ago, Ryan Getzlaf had a dreadful NHL season, scoring 11 goals, looking nothing like the star he was and the star he is now.
And just about everybody thought he was done as a big-time player."


Getzlaf looked "done" while playing under Carlyle.  Amazing that once Carlyle was gone he suddenly became great again.
 
Zee said:
RedLeaf said:
Simmon's take...

http://www.torontosun.com/2014/05/08/maple-leafs-feel-theres-still-life-in-randy-carlyle-yet

Love how Simmons doesn't see the irony of bringing up Getzlaf. 

"Two years ago, Ryan Getzlaf had a dreadful NHL season, scoring 11 goals, looking nothing like the star he was and the star he is now.
And just about everybody thought he was done as a big-time player."


Getzlaf looked "done" while playing under Carlyle.  Amazing that once Carlyle was gone he suddenly became great again.

The irony of the beginning to that article is too good.  Ironically (in the 'like rain on your wedding day' sense) is that's also where I stopped reading.
 
Potvin29 said:
Zee said:
RedLeaf said:
Simmon's take...

http://www.torontosun.com/2014/05/08/maple-leafs-feel-theres-still-life-in-randy-carlyle-yet

Love how Simmons doesn't see the irony of bringing up Getzlaf. 

"Two years ago, Ryan Getzlaf had a dreadful NHL season, scoring 11 goals, looking nothing like the star he was and the star he is now.
And just about everybody thought he was done as a big-time player."


Getzlaf looked "done" while playing under Carlyle.  Amazing that once Carlyle was gone he suddenly became great again.

The irony of the beginning to that article is too good.  Ironically (in the 'like rain on your wedding day' sense) is that's also where I stopped reading.

It's like ten thousand spoons when all you need is a knife!
 
I think the Leafs made the right move in all respects. There would have been no discussion at all about a coaching change had the Leafs made the playoffs. I think the Bernier injury was the biggest factor in that, but I am glad things turned out as they did because I would have preferred some changes in Carlyle's coaching staff. I have posted to that effect here beforehand. Not to say these guys were terrible coaches or anything like that, but I just think the bench needs more actual NHL experience behind the bench, guys who played the game - like Carlyle. A Larry Robinson type to coach the defence and penalty kill. An Adam Oates type to coach the offensive and power play. And, a face-off specialist like a Mike Peca or someone like that. People who had great success at that they do at the highest level. I think young players will really learn and respect guys who have been there - done that.
 
"They love Jonathan Bernier, the goaltender, but they would love him more if he played more games. They love the first line of Phil Kessel, Tyler Bozak and James van Riemsdyk, which gave fits to opposition coaches. They love the development of the young defenders, Morgan Rielly and Jake Gardiner. That?s about where the love ends for now."

They don't love Phaneuf? Didn't Nonis just sign him for 7x$7M?
 
This instills confidence like no contract extension can:

?It was mind-boggling to us,? Carlyle said at one point of the Leafs woeful penalty kill, one of three times he referenced a boggled mind during the conference call. ?We had pretty much the same personnel and we couldn?t find a way to stop the opposition?s power play on a regular rate. Those were the things that were confusing and mind-boggling to a coaching staff.?

That's from Mirtle's recap of the extension, and I particularly like this one:

What it speaks to, though, is the fact that Randy Carlyle the myth continues to overshadow Randy Carlyle the reality for Toronto?s decision makers, even with new president Brendan Shanahan on board with a fresh set of eyes.

Link: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/leafs-vote-of-confidence-for-head-coach-carlyle-is-mind-boggling/article18578098/
 
The more I think of it Id rather Carlyle back with new assistants than bring in what is truly out there right now. The extension really doesnt mean much if the team gets out of the gate horribly. After Wilson had been extended around Christmas that year he was fired I beleive.. Extension doesnt always mean job sercurity..
 
