Advocacy for #3 precludes advocacy for #4.I guess this is a too complicated and foreign concept for most fans, but it's possible to think simultaneously that:
- nepotism is wrong
- nepotism seems to exist within the org
- Nash seems to be a beneficiary of it and has achieved his current role at least partially for wrong reasons
- Nash might be good at what he does and will be given a chance to show it
The definition of nepotism inherently implies lack of fitness for the job. That's why it is considered bad. Trying to say both is effectively trying to say "he's not fit for the job, but he might be fit for the job". It's self-contradictory.Please explain
According to which definition?The definition of nepotism inherently implies lack of fitness for the job.
I guess this is a too complicated and foreign concept for most fans, but it's possible to think simultaneously that:
- nepotism is wrong
- nepotism seems to exist within the org
- Nash seems to be a beneficiary of it and has achieved his current role at least partially for wrong reasons
- Nash might be good at what he does and will be given a chance to show it
Nowhere in my posts have I suggested anything like that even implicitly.Should we just have a rule against hiring former star players? That would have kept the Avs from hiring Sakic.
Advocacy for #3 precludes advocacy for #4.
Coaches and FO are two different beasts. The average NHL coaching tenure is like 2-3 years.
So taking Torts out of the equation, since you're just throwing him in there to inflate that number, we're not that far out of the norm. Vincent was an emergency hire who didn't get extended, so I wouldn't really count him either. That leaves Larsen and Babcock.
We still have essentially zero idea about what ACTUALLY happened with Babcock. He looked at people’s phones, big f***ing whoop. Reality is that whatever he saw IN the phone(s) in probably worse than his actions of looking at said phones. Literally did the shit he was probably asked and tasked to do. Then everyone joined the groupthink crowd and called for his head. Should have kept him around.Babcock was a case where he might have actually been the most qualified person for the job, with the most experience and the resume to back it up....and how did that work out?
All I want is to compete for a Cup. We have never come close to doing that.
What do you consider a team that can beat ANY of the teams on ANY night, that you would consider “competing for the cup”??
Because that’s what the CBJ team was for about 4 years, about 4 years ago.
It seems that you know exactly what happened.We still have essentially zero idea about what ACTUALLY happened with Babcock. He looked at people’s phones, big f***ing whoop. Reality is that whatever he saw IN the phone(s) in probably worse than his actions of looking at said phones. Literally did the shit he was probably asked and tasked to do. Then everyone joined the groupthink crowd and called for his head.
Genuinely do not get the hype for Nash in the front office. Trade request aside when he was a player, what parts of the organization have measurably gotten better under his direction?There’s no reason this needed to happen
This is where I'm at. There's definitely a factor of "look he's one of us" as the face of CBJ for so long. But it's not like it's unwarranted. Was it nepotism or favoritism that landed him the role of GM for team Canada and assistant the year before that? Or was it maybe that people around him think he has a good mind for putting together a good team?I'm inclined to agree none of us have enough concrete data to evaluate Nash's qualifications for the new role. So I'll take a wait-and-see attitude. (It's not like ownership is holding its breath waiting for my take on the move.)
Was it nepotism? I prefer "favoritism" because I reserve "nepotism" for blood relations or something not publicly known. But that's just me obsessing about semantics.
We might be wise to acknowledge the possibility that the organization did a real search for candidates and landed on Nash objectively. Skepticism, however justified, is not the same as proof.
So you have such a negative opinion about Rick Nash that you want a guy who is clearly much younger with much less hockey experience telling him what to do? The guy is not even 30 yet and has only worked in hockey for 3 years.I don't care what title you give him, as long as there's someone above him (Abdou) that will stop him from doing dumb stuff.
I get it, Sakic/Yzerman ... why not us? Cause those guys are hall of famers! First thing Nash should do when the owners crown him king of moneymakers, is taken that jersey down!
Quoting myself for posterityI still really don’t understand why people get their panties in such a bunch over what Nash does. Who cares? Lots of folks seem certain that he’s terrible in whatever role he’s in. How would any of us know?
He’s clearly highly thought of both inside and out of the organization.
He's a name people recognize from this franchise's past, therefore Bad and Forever Ineffably Tainted With Horrible Failure.I'm neither for Nash nor against Nash when it comes to his front office advancement. I simply don't have enough information to judge. But companies all over the world do this sort of thing every day as part of their business continuity plans. They identify talent and then attempt to develop those individuals through some combination of mentoring, formal education, and stretch assignments. That also often includes allowing people the leeway to make mistakes and learn from them. Viewed in that context I don't understand the anti-Nash sentiment.
Item No. 1: Nash’s new title
Ever since Don Waddell was hired as president and general manager in late May, Rick Nash’s status within the Blue Jackets’ front office has only elevated. The news this week that Nash now has a different title — director of hockey operations — makes it clear where all of this is going, too.
It’s hard to say how long Waddell, who turned 66 last month, will want to continue in the GM’s chair, but it’s obvious who will get the chair next.
“Rick is going to be involved in every decision we make for this hockey team,” Waddell said. ” It started with the coaching search (for Dean Evason); he was a big part of that. He’s a true professional. He’s a quiet guy, but when you ask him a question, he gives you his honest thoughts and he gives you a very thoughtful answer.
“I knew him as a player, but I didn’t know him as a person. But throughout my time here, I’ve gotten to know him as a person, and I wouldn’t be a very smart guy running this team if I didn’t surround myself with people like Rick Nash.”
Nash joined the Blue Jackets in 2019, shortly after he retired prematurely due to a series of concussions late in his career. He was hired by former GM Jarmo Kekalainen as his special assistant, but two years later he began a three-year run as director of player development.
It was clear after last season that Nash had hoped to be considered for the GMs job when Kekalainen was fired, but the organization — specifically Mike Priest, who led the search — made it clear that they were looking for someone with previous NHL experience as a GM.
Waddell is the Blue Jackets’ fourth GM. None of the previous hires — Doug MacLean, Scott Howson and Kekalainen — had been NHL GMs before taking the job.
The goal, over the next two or three seasons, is to put Nash as close to the job as possible under Waddell, who acknowledged this week that Nash as the club’s future GM has been discussed internally.
“We’ve talked about it, just in general,” Waddell said. “Rick has three young kids at home, and he’s been away his whole career. I said to him, ‘Make sure you take care of your family. Let’s do that first, because that’s the most important thing.’
“Everything I touch, I’m going to give you that opportunity to learn. It’s a great opportunity for both of us. For me, it’s an extra resource, and hopefully I can teach him some things from experience through the years.”
Nash will continue to oversee the club’s player development program, which is vitally important for any small-market franchise. But he’ll have his hands, eyes and opinions in every aspect of the organization — contract negotiations, trade offers, scouting, etc.
“Don’s been great,” Nash said. “I have to say, Jarmo was great with me, too. He brought me in and opened doors to me.
“Don coming in has just meant a different way of doing things, and I’m going to be a sponge and try to learn as much as I can from him..”
He's a name people recognize from this franchise's past, therefore Bad and Forever Ineffably Tainted With Horrible Failure.
There really isn't any reasoning to it beyond that.
By comparison to the rest of the league we're about average to above-average.We seem to hire an unusually large number of ex Jackets.