SettlementRichie10
Registered User
- May 6, 2012
- 10,065
- 9,170
If Blake scurries off to become GM of the Sharks, they should take his f***ing jersey off the rafters.
His career earnings as a player was north of $80MGood points, maybe he’s financially secure with solid investments
You're absolutely right. never in the history of the planet has the press ever been used by anyone to float a trial balloon. What could I have possible been thinking /sarcasm off.I find it f***ing hilarious you think the org needed Hoven to plant a ‘Blake’s staying’ piece in order to check the temperature of the fan base. That’s about as absurd as
It gets around here….
If the Sharks win a cup under Blake, maybe that's what it'll take to get Luc booted completely out of the organization.If Blake scurries off to become GM of the Sharks, they should take his f***ing jersey off the rafters.
I always said it (PLD) felt like a Luc trade, as did ending the rebuild. This was the first year every move felt like a Rob Blake one.wooeeee rosen continuing on and saying the PLD trade happened around Blake rather than with him
We are absolutely f***ed unless the Luc-Brisson-Bergevin human centipede gets ousted as well
The bozos on Twitter have hated Blake and every coach under the Kings for years now, they expected the tune would change suddenly? lol….You're absolutely right. never in the history of the planet has the press ever been used by anyone to float a trial balloon. What could I have possible been thinking /sarcasm off.
Without granting the idea that he's "getting away with anything" I could explain it to you but I suspect you wouldn't accept it.Just how does Robitaille keep getting away with this?
I've never looked at Doughty or Kopitar (for that matter) as the type of leadership guys that win you Stanley Cups. We had a lot of other guys that made the difference in 2012 and 2014. You need guys that have an edge and put winning above everything. Even though the Kings were better this year, you could tell that all the LA fans were anticipating Edmonton to come back after that Kane goal.Blake leaving means nothing if Luc, Bergevin, and Hiller all get to stay at their positions. The slate needs to be completely wiped for the team to have any future success, a complete purge of all upper management. I'm still baffled and livid that Hiller basically threw the series with his terrible tactics, especially in games 3 and 4. Also, Trevor Lewis needs to f*** off and retire already. Also want to see Doughty gone if possible.
Okay, I am inclined to believe what Rosen says since he seems to be on the dot about all the innerworkings.Without granting the idea that he's "getting away with anything" I could explain it to you but I suspect you wouldn't accept it.
Without granting the idea that he's "getting away with anything" I could explain it to you but I suspect you wouldn't accept it.
Close ties w the Anschutz family seems like the most likely answer. It would be ideal to have a president of hockey ops in between Luc and any GM hire to firewall his influence. I have a feeling Blake pushed back after the PLD fiasco - if indeed what Rosen said is true (what we all suspected) that it was Luc/Brisson/Bergovin behind that move.. and that is why last season's moves made more sense. But F Blake. He didnt know what he was doing. He hired Koala, dealt the best picks of the tank, burned JQ for not a lot, and basically had zero results to be proud of in his 8 years.Just how does Robitaille keep getting away with this?
2019 draft is brutal. Spence is the only one on the roster and Kaliyev is the overall leader in total games played out of all the picks.And I do agree with the notion that Blake perhaps came to the realization that turning this team into a contender and having one more mini-run with 11 and 8 is over, and that the only way to get back to contending is to tear it down, and just didn't want to go through that, even if an extension was on the table.
The cold hard truth is the Kings are as far away from being a contender as any team in the NHL. There is no way to get the type of players you need to build around without tearing this whole thing down and having 4-5 years picking inside the top 10, with a couple of those at least being inside the top 5. That obviously takes Doughty and Kopitar out of equation, but it also takes Kempe, Fiala, Moore, Gavrikov, Foegele and Edmundson out, and heck even a guy like Mikey Anderson will be on the wrong side of 30 when this next rebuild ends.
I think they originally did have something resembling a plan, starting around December 2018, they were going to suck for three years, pick very high and hope to roll a Yahtzee with at least two of those picks and have them ready to be added to Kopitar and Doughty.
1. Bad Luck. In the three drafts the Kings were targeting to roll that Yahtzee, there was only one guy in the top 10 of those drafts (Jack Hughes) that ended up being a sure-thing face of the the franchise type player. Contrast that between say the 16-18 drafts where there was Matthews, both Tkachuk's, Heiskanen, Suzuki, Q Hughes and Makar.
2. 2019 draft. It really can't be understated just what a disaster the 2019 draft ended up being for Blake's mission to rebuild quickly on the fly. Three picks inside the top 32, including a top 5 pick, I would assume that they figured they had at worst a championship caliber 2C, a 25 goal 2nd line winger and a solid all-around 2nd pairing defenseman. Six years later all you have to show for it is a 4th line winger. One of the worst nights/weekends in franchise history.
3. Poor development. This one is on Blake for sure, no bad luck or bad analysis by the scouts. The handling of many players from those drafts, including the three highest picks were terrible and set back not only the time-frame, but the players potential as well.
I think by the summer of 2021 Blake probably already knew that the on the fly rebuild was doomed, that those drafts weren't going to provide the type of players needed, and that is when all the stupid reactive moves for band-aid veterans started being made (Danault, Arvidsson, Fiala, PLD) in a Hail-Mary attempt to win.
Close ties w the Anschutz family seems like the most likely answer. It would be ideal to have a president of hockey ops in between Luc and any GM hire to firewall his influence. I have a feeling Blake pushed back after the PLD fiasco - if indeed what Rosen said is true (what we all suspected) that it was Luc/Brisson/Bergovin behind that move.. and that is why last season's moves made more sense. But F Blake. He didnt know what he was doing. He hired Koala, dealt the best picks of the tank, burned JQ for not a lot, and basically had zero results to be proud of in his 8 years.
