GDT: GDT #43 New York Islanders vs Ottawa Senators | January 14th | 7:30 PM | F/L 2-0

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Define healthy or show your work please.
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Ok, I assume this is your work. First rule of statistics, it is not wise to draw inferences from descriptive statistics. You and I can play this game all day long but in my mind even a child can figure out possibly what's going on here. But that said, anyone can draw any conclusions from the data presented here, the best hope if you decide to use such a flawed method in judging performance is just to use common sense.

Second rule of statistics. When you are preparing a data analysis, or whenever I prepared data for analysis we always scanned for outliers that were 2 standard deviations from the mean and we REMOVED them from the analysis and we would explain why that data was removed. I could look at this data and I would immediately notice that the goal's for in year 2024-2025 were the lowest at 2.60 which if I was to do an analysis and you can do this easily in excel that number should fall outside 2 standard deviations from the mean. Meaning that it is an outlier. PK, can you come up with any reason why scoring is low this season? Hmm, I think I could. Could it be oh maybe they were missing their two top playmakers for a significant period of time or maybe you have the worse PP assistant coach in the NHL 6 years running dragging your numbers down. But any way you cut it there legitimate reasons why that 2.60 can be considered a statistical outlier and you don't include those numbers in the statistical averages. Same with GAA. 3.02 is kinda high but maybe not 2 standard deviations from the mean but could anyone explain why that number is high this year. Hmm I could. Maybe because the team missing f-ing their entire left side defense for 1/4 of the season and had called up 3 AHL players to play in their stead.

So all you can do is look at the body of work Roy has done compared to his predecessors under similar conditions with as much of the variables controlled as possible. If you take year 2023-2024 and you compare Lambert's performance versus Roy's performance you will see an INVERSE relationship depending upon who was coaching the team. When Roy was coaching the exact roster as Lambert he had a high GF and statistically the highest GF in 8 years at 3.06 and at the same time he had a lower GA average compared to Lambert. This is the inverse relationship. Previous data had been posted previously on this board cited from an article showed in just 37 games Roy improved the 5 on 5 GAA of not just one but EVERY SINGLE player on this team. Now understand this. This data is not really an apples to apples comparison. Roy joined the Islanders in the middle to the latter part of a season when the team was on a losing streak and a nose dive with a high pressure to make the playoffs and he does this. The highest GF in 8 years and the lowest GAA for every single player literally over night.

Folks, you don't blame a guy with that kind of a performance unless you are a complete idiot. Some of you might try to take out a calculator and try to fool masses with your skewed "conclusions" but you're not fooling me. The problem with this team is not Roy. It would be like looking at the Oilers first few seasons and assuming their losing record must be due to McDavid because he's just not making players around him better like he's supposed to so you trade him. (This is the logic some fools here are using against Barzal). You don't throw the baby out with the bath water. You make a fair analysis of the situation and you go from there.
 
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It is you who cannot who has trouble with reading comprehension. Your post does not address what is being discussed. Yes, Lou, did the hiring. He does all of the hiring, he is the GM and President. The coach cannot hire anyone. That is not his job. But the question at hand is whether or not Roy had or has a say and if Lou would be amenable to making changes if Roy requested them. I don't know the answer to that and neither do you.
Your statement was, "None of us here know if he has that authority or not but some are making the assertion that he doesn't."

And you just admitted that Lou does the hiring and that means HE has the authority, the final say, not Roy. Comprende?
 
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Ok, I assume this is your work. First rule of statistics, it is not wise to draw inferences from descriptive statistics. You and I can play this game all day long but in my mind even a child can figure out possibly what's going on here. But that said, anyone can draw any conclusions from the data presented here, the best hope if you decide to use such a flawed method in judging performance is just to use common sense.

Second rule of statistics. When you are preparing a data analysis, or whenever I prepared data for analysis we always scanned for outliers that were 2 standard deviations from the mean and we REMOVED them from the analysis and we would explain why that data was removed. I could look at this data and I would immediately notice that the goal's for in year 2024-2025 were the lowest at 2.60 which if I was to do an analysis and you can do this easily in excel that number should fall outside 2 standard deviations from the mean. Meaning that it is an outlier. PK, can you come up with any reason why scoring is low this season? Hmm, I think I could. Could it be oh maybe they were missing their two top playmakers for a significant period of time or maybe you have the worse PP assistant coach in the NHL 6 years running dragging your numbers down. But any way you cut it there legitimate reasons why that 2.60 can be considered a statistical outlier and you don't include those numbers in the statistical averages. Same with GAA. 3.02 is kinda high but maybe not 2 standard deviations from the mean but could anyone explain why that number is high this year. Hmm I could. Maybe because the team missing f-ing their entire left side defense for 1/4 of the season and had called up 3 AHL players to play in their stead.

So all you can do is look at the body of work Roy has done compared to his predecessors under similar conditions with as much of the variables controlled as possible. If you take year 2023-2024 and you compare Lambert's performance versus Roy's performance you will see an INVERSE relationship depending upon who was coaching the team. When Roy was coaching the exact roster as Lambert he had a high GF and statistically the highest GF in 8 years at 3.06 and at the same time he had a lower GA average compared to Lambert. This is the inverse relationship. Previous data had been posted previously on this board cited from an article showed in just 37 games Roy improved the 5 on 5 GAA of not just one but EVERY SINGLE player on this team. Now understand this. This data is not really an apples to apples comparison. Roy joined the Islanders in the middle to the latter part of a season when the team was on a losing streak and a nose dive with a high pressure to make the playoffs and he does this. The highest GF in 8 years and the lowest GAA for every single player literally over night.

