Speculation: 2024-25 Coaching/Management/Ownership

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Hamilton Bulldogs

Registered User
Jan 11, 2022
4,053
5,818
I'm fine with hard ass, but Cronin doesn't even seem like he's that either.
He seems just completely out of touch.

There's nothing about professional athletes that strikes me as wanting to sit around for 40 mins listening to stories that are completely unrelated to the job itself. Then you watch video? it sounds exhausting and they haven't even hit the ice lol.
 

Ducks DVM

sowcufucakky
Jun 6, 2010
52,988
31,255
Long Beach, CA
As an aside - I work for bosses like that at my job: complete micromanagers that interject their personal lives as some sort of motivation practice. Completely toxic.

Just don't see how anyone here can continue to push/want Cronin. I questioned the hire right off the bat when Verbeek went with someone completely new to the position over others (at the time) that were proven.

We have the potential and the talent here, but he has not come across as someone who can push the team towards any type of relevancy. Finishing one point above Eakins is supposed to be some sort of 'victory' with certain posters - even though they were both awful coaches. He seems to lack any type of line-matching, game awareness or tactical ability.

I know that we are in a rebuild and there are growing pains, but man this is starting to become frustrating. Cronin even admitting he let the group 'coach themselves' with the last while of the season basically tells me even he himself gave up on trying.



Never looked like an NHL coach. 10+ years of assisting coaching and not once was he thought of HC material until now. This clown show can't end soon enough! :baghead::baghead::baghead::baghead::baghead:
If Hollywood has taught me anything, it’s that you should get hypnotized
 
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Reactions: Bender66
Jan 21, 2011
5,550
4,220
Massachusetts
If Hollywood has taught me anything, it’s that you should get hypnotized

Classic response coming from you

I've been thinking this for a while now.. If he can Cronin.. than maybe he needs to go to

Besides drafting (which is subjective) what else has Verbeek done? Half filled promises, sort of hasty with the media, no real outline/plan, extending the rebuild, no real roster upgrades, list goes on.
 

Gliff

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Sep 24, 2011
16,395
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Middle Tennessee
There was no significant improvement to address the top-9 or top-4 defenseman. Even overpaying someone for a year or two to flip them at the deadline was too much apparently
Who was the option to do this?

Did I miss where a top 6/top 4 signed for a year or two overpayment? They all got overpayment with term.
Stamkos is not a 8 mil player anymore, let alone for 4 years until age 38.

Zadorov is a bottom pairing defensemen that plays under 18 minutes a game and got 5 mil for 6 years until age 36.

There were guys that would have been good fits, like Roy, March, or Pesce, but they had to want to come here.
 
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Hockey Duckie

Registered User
Jul 25, 2003
18,357
13,400
southern cal
He inherited one. Hard to put that on him.

Verbeek picked up Eakins' option year. Verbeek didn't have to pick up that option. I think most of us were thinking we were getting a new coach after 2021-22 because that's what new GMs usually do, bring in their own coach into the new org.

From the Athletic:

Another thing Verbeek did after last season was pick up Dallas Eakin’s option year. Verbeek resisted the temptation that I think a lot of new GMs have, to bring in his own coach immediately.
Now, who knows where this goes after this season? Eakins’ deal will be up. But at the very least, Verbeek wanted to take the time to further get to know his coach before making any decisions.
“It’s not fair … me coming in two, three months and then going with a new guy,” Verbeek said. “And in the sense that I just blew up the team (at the trade deadline). So I wanted to give him a chance. And it gave us an opportunity to get to know one another over the course of the offseason.
“So that’s kind of how the decision was made.”


On a tangent, McIlvane was supposed to come over two seasons ago, but he got held up in Germany. Verbeek got one of McIlvane's former assistant in Kris Sparre in at San Diego two years ago and the fact we hired Sommer at the last minute are pieces of evidence McIlvane was supposed to come over. Since McIlvane's arrival was delayed, that probably put everything out of whack for Verbeek overarching plan.
 
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Deuce22

Registered User
Jun 17, 2013
5,753
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SoCal & Idaho
Verbeek picked up Eakins' option year. Verbeek didn't have to pick up that option. I think most of us were thinking we were getting a new coach after 2021-22 because that's what new GMs usually do, bring in their own coach into the new org.

From the Athletic:

Another thing Verbeek did after last season was pick up Dallas Eakin’s option year. Verbeek resisted the temptation that I think a lot of new GMs have, to bring in his own coach immediately.
Now, who knows where this goes after this season? Eakins’ deal will be up. But at the very least, Verbeek wanted to take the time to further get to know his coach before making any decisions.
“It’s not fair … me coming in two, three months and then going with a new guy,” Verbeek said. “And in the sense that I just blew up the team (at the trade deadline). So I wanted to give him a chance. And it gave us an opportunity to get to know one another over the course of the offseason.
“So that’s kind of how the decision was made.”


On a tangent, McIlvane was supposed to come over two seasons ago, but he got held up in Germany. Verbeek got one of McIlvane's former assistant in Kris Sparre in at San Diego two years ago and the fact we hired Sommer at the last minute are pieces of evidence McIlvane was supposed to come over. Since McIlvane's arrival was delayed, that probably put everything out of whack for Verbeek overarching plan.
I think there is a case to be made that he kept Eakins because he knew Ducks were tanking and didn't care if the coach was lousy. Carlsson was the prize for that year of being caved in.
 

Hockey Duckie

Registered User
Jul 25, 2003
18,357
13,400
southern cal
I think there is a case to be made that he kept Eakins because he knew Ducks were tanking and didn't care if the coach was lousy. Carlsson was the prize for that year of being caved in.

I don't completely believe that in Verbeek's psyche because Verbeek was sold on his own prowess on his assessment of the team's roster to want to sell off at the TDL as well as his off-season acquisitions that he thought the team could be a .500 team to start that season. It was a terrible roster makeup across the board from the defense to believing he had a top-6 center in Strome. Remember, Verbeek offered a multi-year deal to Klingberg and Klingberg rejected it like Klingberg rejected a sweet, long term deal with Dallas (he's got a stupid agent or a greedy agent, either way, lost Klingberg easy millions).

Before that season started, I said we were going to be terrible b/c our defensive makeup was horrendous. I didn't drink the kool-aid.

Carlsson was the "consolation prize", not "the prize". I'm still pissed about that.
 

Dryish

Nonplussed
Dec 14, 2015
1,724
2,438
Hki Metro
I honestly think keeping Eakins was the right move to make at the time. We were going to suck, there was literally zero way we wouldn't have with the roster that we iced, and bringing in a new coach when the management overall had just undergone a drastic change and we were clearly facing several development years in a row wasn't necessarily the right move for the locker room that seemingly liked their coach. Especially if Verbeek's coach of choice wasn't available.
 

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