kabidjan18
Registered User
- Apr 20, 2015
- 5,873
- 2,185
Bukarts. His little brother has one of the coolest names in the world.The Oilers defeated the New York Rangers once in the regular season with relative ease. I guess they should be in the Stanley Cup play-offs instead of the Rangers, right?
The score in a single game means very little. First of all, chance plays a major role in the short-term. Second, Latvia clearly dominated Austria in that 3-6 loss both in terms of possession and the number of shots and chances. So, no, they didn't win 'fairly easily'. It was essentially a fluke win. Third, Girgensons has mostly been a 3rd line player in the Latvian national team. Daugavins made his debut in the NHL in 2009/10. The last time Ozolins played in the World Champs was 2002.
The overall quality of the Latvian and Austrian hockey programmes hasn't changed that much over the years. The emergence of an AHL/ECHL guy in Lebler doesn't change anything in that respect.
As for continuity in the way we play the game, there's probably not going to be a whole lot of it. I've already mentioned it several times in this thread - we've got a new, incompetent coach, who favors an old-school East-West type of a game. Just to give you an example, Roberts Bukarts (who is a thoroughly mediocre forward, and is mostly known for being a soft, lazy, non-contributing zero in defence) has just been placed in a 1st line slot along with Sprukts and M. Redlihs.
Bukarts was sent down by Riga Dinamo to their farm team HK Liepaja, where he played in the play-offs of the Latvian domestic league, which is a semi-pro/amateur league. And he didn't look better than his linemates there.
There are only 2 defensemen and 7 or 8 forwards (4 of whom are bottom 6 scrubs) available from the Sochi line-up, so the continuity part is probably going to be quite problematic for us. And, obviously, our WC roster is worse than in the Olympic year.
It's a different team and a different coach with a different approach, so I also don't agree with your underlying argument as to why we should be the favorites against France. I don't think we are and at the same time I'm not really sure what to expect. There's a lot of unknowns and a lot of room for improvement, but as of this point and time, things are looking pretty bleak for the Latvian national team.
I think you noticed reading my post that my point wasn't that Austria is better than Latvia because I don't believe that, but that the small sample size makes giving Austria a 1 in 5 chance of winning an interesting or disputable statement. The Oilers lost to the Rangers the other time they played. More indicatively though, the Oilers played a full 82 games season, and 82 games the year before, giving us a decent data pool to make the statement that the Rangers are better. Secondly, Austria is a counter-attack/quick-strike team, so it's obvious that they will have less possession time and less shots, but simply completing less passes around the blue line and shooting less one-timers does not indicate that they were not in control of the game. As for the fluke idea, they also beat Slovakia that year, Norway in the Olympics, and most impressively hung 4 goals on the Finnish Olympic team which was the most out of any team in the Olympics whether in the group stage or in the playoff so it make not have been as "flukey" as one may think. But less about Austria. Roberts Bukarts actually furthers my point about continuity because he is one of 11 players that play(ed) for Dinamo Riga which likely factored into his selection. Two others play together in Dynamo Moskva and in general the job that the Latvian front desk does of building continuous rosters is very good. Finally, even with the coaching change and the change in styles, it's not like the Latvian players are going to stop checking, crashing the net, and playing the style that they've trademarked so well. Their personnel and still stack up well against the competition and I think 3-4 or 2-5-1 is a fairly reasonable estimate.