Wetcoaster
Guest
And so what.Sure...to scalpers who couldn't re-sell those seats.
And so what.Sure...to scalpers who couldn't re-sell those seats.
Marty Brodeur, Mike Smith, Evgeni Nabokov, Ron Hextall, Chris Osgood, and Jose Theodore all disagree with you. Pfft...Luongo is the problem with this team. He lets in goals where he has no chance to make the save on (where most NHL goalies wouldn't make the save) but it's his lack of goal scoring that's killing us.
And so what.
Maybe that's because a goalie can't score goals, and if your team isn't scoring goals, you won't win?
Let's try this again.
I work in an office. It's my job to manage data. Let's leave it at that. Me doing my job isn't necessarily going to lead to our company being a profitable company; that depends on the performance of a lot of people. Namely, sales. If Sales can't sell our products, my job is meaningless.
Be that as it may, I am not judged based on whether or not the sales people are effective. It is true that if we're not selling products, it doesn't much matter what I do, but that doesn't mean nobody cares if I just put my feet up on my desk and do nothing all day. I am judged based on how I perform. Period. Even if we don't sell a single product, I am still only going to be judged based on how well I do my job. If I'm doing it poorly, I'm doing it poorly, and nobody is "blaming" the failure of the company on me. Nobody will say "It's not his fault! We didn't sell any products! It's the sales peoples fault!" I am judged based on my performance. Period. End of discussion.
And I mean that literally.
The waiting list for season tickets remains years long and very few do not re-up. No real world problem that I can see.What is says is that interest is waning in the Vancouver hockey market. It's a short-sighted view to say "oh everything is honkey dorey because the tickets were sold" but you'd be ignoring the fact that there is an underlying problem when a lot of people aren't actually filling those seats.
What is says is that interest is waning in the Vancouver hockey market. It's a short-sighted view to say "oh everything is honkey dorey because the tickets were sold" but you'd be ignoring the fact that there is an underlying problem when a lot of people aren't actually filling those seats.
It's easy for armchair goalies to question a professional NHL goaltender when they have the benefit of slowing down a play, watching the replay, thinking about the situation, and change what they would do assuming the player would continue to do the same thing. In this situation they would probably post a 1.000 SVP and question why Luongo doesn't.
I wonder why the Canucks employ Rollie Melanson? I'm sure they could find several goalie coaches online who would probably work for much cheaper.
???Yeah, it's called tickets being priced too high, especially for a game against a team like Columbus.
Some people face the real world, where they can be a staunch supporter and die-hard hockey fan but not afford to pay $350 for a pair of tickets in the corner.
???
The tickets have already been sold.
If anything it shows that tickets are not overpriced just that some fans are not excited by a Friday night game with CBJ.
Well, he makes a toe save there, it's hard to control rebounds on toe saves. Sometimes you have to give the shooter some credit for his shot placement.
Also while I agree with you in general philosophy, Lu is just not an active stick goaltender which is not surprising given his coaching influences. Personally I think all goalies should be active stick goalies but Lu is just not. Which is disappointing but it isn't going to change anytime soon. And he's not alone in the league by any means.
Having said that, you'd have to lunge to redirect with your stick there. So yeah, I disagree with your assessment on that particular goal.
It's RE: why scalpers aren't having an easy time re-selling.
And how is that a real world problem and in particular how does it affect the Canucks business?It's RE: why scalpers aren't having an easy time re-selling.
And how is that a real world problem and in particular how does it affect the Canucks business?
And so what.Scalpers unable to sell tickets on a cold Friday night in a hockey town is a canary in the coal mine, in my opinion.
I know a couple longer time season tickets holders and they have both remarked to me that there has been noticeably more empty seats than years past. Anecdotal evidence for sure, but people have noticed.