RedLeaf said:
L K said:
RedLeaf said:
Strangelove said:
CarltonTheBear said:
Strangelove said:
It's also a massive stretch that he hasn't been that bad, if you want to get pedantic.
Aside from Montreal I don't think he cost the team any wins.
"Costing the team wins" is sort of a nebulous concept. I get what you mean. But I don't think we should underestimate the impact that his weak first period play has on the team's ability to play well for the rest of the night. He literally let in one of the first shots against in all four games he started, and proceeded to hang on, in mediocre fashion, for the rest of the game, leaving the team with an uphill battle. So whether or not he's "costing the team wins", he's a huge part of the problem right now.
Agreed. We can't underestimate the psychological impact he has on the rest of the team when he continues to give up weak goals in important games, and creates a mountain to climb game after game.
How about when the goaltender is expected to make an excessive amount of saves in the 1st period because they team doesn't come prepared to play most nights. It honestly goes both ways. This team feasted on absurdly competent goaltending for 2/3 of the year. The second it faltered the team did absolutely nothing to change how they played to make up for it. The goaltending has compensated for terrible positional player performance far more than the other way around.
Blaming Reimer for the team falling apart down the stretch is like blaming the guy who sticks his finger in the dam for not maintaining the integrity of the structure.
But we have another guy who 'has' been able to hold the dam together with one finger. Poor structure and all.
Post Olympics:
Bernier - 30/35 (.857), 26/30 (.867), 35/37 (.946), 28/31 (.903), 43/44 (.977), 8/10 (.800)
Overall - .909 SV%
AVG # Shots - 35.1
Reimer - 31/33 (.939), 42/48 (.875), 31/31 (1.00), 29/32 (.906), 28/31 (.903), 25/30 (.833), 32/36 (.889)
Overall - .905 SV%
AVG # Shots - 36.2
The difference between Reimer and Bernier's SV% is one goal. The Leafs have scored 14 goals with Reimer in net over 6 2/3 hockey games (2.10 Goals/Game). With Bernier they have scored 18 goals over 5 1/3 (3.38 Goals/Game). So Reimer gives up one more goal over a 6 game period than Bernier has been performing...and the Leafs have given scored more than a goal less PER GAME with Reimer in net.
The forwards have played like garbage. Maybe it's a lack of confidence in Reimer, but that's pretty bunk if this team is in a playoff battle and plays crap defense and offense and the blame gets lain at the feet of the goaltender when the team in front of him quits playing remotely close to quality hockey. You aren't going to win very many games scoring 2 goals a night.
EDIT: And that isn't to say that Reimer isn't part of the problem. He's not making enough saves for the team to win, and some of those early goals really do hurt the team. But this is a top down problem.
1) The coach can't get the team motivated to play hard right from puck drop. He can't get the team to hold leads in the 3rd period. He can't implement a system that doesn't have the team playing 60% of the game in their own zone. They get horribly outplayed/outshot/outscored in 2 out of 3 periods this year. They are historically bad at puck possession. They are historically bad at giving up shots. Their special teams have fallen apart completely with a terrible PK and a PP that is still on the season good but is continuing a slow decline to mediocrity.
2) The forwards suck at defensive zone coverage. They turn the puck over a lot and are out of position constantly. Outside of the Kessel line, they really haven't shown an ability to stay consistent as a group.
3) The defense have been downright terrible in their own zone. Leaving guys wide open in the slot. Not taking their man. Slow to adjust to speed.
4) The goalies aren't providing top 10 goaltending anymore
It's a massive collection of things that are going wrong and the longer Carlyle has been in place, the worse they have gotten. You either torch the core of this team to fix the problem, or you gamble that the coach has just been a disaster at managing the tools that he was given.
One way or another a big change is going to have to take place in the offseason.