Folks, you don't blame a guy with that kind of a performance unless you are a complete idiot. Some of you might try to take out a calculator and try to fool masses with your skewed "conclusions" but you're not fooling me. The problem with this team is not Roy. It would be like looking at the Oilers first few seasons and assuming their losing record must be due to McDavid because he's just not making players around him better like he's supposed to so you trade him. (This is the logic some fools here are using against Barzal). You don't throw the baby out with the bath water. You make a fair analysis of the situation and you go from there.
while interesting, this data doesn't really show anything unless you can in fact control for the factors you claim explain the variation, such us the number of injuries and quality of players injured. Similarly, without having that information to compare Roy and Lambert, it is impossible to draw any meaningful inferences from this data - as you point out in your first point.
I don't really have a horse in this race - I don't hate Roy as a coach (though I do question some of his decisions) and think he is better than Lambert but I think he is stuck with a declining roster and a poor PP coach (whether chosen by Roy or imposed by Lou).
That said, I am firmly opposed to promoting him to GM, as he has no experience in that at the NHL level and has not knocked his current job out of the park. In fact, the one personnel decision he did have a hand in was bringing in Duclair, which I personally think was a bad move that will get worse over time. If that was Roy's big acquisition idea, I want him nowhere near the GM role.
 
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Your statement was, "None of us here know if he has that authority or not but some are making the assertion that he doesn't."

And you just admitted that Lou does the hiring and that means HE has the authority, the final say, not Roy. Comprende?
Seriously man, what is the deal with you? No one has ever questioned for even a millisecond that Lou has the final say and does the actual hiring and firing but for the umpteenth time that isn't what is being discussed. The highlighted sentence refers to whether or not a coach has any input in the hiring and firing of assistants. Not the actual act, but the input. Some were arguing without knowledge one way or the other that that was true, that he has no say and is therefore not responsible for their bad coaching. That is all. Of course you know that but in many ways you're just like Lou, continually doubling down, in this case, on a silly, specious and semantic argument to deflect responsibility for anything away from Roy.
 
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View attachment 961573


Ok, I assume this is your work. First rule of statistics, it is not wise to draw inferences from descriptive statistics. You and I can play this game all day long but in my mind even a child can figure out possibly what's going on here. But that said, anyone can draw any conclusions from the data presented here, the best hope if you decide to use such a flawed method in judging performance is just to use common sense.

Second rule of statistics. When you are preparing a data analysis, or whenever I prepared data for analysis we always scanned for outliers that were 2 standard deviations from the mean and we REMOVED them from the analysis and we would explain why that data was removed. I could look at this data and I would immediately notice that the goal's for in year 2024-2025 were the lowest at 2.60 which if I was to do an analysis and you can do this easily in excel that number should fall outside 2 standard deviations from the mean. Meaning that it is an outlier. PK, can you come up with any reason why scoring is low this season? Hmm, I think I could. Could it be oh maybe they were missing their two top playmakers for a significant period of time or maybe you have the worse PP assistant coach in the NHL 6 years running dragging your numbers down. But any way you cut it there legitimate reasons why that 2.60 can be considered a statistical outlier and you don't include those numbers in the statistical averages. Same with GAA. 3.02 is kinda high but maybe not 2 standard deviations from the mean but could anyone explain why that number is high this year. Hmm I could. Maybe because the team missing f-ing their entire left side defense for 1/4 of the season and had called up 3 AHL players to play in their stead.

So all you can do is look at the body of work Roy has done compared to his predecessors under similar conditions with as much of the variables controlled as possible. If you take year 2023-2024 and you compare Lambert's performance versus Roy's performance you will see an INVERSE relationship depending upon who was coaching the team. When Roy was coaching the exact roster as Lambert he had a high GF and statistically the highest GF in 8 years at 3.06 and at the same time he had a lower GA average compared to Lambert. This is the inverse relationship. Previous data had been posted previously on this board cited from an article showed in just 37 games Roy improved the 5 on 5 GAA of not just one but EVERY SINGLE player on this team. Now understand this. This data is not really an apples to apples comparison. Roy joined the Islanders in the middle to the latter part of a season when the team was on a losing streak and a nose dive with a high pressure to make the playoffs and he does this. The highest GF in 8 years and the lowest GAA for every single player literally over night.

Folks, you don't blame a guy with that kind of a performance unless you are a complete idiot. Some of you might try to take out a calculator and try to fool masses with your skewed "conclusions" but you're not fooling me. The problem with this team is not Roy. It would be like looking at the Oilers first few seasons and assuming their losing record must be due to McDavid because he's just not making players around him better like he's supposed to so you trade him. (This is the logic some fools here are using against Barzal). You don't throw the baby out with the bath water. You make a fair analysis of the situation and you go from there.

All I asked was for you to define healthy and/or for you to show your work on how you came to these conclusions. You provided neither.

What is interesting is that missing Barzal for an extended period of time actually led to better numbers offensively this season, and goals against remained relatively the same (an increase of .05 without him). Even 5 on 5 goals went up and 5 on 5 defense got better, significantly, despite a decimated defensive core. (I also went back and looked at when Barzal was out for an extended period of time in 2022-23 shown at the bottom)

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The highest goals for average, sure, but the goals against couldn't have been the lowest since it was overall still higher than every single Trotz year and it was higher than the first Lambert year.

You suggested that Barzal (and Duclair) being out for an extended period is a reason for the drop in GF/GP but the data doesn't back that up. Also worth noting when mentioning outliers, Roy's first 37 games to close out the 2023-24 season is the smallest sample of the bunch.

Disclaimer: I am not a math wiz and was at work being interrupted while looking at some of the data so there could definitely be errors.
 
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