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It's not just one bad game. We've seen this "October Andersen" play out the first 2 seasons and now maybe again this year. If he could start the season on time it would help the Leafs get off to a good start. Leafs deserved to win tonight but shoddy goaltending was the differenceZanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Hmmm missed tonight's game and "watched" it through the GDT. One bad game and Andersen is garbage, I see.
Sounds like the whole team needs to wake up and understand that Bettman has been only too successful in making it a parity league.
Actually it is just one bad game THIS SEASON. Shoddy goaltending or not the TEAM doesn't look that good to me. Out of sync right now trying to find their way. It'll come.Zee said:It's not just one bad game. We've seen this "October Andersen" play out the first 2 seasons and now maybe again this year. If he could start the season on time it would help the Leafs get off to a good start. Leafs deserved to win tonight but shoddy goaltending was the differenceZanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Hmmm missed tonight's game and "watched" it through the GDT. One bad game and Andersen is garbage, I see.
Sounds like the whole team needs to wake up and understand that Bettman has been only too successful in making it a parity league.
OldTimeHockey said:I didn't watch the game but did watch the 6 minute replay. I'd say that goaltending can only been looked at on two of those goals, with only one of those two not involving a defensive breakdown.
It's early in the season but the trend of coughing up the puck repeatedly in their own zone needs to be stopped as soon as possible.
I mean any shot on goal any team allows you can call a "defensive breakdown". If teams played perfect defense there would be 0 shots on net. Fact is Leafs allowed only 23 shots and Andersen gave up 4 (on the first 17 mind you). The chances the Sens scored on weren't exactly 10 bell chances either. He's gotta stop at least 3 of those 4Frycer14 said:OldTimeHockey said:I didn't watch the game but did watch the 6 minute replay. I'd say that goaltending can only been looked at on two of those goals, with only one of those two not involving a defensive breakdown.
It's early in the season but the trend of coughing up the puck repeatedly in their own zone needs to be stopped as soon as possible.
Yep, agreed. I think the problem seems to be that fans are so used to Andersen bailing the D out of bad decisions, that when he doesn't do it, it's his fault.
I still maintain that this D group is being tasked with plays that it doesn't have the talent to execute. None of them are especially big and strong, so they can't break up the cycle, and their constantly getting on the wrong side of body position, so when they do finally get a chance to transition it, they're gassed. None of them are particularly fast, save Reilly. And none of them have much vision in terms of possession type decisions in their own end save Gardiner, and he occasionally has his off nights as well.
I'd like to see them acknowledge this, and return to a simpler getting the puck out of the zone as quickly as possible rather than trying to make elite plays as a group. Once the opposition has the puck in the Leafs' end, they're having a hell of a time trying to get it back.
I don't agree on what you think a good scoring chance is. So 2 breakaways and a Chabot walking in putting in his own rebound aren't 10 bell chances? I'll give you he didn't look great but those 3 are 10 bellers all day and were created by a defensive lapse of the team.Zee said:I mean any shot on goal any team allows you can call a "defensive breakdown". If teams played perfect defense there would be 0 shots on net. Fact is Leafs allowed only 23 shots and Andersen gave up 4 (on the first 17 mind you). The chances the Sens scored on weren't exactly 10 bell chances either. He's gotta stop at least 3 of those 4Frycer14 said:OldTimeHockey said:I didn't watch the game but did watch the 6 minute replay. I'd say that goaltending can only been looked at on two of those goals, with only one of those two not involving a defensive breakdown.
It's early in the season but the trend of coughing up the puck repeatedly in their own zone needs to be stopped as soon as possible.
Yep, agreed. I think the problem seems to be that fans are so used to Andersen bailing the D out of bad decisions, that when he doesn't do it, it's his fault.
I still maintain that this D group is being tasked with plays that it doesn't have the talent to execute. None of them are especially big and strong, so they can't break up the cycle, and their constantly getting on the wrong side of body position, so when they do finally get a chance to transition it, they're gassed. None of them are particularly fast, save Reilly. And none of them have much vision in terms of possession type decisions in their own end save Gardiner, and he occasionally has his off nights as well.
I'd like to see them acknowledge this, and return to a simpler getting the puck out of the zone as quickly as possible rather than trying to make elite plays as a group. Once the opposition has the puck in the Leafs' end, they're having a hell of a time trying to get it back.
Zee said:I mean any shot on goal any team allows you can call a "defensive breakdown".
Zee said:Even when Oz got walked, the shot wasn't dangerous, it went right under Andersen's arm. That's a shot that has to be stopped. 3 of 4 goals were on Freddie. At what point do you expect him to make a save?
Yeah one bad goal on Craig Anderson, 3 bad goals on Freddie, Leafs win this game if the goalies were switchedFrycer14 said:Zee said:Even when Oz got walked, the shot wasn't dangerous, it went right under Andersen's arm. That's a shot that has to be stopped. 3 of 4 goals were on Freddie. At what point do you expect him to make a save?
Heh, sometimes shots find holes, and it has nothing to do with how the goalie played the situation. Allowing high-danger chances increases that possibility.
If, say Matthews had scored the same way on Anderson, we'd all be going nuts about how awesome Matthews is, not how Anderson botched it.
This was somewhat similar to last season iirc...OldTimeHockey said:I didn't watch the game but did watch the 6 minute replay. I'd say that goaltending can only been looked at on two of those goals, with only one of those two not involving a defensive breakdown.
It's early in the season but the trend of coughing up the puck repeatedly in their own zone needs to be stopped as soon as possible.
Zee said:I mean any shot on goal any team allows you can call a "defensive breakdown". If teams played perfect defense there would be 0 shots on net. Fact is Leafs allowed only 23 shots and Andersen gave up 4 (on the first 17 mind you). The chances the Sens scored on weren't exactly 10 bell chances either. He's gotta stop at least 3 of those 4Frycer14 said:OldTimeHockey said:I didn't watch the game but did watch the 6 minute replay. I'd say that goaltending can only been looked at on two of those goals, with only one of those two not involving a defensive breakdown.
It's early in the season but the trend of coughing up the puck repeatedly in their own zone needs to be stopped as soon as possible.
Yep, agreed. I think the problem seems to be that fans are so used to Andersen bailing the D out of bad decisions, that when he doesn't do it, it's his fault.
I still maintain that this D group is being tasked with plays that it doesn't have the talent to execute. None of them are especially big and strong, so they can't break up the cycle, and their constantly getting on the wrong side of body position, so when they do finally get a chance to transition it, they're gassed. None of them are particularly fast, save Reilly. And none of them have much vision in terms of possession type decisions in their own end save Gardiner, and he occasionally has his off nights as well.
I'd like to see them acknowledge this, and return to a simpler getting the puck out of the zone as quickly as possible rather than trying to make elite plays as a group. Once the opposition has the puck in the Leafs' end, they're having a hell of a time trying to get it back.