Nik the Trik said:
Yes, that was a joke. Lighten up, Francis.
You are posting in written word without inflection, and I don't know you from a hole in the ground. Use an emoticon. Just one please. You don't need to overdo it, I'll pick it up from one.
Significantly Insignificant said:
B) Directing a product means planning what features go in when and what defects need to be fixed at what time, and figuring out the who is going to work on the specific pieces of the product.
Nik the Trik said:
Ok, then, no. I think my analogy is far more apt than yours.
Yes because I know a lot of coaches who don't decide who to put in the roster or not to put in a roster, or who to play where or when. I mean most of them just show up and look pretty behind the bench
<- notice the emoticon. Take it for what you will. It's not that funny of a joke. The emoticon is not provided to show the amount of laughter that I expect one to take from my comment, but rather that my comment should be taken lightheartedly.
Nik the Trik said:
There's a lot to unpack here so I'll try to do it in point by point form. First, saying that you're overrating the impact of a coach isn't saying the coach has no impact. Just a drastically less important one than you're saying they have. Secondly, I don't know about Tortorella. Third, the issue is one of marginal value. So, yes, Babcock might have a significant edge over someone who's so fundamentally stupid and self-defeating that they would move Kessel to a position he's never played as a professional in his late twenties. That's a bit of a straw man though because nobody like that would ever be hired to coach a NHL team. Babcock's value isn't in his being better than a coach who would make his players play without sticks, either.
Most guys who are going to be hired for a NHL job are good coaches. The difference between someone like Babcock and someone like Byslma or Boucher is a marginal one.
Sorry your pressed for time. You probably won't like this post either then.
If you are the best general in the world and you only have 100 soldiers, you are going to lose to the general that has 10000, regardless of the skill of that opposing general.
If you are the best general in the world, and you have 10000 soldiers, and you are going against a general that has 10000 soldiers, and those soldiers are of all equal skill level, then the better general is probably going to win ( I will explain the probably below ).
If you are the best general in the world and you have 10000 soldiers and you are going against a general who has 10000 soldiers, and they are a little bit better than you, the better general still may win and it because of their choices, and combat tatics.
If you are the best general in the world, and you have the 10000 best soldiers in the world, then you are probably going to win against a slightly less quality of general with slightly less quality of 10000 soldiers.
The probably is because there is no accounting for luck, karma, cosmic fate, what have you.
So now to apply that to the NHL. And I am pulling these distributions out of a hat, just for time sake.
Lets say there are 6 upper echelon teams, 18 middle of the pack teams and 6 teams that are really bad.
When the 6 upper echelon teams play the 6 bad teams, then the upper echelon team is probably going to win. Injuries and luck play a factor of course. I agree, not amount of coaching is going to increase the chances of the bad team winning over the good team. I would say that it may improve the optics of the loss. For example rather than getting blown out 6-0, if your coach is smart, he may implement a plan that limits that to 3 - 0. But the loss is still a loss.
When the 18 middle of the pack teams play the 6 bottom place teams, they are more likely going to win, but there is a chance that the bottom place team may win. Again luck and injuries play a factor. Can the coach come up with a game plan that gives his team a better chance to win? Yes, I think he can. Do I think that Babcock has a better skill of coming up with game plans than say Boucher or Hitchcock. Yes I think he does.
This brings us to the final set, of when the 6 bottom place teams play one another. So here, you can't really handicap it. The players on both teams become a wash. Both teams will have strengths and weaknesses. It will come down to player utilization and how the strengths of a team are used and the weaknesses of the other team are exploited. I think Babcock has an edge in this category over Boucher and Hitchcock as well.
My issue with you saying that a coach has very little to no impact is that you don't have proof to back that up, and I agree that I have no conclusive proof to support my theory otherwise. If Babcock had been in St. Louis, would the have made it to the second round? Would they have one the cup? Would they have missed the playoffs? Your position seems to be that the exact same thing would have occured. All other factors staying the same, what would have happened? If it's not exactly the same then the coach has an impact. And yes, missing the playoffs vs making them, and making the second round rather than losing in the first in my mind is a big difference in impact brought about by changing one piece on the team.
This is why I have to present my line of thinking and say "This is what makes one coach better than another and why I think they can have an impact of the game". It frustrates me that you insistence that this point of view is uneducated, silly, rooted in fantasy, and obviously proposed by someone who has never watched a game of hockey in his life when you have no conclusive proof to back it and it's based on your opinion of how hockey games are won. It's not what you are saying, it's how you are saying it.
I think Babcock is a better coach that Boucher or Hitchcock because of what I have been told. That's it, that's all I got. I've never met the man. People in papers, on the radio and the T.V. have presented me with examples of why he is a great coach. Whether it's the way that he eliminated Stamkos from the first round, the Nashville example I posted, the examples of how he delegates work to his assistants and communicates with the players so that they know their roles and what they are supposed to do on the ice. I have been told that other coaches don't do those things as well as Babcock, and that those things matter when it comes to playing the game of hockey, which in my mind means that it can have an impact on the outcome of the game.