- Feb 13, 2012
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Who?Costco scored last night for the Flames. Glad to see hes still playing for now. Did we ever figure out why his car accident incident sounded so weird?
Who?Costco scored last night for the Flames. Glad to see hes still playing for now. Did we ever figure out why his car accident incident sounded so weird?
Justin Kirkland. The account of the car accident he was in last year on the way to a game was really oddWho?
Not a glowing review of Cronin…..A lot of Ducks talk and Mintyukov praising for former Ducks d-man Ilya Lyubushkin in this translated interview:
Have a good read!
Stars' Lyubushkin Talks New Contract, Maple Leafs, Mintyukov in Russian Interview - The Hockey Writers Dallas Stars Latest News, Analysis & More
In this interview, Stars' Ilya Lyubushkin talks about his move to his new team, playing in Toronto, Mintyukov and the Ducks, and much more.thehockeywriters.com
Even though the coach was a good guy, he always put enormous psychological pressure on the players. We had a schedule where we would come in, warm up, sit in a meeting for an hour, and only then hit the ice. I always thought, ‘Why are we warming up now? Let’s do it after the hour-long meeting.’ They said, ‘No, we can’t do it that way.’ Then, after two months, they changed it, agreeing, ‘Okay, let’s do it your way.’Not a glowing review of Cronin…..
It really isn't. The part about the order of practice - that they would come in, warm up, then sit for an hour in meetings (some of which Lyubushkin said weren't even hockey-related), and then get back on the ice to practice - that makes very little sense to me.Not a glowing review of Cronin…..
I’ve been defending him till now given his short tenure but if there are other players feeling this way, it is certainly concerning.It really isn't. The part about the order of practice - that they would come in, warm up, then sit for an hour in meetings (some of which Lyubushkin said weren't even hockey-related), and then get back on the ice to practice - that makes very little sense to me.
On the one hand, I appreciate that Cronin changed his approach midseason. On the other hand, that whole thing seems really weird to me. The point of warming up is to get the blood flowing and the muscles stretched out so that they don't go from nothing to full use too quickly. Why would he have the players warm up and then sit so that muscles could re-tighten?
The "psychological pressure" comments are also very alarming. There have been bits and pieces here and there that have made me skeptical of Cronin, but still hopeful that he can turn the ship around. This interview makes me think he's probably not the guy. We'll see how the season goes (the earliest he would get fired is next offseason), but this isn't a good look.
"Am I really tired of hockey already?!"
"Even though the coach was a good guy, he always put enormous psychological pressure on the players."
“It wasn’t just because we weren’t winning—there was a combination of factors. The coach, Greg Cronin, was very tough, and the psychological atmosphere within the team was very difficult. It wasn’t that I wanted to quit hockey at that moment, but I did catch myself thinking, ‘Am I really tired of hockey already?!'
But you’d come to these meetings, sit there for 40 minutes, listening to things unrelated to hockey. Then, finally, we’d start watching video. By then, you’ve already been sitting for 40 minutes, listening to random stories. It was just exhausting. He’s a good coach and a good person, but that was his approach. You’d walk into the locker room and see all the other guys with the same expressions on their faces as you… It was hard to find any motivation to go out and train. And it wasn’t just about struggling to find motivation—you just didn’t want to do it.”
A Dude who has played hockey his entire life was questioning whether he wanted to actually play a game he supposedly loved? Cronin's approach combined with losing so much must have made the atmosphere terrible.
Wow those quotes about Cronin are pretty horrible.
This one screams to me:
“It wasn’t just because we weren’t winning—there was a combination of factors. The coach, Greg Cronin, was very tough, and the psychological atmosphere within the team was very difficult. It wasn’t that I wanted to quit hockey at that moment, but I did catch myself thinking, ‘Am I really tired of hockey already?!'
But you’d come to these meetings, sit there for 40 minutes, listening to things unrelated to hockey. Then, finally, we’d start watching video. By then, you’ve already been sitting for 40 minutes, listening to random stories. It was just exhausting. He’s a good coach and a good person, but that was his approach. You’d walk into the locker room and see all the other guys with the same expressions on their faces as you… It was hard to find any motivation to go out and train. And it wasn’t just about struggling to find motivation—you just didn’t want to do it.”
A Dude who has played hockey his entire life was questioning whether he wanted to actually play a game he supposedly loved? Cronin's approach combined with losing so much must have made the atmosphere terrible.
I think I've ran out of excuses for him. He does sound like a respectable guy that's interesting to talk to, but I don't want him coaching our team. It shows how our team looks and plays. Get Bruce back, it will do way more for the team and players individually.
bruce is almost 70 and probably not going to coach at the NHL level again. not to mention that he's the guy you hire when your team is ready to contend for the playoffs, and this team is far from thatI think I've ran out of excuses for him. He does sound like a respectable guy that's interesting to talk to, but I don't want him coaching our team. It shows how our team looks and plays. Get Bruce back, it will do way more for the team and players individually.
Unfortunately, I have to definitely agree that it seems that Pat does not see the problem with Cronin. Even more, he seems to be encouraging it. That's bleakThe problem is Verbeek doesn't see a problem with Cronin or last season, but Verbeek really wanted Eakins out of the org asap the season prior. Verbeek is very supportive with what Cronin is doing b/c they are essentially the same persona. Like many others have mentioned how Z was treated far differently from everyone else last year - it was another piece of evidence of a psyche experiment by Cronin.