Potvin29 said:
?It was mind-boggling to us,? Carlyle said at one point of the Leafs woeful penalty kill, one of three times he referenced a boggled mind during the conference call. ?We had pretty much the same personnel and we couldn?t find a way to stop the opposition?s power play on a regular rate. Those were the things that were confusing and mind-boggling to a coaching staff.?

I love how this is so hard to figure out. They never adjusted their PK to defend against the new 1-3-1 PP formation that basically the entire league (including the Leafs) adopted this season.
 
L K said:
Where I have a problem is that Carlyle saying it's the roster that's wrong and not me, ignores the fact that he couldn't do anything with a very good Anaheim team right before he came to Toronto.  That Anaheim team had the exact same issues with puck possession and getting hemmed in their own zone.  I mean if Carlyle had won anything recently I would agree that what worked in the past should be applied, but honestly, we are talking about a guy with 1 playoff series win in the last 8 years.  That isn't exactly my idea of a system of success any more than the Leafs playing run and gun with their head up their rear end in the defensive zone.

Ok, and I think you're getting at a fair criticism here. If what Carlyle has shown is that the team he's trying to build, the only team he's capable of winning with, is one that looks at lot like the 06-07 Ducks then it's absolutely fair to say that it's pretty unlikely that a team with those precise dimensions is going to be put in place and so the team that the Leafs want may not be a match for Carlyle's style. That's fair. Personally, I think the Leafs were trying to build a team in that mold with a hope that Phaneuf could become a poor man's Pronger, Rielly could grow into a Niedermayer like player, Kessel would be Selanne, Bozak as McDonald and so on.

But in the more specific sense, I don't think Carlyle is wrong when he looks at the fundamental flaws of this team and says it's primarily a matter of personnel. Sure, you can criticize him for not being the best coach for maybe squeezing every point out of a deeply flawed roster but as we agree, that shouldn't be the benchmark.

L K said:
Did the Blues tune Hitchcock out this year because he was in the last year of his contract?

Well, something clearly went wrong near the end there.
 
Potvin29 said:
This instills confidence like no contract extension can:

?It was mind-boggling to us,? Carlyle said at one point of the Leafs woeful penalty kill, one of three times he referenced a boggled mind during the conference call. ?We had pretty much the same personnel and we couldn?t find a way to stop the opposition?s power play on a regular rate. Those were the things that were confusing and mind-boggling to a coaching staff.?

That's from Mirtle's recap of the extension, and I particularly like this one:

What it speaks to, though, is the fact that Randy Carlyle the myth continues to overshadow Randy Carlyle the reality for Toronto?s decision makers, even with new president Brendan Shanahan on board with a fresh set of eyes.

Link: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/leafs-vote-of-confidence-for-head-coach-carlyle-is-mind-boggling/article18578098/

I think the quote can be perceived as more innocent than it is being made out to be.  I mean I've had plenty of situations where I'm working and people that should be getting better aren't.  The message from that to me however is to change my management plan.  I don't think Carlyle does that.  And that ultimately will be my problem with stubborn old coaches.  If you don't adapt the game passes you by.  How you can look at the Leafs of the last two years and say they were anything more than a top line and good goaltending is absurd.  To praise the coach because the Leafs have good goaltending.....
 
CarltonTheBear said:
Potvin29 said:
?It was mind-boggling to us,? Carlyle said at one point of the Leafs woeful penalty kill, one of three times he referenced a boggled mind during the conference call. ?We had pretty much the same personnel and we couldn?t find a way to stop the opposition?s power play on a regular rate. Those were the things that were confusing and mind-boggling to a coaching staff.?

I love how this is so hard to figure out. They never adjusted their PK to defend against the new 1-3-1 PP formation that basically the entire league (including the Leafs) adopted this season.

Yeah I think that was the conclusion from Gus Katsoros (I think) who looked at why Chicago and Toronto's PK both fell so much from the shortened season.  The Leafs were giving up a ton more shots against on the PK than the previous season, and I think he discussed the league-wide adoption of the 1-3-1 as a major contributing factor.
 
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