It's not that complicated and with all due respect to Rosen you don't need an insider or complicated palace intrigue theories to explain it.Okay, I am inclined to believe what Rosen says since he seems to be on the dot about all the innerworkings.
So I'll set the stage. Judging by the context, Robitaille has a lot of influence. Mentioned many times by many people. Too much smoke to be wrong.
With that being said, Luc has been around long and the team has gone nowhere. He obviously has a lot of blame in this.
Now that I set the stage, how does he dodge any backlash? Seems like Blake or Gms take the dagger while Luc has too much influence on the Gms failures.
And I do agree with the notion that Blake perhaps came to the realization that turning this team into a contender and having one more mini-run with 11 and 8 is over, and that the only way to get back to contending is to tear it down, and just didn't want to go through that, even if an extension was on the table.
The cold hard truth is the Kings are as far away from being a contender as any team in the NHL. There is no way to get the type of players you need to build around without tearing this whole thing down and having 4-5 years picking inside the top 10, with a couple of those at least being inside the top 5. That obviously takes Doughty and Kopitar out of equation, but it also takes Kempe, Fiala, Moore, Gavrikov, Foegele and Edmundson out, and heck even a guy like Mikey Anderson will be on the wrong side of 30 when this next rebuild ends.
I think they originally did have something resembling a plan, starting around December 2018, they were going to suck for three years, pick very high and hope to roll a Yahtzee with at least two of those picks and have them ready to be added to Kopitar and Doughty.
1. Bad Luck. In the three drafts the Kings were targeting to roll that Yahtzee, there was only one guy in the top 10 of those drafts (Jack Hughes) that ended up being a sure-thing face of the the franchise type player. Contrast that between say the 16-18 drafts where there was Matthews, both Tkachuk's, Heiskanen, Suzuki, Q Hughes and Makar.
2. 2019 draft. It really can't be understated just what a disaster the 2019 draft ended up being for Blake's mission to rebuild quickly on the fly. Three picks inside the top 32, including a top 5 pick, I would assume that they figured they had at worst a championship caliber 2C, a 25 goal 2nd line winger and a solid all-around 2nd pairing defenseman. Six years later all you have to show for it is a 4th line winger. One of the worst nights/weekends in franchise history.
3. Poor development. This one is on Blake for sure, no bad luck or bad analysis by the scouts. The handling of many players from those drafts, including the three highest picks were terrible and set back not only the time-frame, but the players potential as well.
I think by the summer of 2021 Blake probably already knew that the on the fly rebuild was doomed, that those drafts weren't going to provide the type of players needed, and that is when all the stupid reactive moves for band-aid veterans started being made (Danault, Arvidsson, Fiala, PLD) in a Hail-Mary attempt to win.
2019 draft is brutal. Spence is the only one on the roster and Kaliyev is the overall leader in total games played out of all the picks.
Muzzin trade was great, except he flubbed the 1st round pick that was part of the return and the best player in the deal was dumped in order to get PLD in the fold.
This is the start of the rebuild. Rough stuff.
It happens all over the NHL, and professional sports in general, but we know, the rules for everyone else in North America never seem to apply to the Kings, in everything they do. They are just this unique unicorn franchise that can't be evaluated by traditional metrics and analysis. And anyone who tries to do that is just "folks mad on the internet"You think it's an easy decision for a company to fire their president of 20 years with industry contacts, influence, clout, experience etc etc etc while the company is hitting it's financial goals and has had other forms of success during his tenure because some folks on the internet are mad about some stuff some other folks on the internet said online?
I think it's important to note and not understate his influence on the team. If Luc does have a lot of say on what the GM does then I think thats far different than Business Operations. I think the goal of any company to keep aware of projections. As a business owner myself, I have to forecast what the future will look like. Any and every business owner can't just be present. It has to consider, what will the future hold if I keep this trajectory.It's not that complicated and with all due respect to Rosen you don't need an insider or complicated palace intrigue theories to explain it.
Luc Robitaille was named the President of Business Operations in 2007. Hockey ops and Business Ops merged in 2017 and Luc Robitaille has been the president of the team since then.
Luc Robitaille has been serving in his role in one form or another for almost 20 years.
You think it's an easy decision for a company to fire their president of 20 years with industry contacts, influence, clout, experience etc etc etc while the company is hitting it's financial goals and has had other forms of success during his tenure because some folks on the internet are mad about some stuff some other folks on the internet said online?
I mean... I get it we're all fans and this is emotional stuff but sometimes it's just not that complicated.
And that's NOT me stumping for my employer that's me telling you how I think the real world works.
I doubt Luc has been making any business decisions during his tenure. Just ask him if he knows the difference between an income statement and a balance sheet. There are lots of quality people in place beneath him making good decisions, but that's likely due more to Beckerman than Robitaille.It's not that complicated and with all due respect to Rosen you don't need an insider or complicated palace intrigue theories to explain it.
Luc Robitaille was named the President of Business Operations in 2007. Hockey ops and Business Ops merged in 2017 and Luc Robitaille has been the president of the team since then.
Luc Robitaille has been serving in his role in one form or another for almost 20 years.
You think it's an easy decision for a company to fire their president of 20 years with industry contacts, influence, clout, experience etc etc etc while the company is hitting it's financial goals and has had other forms of success during his tenure because some folks on the internet are mad about some stuff some other folks on the internet said online?
I mean... I get it we're all fans and this is emotional stuff but sometimes it's just not that complicated.
And that's NOT me stumping for my employer that's me telling you how I think the real world works.