GKJ
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- Feb 27, 2002
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That may be true for players in a contract year. But what about players like Sanheim or Farabee? They wouldn't have to perform like are now and still get paid for 5+ years.
If you like it or not, Tortorella obviously knows which buttons to push.
That may be true for players in a contract year. But what about players like Sanheim or Farabee? They wouldn't have to perform like are now and still get paid for 5+ years.
If you like it or not, Tortorella obviously knows which buttons to push.
In the hope that a better team will trade for them? Just a wild guess.Never saw that poll tbh, so I can't comment on that. But why would the players work so hard if they hated their coach? Out of fear? In that case that seems to be working, as well.
That is a wild guess. What if a worse team trades for them?In the hope that a better team will trade for them? Just a wild guess.
They'd still probably be okay with it once they realized training camp no longer involved any rope play.That is a wild guess. What if a worse team trades for them?
Why wouldn't we question a guy who hasn't been able to get a team over the hump since the 2005 lockout and who makes one bizarre lineup decision after another?
They might be happy about that too.That is a wild guess. What if a worse team trades for them?
If you like your job but hate your boss what do you do. My previous boss was a micromanaging clown but I still showed up to work everyday and did my jobThat may be true for players in a contract year. But what about players like Sanheim or Farabee? They wouldn't have to perform like are now and still get paid for 5+ years.
If you like it or not, Tortorella obviously knows which buttons to push.
Of course, they're professionals. But players don't even have to like their coach. They just have to respect him and trust in his abilities to coach. And when I look at this team right now, I don't see a single player that's underperforming relative to expectations. So he must be doing something right.If you like your job but hate your boss what do you do. My previous boss was a micromanaging clown but I still showed up to work everyday and did my job
Tortorella is the Doc Rivers of the NHL
Any are viable other than martini coach. He was the worst of the bunch to me.There's more than one way to coach and get results.
You can call your players toilet seats and bench them in their hometowns. You can go wakeboarding in your down time. You can drink martinis. You can bake a cake. You can get cancer.
We've certainly run the gamut of coaching styles and personalities. I think any given one of them can win, and they are one important variable in a veritable stew of variables.
Was that French Hak who employed his Maginot Line defense for the Flyers?Any are viable other than martini coach. He was the worst of the bunch to me.
Torts wishes he was as successful as Doc.
Doc is a nice guy and not a pathological liar.
Tortorella has won 4 playoff rounds since the 03-04 Lightning. And I think there's a pretty easy argument he's more successful than Glenn Rivers relative to expectations. Imagine if Tortorella coached a prime Kucherov/Hedman/Point-era Lightning team for 15 years and made maybe one ECF. A truly special talent pisser hopping from contender to contender.
Doc is every bit as much of a political animal as Tortorella. He just claps more and has more tact with throwing people under buses. Loves to control narratives and make himself the hero, usually after the fact.
I also don't know if Tortorella would have traded rookie Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Even Tortorella gives young players far more rope than Doc.
Won 4 playoff rounds and missed the playoffs 7 times. He wishes he was Doc.
Won 4 playoff rounds and missed the playoffs 7 times. He wishes he was Doc.