Nik Bethune said:Bates said:Gotta go a long ways back now to see that success.
I'm referring to his success with the Leafs.
We define success differently then.
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Nik Bethune said:Bates said:Gotta go a long ways back now to see that success.
I'm referring to his success with the Leafs.
Nik Bethune said:Hobbes said:I'm not terribly optimistic at the chances of us seeing a Bluesian type of turn-around, but at this point I'd settle for some half-decent up-tempo hockey with pace, and that's Keefe's MO so if nothing else at least it ought to be watchable.
I'm pretty bummed out that the lesson people took from the Blues seems to be "Fire a coach mid-season and anyone can win the cup!" and not "In the modern era of parity, no team is good enough to overcome bad goaltending and no team is bad enough to stink with good goaltending".
Zee said:Dappleganger said:Zee said:In what world does a GM get 18 months, doesn?t get to hire his own coach and gets fired?Dappleganger said:Turn it around all they want and all we'll get is a team that makes the playoffs, we are not a Stanley Cup team. Dubas is building a fast skilled team with zero toughness, no matter what that will never win a cup. Dubas must go!!4EVRLEAFAN said:Should have fired Dubas as well
Yep.
As in should have, obviously it would have been unorthodox for Dubas to be fired as well.
I wouldn't have hired Dubas, I would have gone with Hunter.
His 3 big re-signings were not "wins". He bungled the back up goalie situation. Both defensemen trades this summer were big misses. I have reasons why i have doubt in Dubas' ability.
As astray Babcock went in his performance, Dubas has been just as culpable.
Contracts aside you?re basing this on the teams and players performance the first 23 games. If they turn it around and look good are the d signings and goalie situation better? Winning fixes a lot of things.
rBates said:Nik Bethune said:CarltonTheBear said:I feel like this was more of a sign that Dubas wanted to do this in the offseason but Shanny blocked it.
Could be. I still don't think Babcock is really what's wrong with the team though and I think his past success earned him more than this.
Gotta go a long ways back now to see that success.
Hobbes said:That's the lottery principle isn't it? Despite the staggering odds against it, millions of people still sink money into lotteries week after week on the flawed logic that "someone's got to win so it might as well be me"
Yes but it will be meHobbes said:Nik Bethune said:Hobbes said:I'm not terribly optimistic at the chances of us seeing a Bluesian type of turn-around, but at this point I'd settle for some half-decent up-tempo hockey with pace, and that's Keefe's MO so if nothing else at least it ought to be watchable.
I'm pretty bummed out that the lesson people took from the Blues seems to be "Fire a coach mid-season and anyone can win the cup!" and not "In the modern era of parity, no team is good enough to overcome bad goaltending and no team is bad enough to stink with good goaltending".
That's the lottery principle isn't it? Despite the staggering odds against it, millions of people still sink money into lotteries week after week on the flawed logic that "someone's got to win so it might as well be me"
Staggering odds?? Crap, I need to rethink...Hobbes said:Nik Bethune said:Hobbes said:I'm not terribly optimistic at the chances of us seeing a Bluesian type of turn-around, but at this point I'd settle for some half-decent up-tempo hockey with pace, and that's Keefe's MO so if nothing else at least it ought to be watchable.
I'm pretty bummed out that the lesson people took from the Blues seems to be "Fire a coach mid-season and anyone can win the cup!" and not "In the modern era of parity, no team is good enough to overcome bad goaltending and no team is bad enough to stink with good goaltending".
That's the lottery principle isn't it? Despite the staggering odds against it, millions of people still sink money into lotteries week after week on the flawed logic that "someone's got to win so it might as well be me"
Nik Bethune said:Hobbes said:I'm not terribly optimistic at the chances of us seeing a Bluesian type of turn-around, but at this point I'd settle for some half-decent up-tempo hockey with pace, and that's Keefe's MO so if nothing else at least it ought to be watchable.
I'm pretty bummed out that the lesson people took from the Blues seems to be "Fire a coach mid-season and anyone can win the cup!" and not "In the modern era of parity, no team is good enough to overcome bad goaltending and no team is bad enough to stink with good goaltending".
