showtime8
Registered User
Usually stay-at-home/defensive/shut-down defencemen have an easier time adjusting to the physical requirements of the NHL moreso than these smooth skaters like Rielly (I consider Gardiner to be a few steps behind Rielly).
Skating ability is just one skill to have as a defender. Willingness to use your body and stick in a smart way is another. I don't think the Leafs have nearly enough of those guys. If they did, maybe we wouldn't be as frantic for a new goalie.
You can skate circles around the guy in your end, but at the end of the day you can't just run around the guy like a yappy dog. You have to engage the opponent and reclaim possession. It takes strength and smarts.
Gardiner, Liles, and Rielly simply don't have this. And then add Phaneuf who is slow and stupid, and you have three quarters of a full d squad that can't defend well. Basically necessitates the acquisition of two EXTREMELY good defensive defencemen and two of these Gardiner/Liles/Rielly/Phaneuf players to get minimal even strength and shorthanded ice time.
Yea, I agree that you need to be more physical as a defenseman, but the Leafs have taken the approach that they will have more than one offensive minded dman.
They gave up a lot when they got rid of Schenn, so it was made clear that they were going in another direction. Getting JVR was important, so I don't want to make this into a Schenn/JVR discussion. Anyways, I've said this for a long time but they should go in a similar direction that the LA Kings have gone. 2 really good young dmen, paired up with 2 veteran shutdown guys. Seems to make sense right? What would that mean for the bottom pairing? Well, it doesn't really matter. You could have a powerplay specialist, guy that fights, or whatever you need. But you need to establish this mentality right away. Right now it stands that they are pairing people up just based on contract and not so much on ability.