No, Skraut, this seems to be a thread where you are taking shots at people like me who disagree with you.
Case in point: "try watching the other feed" ???
Actually, that's all I COULD watch on CI... same as you.
I'm just trying to challenge people to think. Maybe I'm being a bit rough, but it's easy to go with the flow, easy to agree, easy nod along with the groupthink. Go back a few years, I was saying the same thing about Mason being a product of Hitch's system/book not being written on him yet, in the midst of all the shutouts, but was told to be quiet as I clearly didn't know what I was talking about.
The KHL is not the NHL. I hope BOB is the real deal, but Bob is actually proving your point WRONG. He's standing on his head, and we still can't win enough points.
A goalie "standing on his head" is a goalie facing 50 shots a night like Marc Denis did, and still getting a shutout, like Marc Denis didn't. A goalie "standing on his head" is facing world class shooters on a breakaway and denying them time and again. Bob isn't doing either because he doesn't have to. The only breakaways he's seeing are in the 4 on 4 overtimes, and the most of the shots he's facing are from the outside. He's doing his job, he's making the stops he should be making. The nice thing is that he isn't facing the shots that he shouldn't be able to save. If he were facing them, and making those saves THEN you could say he was "Standing on his head."
As happy as I am about the progress, I can simply question the offensive scheme and coaching BASED ON # of GOALS PG.
We got five or six well-paid players playing WELL BELOW their numbers last year (regardless of where they were last year). Who's accountable for that? Is it just the players?
We also have 5 or 6 players playing WELL ABOVE the position that they should be in. There no longer is Rick Nash drawing the entire team to him, and allowing R.J. Umberger to score. Now it is R.J. the other teams are focusing on, and he isn't the player to be able to handle that.
The team is comprised of some of the best 3rd liners in the league. However since there are 9 of them most are playing on the first and second lines. Since you feel the need to point blame, that's what Scott Howson is gone for.
In the mean time, I'll watch 6 guys on the ice work in tandem to keep the puck out of the net, and get the occasional scoring chance. I like knowing we're in every game. I don't miss being on the losing end of 5-2 game, where you knew the team had checked out by 7 minutes into the first period.
As Hannibal used to say "I love it when a plan comes together." It's pretty to watch. Especially after the past few years without one.