Nik Bethune said:Hobbes said:That's the lottery principle isn't it? Despite the staggering odds against it, millions of people still sink money into lotteries week after week on the flawed logic that "someone's got to win so it might as well be me"
Yes. And while I tend to have some sympathies for people who play the lottery in the hopes of a better life, I think that very profitable multi-billion dollar sports teams should be run smarter than that.
I think he will give him more ice. Who knows, maybe we may see him kill penalties.Joe S. said:Do you think Keefe will help Matthews have more than 1 goal on the road?
Hobbes said:A lot of Babcock's success as a coach has come in shorter periods of time (Olympics, Worlds, etc) where you need his intensity and attention to detail and he doesn't have time to wear on you.Many of his former players find that he doesn't age well...much like the rep Hitch and Torts have had.
Dubas did not hire Babcock. Shanahan hired Bab's to give credibility to the team and its aspirations when they were at the bottom of the barrel. Tavares came home more than likely because Babs's was in place. He was given huge money and a long term as that was market demand. He did not get the team past the 1st round in three tries.Nik Bethune said:It's kind of a side note but for years when we talked about the lack of a specific and clearly designed power structure despite some strong personalities with different approaches and we got a lot of talk back, specifically from Dubas, about how he didn't like to work that way and how he liked managing "by consensus" and so on.
I'm not really an "I told you so guy" but a lot of people here said that seemed doomed to failure and it was and, quite frankly, it's very hard to attribute that to anything outside of either Dubas being too young to understand why that was a crummy way to run a team or Shanahan not really having the guts to structure an organization properly.
Highlander said:rBates said:Nik Bethune said:CarltonTheBear said:I feel like this was more of a sign that Dubas wanted to do this in the offseason but Shanny blocked it.
Could be. I still don't think Babcock is really what's wrong with the team though and I think his past success earned him more than this.
Gotta go a long ways back now to see that success.
Ya, he hasn't had either Detroit or Toronto past the first round in the last 1st round 5 times in the last 6 and only to the 2nd round in 4 years previously.
Without question his last 3 years have been excellent. There were signs of some issues in the latter part of last year, but they pulled it back together and gave Boston a decent fight. That said, they finished last year with a record of 7-8-4 after March 1st, which when combined with this year's start gives us a 16-18-8 record...not something to hang your hat on.Nik Bethune said:Hobbes said:A lot of Babcock's success as a coach has come in shorter periods of time (Olympics, Worlds, etc) where you need his intensity and attention to detail and he doesn't have time to wear on you.Many of his former players find that he doesn't age well...much like the rep Hitch and Torts have had.
Maybe. But in the three full seasons here where the team was trying to win they were 135-81-30. That includes absolutely no gap between the first overall pick and a playoff appearance and as much as people like to whine about it, it doesn't include any playoff losses where the Leafs were a decidedly better team or lost badly to a comparable team. A more equitable playoff format and the Leafs probably win a series or so over the last two years.
If someone doesn't want to define that as a successful tenure, well, that's up to them I suppose.
Frycer14 said:Yeah, it's amazing how the goalposts can be moved to fit a narrative. Babcock pulled of a minor miracle in a lot of those seasons getting Detroit into the playoffs, considering age and injuries to those detroit teams, and in his first few seasons with the Leafs, playoffs were either impossible, or the finish line - like the first round loss to Washington year.
The last two seasons have seen a lot of young leaf players develop under babcock, and despite extremely weak defense personnel, had good regular seasons. Losing to Boston in the first round is more a matter of circumstance than failure; it's not Babcock's fault the Kadri put the team in such a hole matchup wise, and being bounced by a team in 7 games that was ahead of them in the standings and had home ice, and almost won the cup isn't exactly absymal failure.
Hobbes said:That said, they finished last year with a record of 7-8-4 after March 1st, which when combined with this year's start gives us a 16-18-8 record...not something to hang your hat on.