CarltonTheBear said:
Chev-boyar-sky said:
Were we expecting Lupul to play 16 games in our ideal plan? We may not get the same performances next year but we had a bunch of negatives on the offensive side too.
Will Lupul play more than 16 of 48 games, let alone 82? That should be a safe bet and should offset any short comings of Kadri.
Can Grabovski return to a 45-50 pt pace? That would make the offense even better. How about Kuli? Does Frattin make progress? Will a full season of Gardiner playing like the rookie Gardiner help the offense and defense? etc. and on and on...
As to Reimer's tending abilities, he had a good year and played well in the playoffs. The team isn't set yet with UFA's yet to sign, so we may see more defensive help added which will only help Reimer with his job.
This team made the playoffs despite a drop in scoring from some key players (Grabbo, Gardiner) and missing one of their top offensive threats for more than half the season. The fact that Kadri overproduced (though maybe he's just developed and continues to do so next year) doesn't change that.
That's still more of the same from this season though. We're crossing our fingers that hopefully our offence will make up for our short comings defensively. And like you said, that could very well work again. But for a coaching system that apparently focuses on defence-first hockey, that's kind of absurd.
Looking at some of those what-ifs though a little more closely, I'm not sure we can bank on Lupul playing a full season yet. Injuries have followed him pretty closely the past few years. As for whether or not Grabbo (and Kulemin goes hand-in-hand here) can regain his scoring touch, that likely depends a lot on how Carlyle is going to play them. It doesn't look like they'll be taken out of their checking roles any time soon, so we might have to get used to what we got this season out of them.
Some of you might have picked up on this recently, but it's not the team/roster that I have a problem with. There's plenty of offence throughout our forward lines, we have a pretty mobile defence, and a goalie that could potentially continue to make some pretty big saves. It's kind of funny. Wilson coached a run and gun style with a roster that wasn't at all capable of doing so. Carlyle's doing the exact opposite in my opinion.
Lupul playing more than 32 games over an 82 game season is a pretty safe bet IMO.
As to the difference in rosters vs. coaches, I'd say the teams aren't vastly different (at least in Wilson's final season vs. Carlyle's first)
Wilson had: Lombardi, Brown, Schenn, Steckel, Connolly, Crabb, Frattin (for more games), Gardiner (for more games)
Carlyle had: JVR, McClement, Komarov, Kostka, Fraser, McLaren, Franson, and the reappearance of Orr
The constant parts of Bozak, Lupul, Kessel, Phaneuf, Liles etc. were available to both.
IMO Ron Wilson tried to play a run and gun style with a team that probably could've hacked it if they hadn't been so horrible defensively, which also led to poorer goaltending (higher % shots, rebounds etc.).
Carlyle, after Wilson's offensive system, has tried to make the forwards more defensively responsible. It looked as if it was working to me with Kessel, Kulemin, McClement and some others. Also I'm not sure the names he has are more "run and gun" types than what Wilson had but that's just me.
Here are GF vs. GA stats from Wilson's last 4 seasons and Carlyle's 1st:
Wilson Carlyle
2008-09: GF 250 GA 293 2012-13: GF 145 GA 133
2009-10: GF 214 GA 267
2010-11: GF 218 GA 251
2011-12: GF 231 GA 264
Prorated over 82 games that's: GF 247 GA 227
So he basically reproduces Wilson's best offensive season playing "run and gun", and has by far the best GA numbers. Best of both worlds really but he gets no credit.
I find that interesting if nothing else.
Edit: You have to go all the way back to 2003-04 (15th) to find a team that finished better than 18th out of 30 teams (this years result) in GA. The next closest team finished 21st (05-06) and no other team finished better than 25th.