Zee said:
Potvin29 said:
L K said:
bustaheims said:
Sarge said:
What message does that send to the other 21 guys on the roster?
That they need to take a long look at themselves and realize that goaltending isn't the only reason why this team has been struggling.
Yeah, not sure what message the 21-24 skaters on the team deserve to receive. Should Gus have been glaring up at the rafters in Burke's direction when half the 3rd period was Phaneuf falling over and giving New Jersey odd-man rushes? How about when everyone looked at Lombardi for being a major goat in the Vancouver game. and on and on and on.
Gus' night last night was pretty prototypical of the Leafs' season. Play great for stretches. Be fine for other stretches and then play absymally out of nowhere.
Even our best line has been an abomination in the defensive zone all year. If they aren't skating with speed through the neutral zone and creating chances, they are being hemmed in the defensive zone and running around incapable of getting hold of the puck.
But goaltending is probably the one position on the ice that will likely have the greatest impact on the team, for better or for worse. The CuJo/Belfour years saw great goaltending make the teams look better than they probably were, so much so that a couple different bounces here or there and they would have been in the Cup finals.
It's obviously never solely the goalie's fault, but the position is also one that, rightly or wrongly, carries an inordinate amount of pressure on it for its singular ability to affect the outcome of the game.
Wanting much better goaltending does not mean I'm absolving the rest of the team of their role in it, it just means I think we need better goaltending for the team to become consistent.
Yes, look no further than the Leafs of last season. From Oct-Dec the Leafs were brutal, bad defensive zone coverage yadda yadda, then Reimer comes in Jan, all is well because he plays amazing and consistently puts up .922 save % numbers. Did the Leafs suddenly improve defensively from Jan on or did they suddenly have confidence in the goalie's ability to save a mistake?
Put it this way, if your team makes 10 glaring defensive errors in a game, and the goalie lets in 1 of those errors but bails you out 9 other times, people will forget the errors and praise the goalie for playing a great game.
If on those same 10 errors the goalie lets in 3, well not so good and suddenly people start saying the defensive zone coverage isn't good enough.
It all snowballs, when the goalie plays well the team relaxes and can play their game. When you're not worried about making a mistake you tend to make fewer of them. It all starts in net for better or worse and the finger is pointed squarely on BOTH Reimer and Gustavsson right now. They need to be better.
Absolutely, and nowhere have I said that Reimer and Gus have been acceptable in net. The Leafs will not make the playoffs if their goaltending doesn't improve. I only take issue with the notion that the players in front of Gus have been let down by the goaltending any more than the goaltenders have been let down by the play in front of them. Certainly at least to the point that the players are in a position to be pointing fingers and blaming the goaltending for their woes.
Any team that is relying on their goaltending to stop 9 out of 10 screwups, isn't good enough up front to do anything. The fact that the Leafs aren't getting saves on 9 of their 10 screwups a night means that the team isn't going to crawl anywhere beyond mediocre, but it hardly is a marker of a team being held back by their goaltending because a good team isn't relying on 10 defensive zone screwups a night.
It's a very big two-way street. The team that played well last year down the stretch with Reimer did a much better job of keeping shots to the outside, limited bad turnovers and played a much better two-way game than the team that was playing earlier in the year...much in the same way that the team that came out flying in January was a much better team than we have seen in February. Some of it is goaltending, but a good portion of the better play in January was the Leafs weren't committing so many bad turnovers and relying on their goaltender to bail them out every 30 seconds to keep them in a game.
The Leafs forwards deserved better last night than they received from Gustavsson. The goaltenders on many a night have deserved a better defensive effort too.
Regardless, the defensive zone coverage, the clearance of pucks and the goaltending need to be better if the Leafs have any aspirations to be in the postseason next year.