SI90
Registered User
I mean if you've egregiously giving up the puck I'd say you're the reason you're not getting any breaks.
I meant us!!
I mean if you've egregiously giving up the puck I'd say you're the reason you're not getting any breaks.
No question, one can't skate and the other just doesn't fit.
Pfft. If you claim that you like to engage posters is because you want to learn something then LEARN. My concerns were in every way exemplified in this game.
As for the above if this was true why did they lose the game literally a minute after I saw that they were backing off what they were doing in the first two periods? I mentioned how I didn’t like a couple of shifts and saw the momentum about to change. The game was lost EXACTLY as I said they were going to lose it. They played conservatively when they should have kept their foot on the pedal.
And while you were trying to lecture me about what you thought was happening I was looking at the bigger picture watching how our D was collapsing in front of Sorokin and as predicted allowed the opposing team to score on a screen shot just like they allowed against the Avs. Just as I told you opposing teams have been doing. You can’t do this in the game you have to get the puck out of the zone and keep the opposing team hemmed into their own D zone. When protecting leads they have to stop collapsing in front of the net and have a player approach the puck carrier at the blue line to cut down his angles and passing lanes. They play like they are down a man. They just all fall back and huddle around the net giving time for the point men to wind up and get a screen shot on the Isles goaltender. It’s predictable and every team now knows how to take advantage of it. A player must attack the puck carrier at the point.
On the offensive side there absolutely were some improvements. They absolutely were being more aggressive on offense and opening up the game a bit. I love seeing Dobson joining or leading the rush. I love how loose the players were relentlessly getting pucks to the net and driving towards the net. They were entering the offensive zone with speed and I thought they moved the puck quicker and less telegraphing their passes on the PP. Horvat is finally showing us why he was worth the salary and picks. This was an element I haven’t seen in a long time. In fact it looked like the Islanders were enjoying themselves. Unfortunately this last for only 2 1/2 periods and inexplicably they stopped pressing and allowed the opposing team to regroup.
If they can just fix this mental aspect of the game they will fix a lot of their problems in giving up leads. If they learn to open up the game at the right times during a game they will do well. The first 2 periods were fantastic and I couldn’t ask for more. The third not so much.
You had the Halal Lamb with too much tzatziki sauce?I was urgently destroying a UBS stall when Detroit and isles scored their third goals. Guess it didn’t help.
Seemed to work out pretty darn well with Greene, no?100% correct. Lou is going to trade a 2nd before the deadline to acquire such a player. Find an older vet D-man with good character on a non-playoff team on an expiring contract and you've probably identified Lou's target.
On the first goal they stopped skating a for a few shifts which allowed the Wings to build momentum. That's the point when I mentioned in this thread that I didn't like what I was seeing. A minute later they scored their first goal.I already described that to you multiple times and you just keep ignoring the actual play.
You're going to seriously argue that the shifts before the goals that were scored are the cause for the goals rather than the shift they actually took place? What happened on the Bolduc/Aho goal? What happened on the turnover from Dobson goal? In detail please.
The first goal wasn't a screen shot.
The second goal deflected off Wahlstrom, who was challenging the point.
Here, I'll use pictures. This was Wahlstrom who was in position to get the puck and it skipped over his stick.
View attachment 760788
Here we see the Detroit defenseman grab the puck after it hopped Wahlstrom's stick. There are three Red Wings below the hash marks, you want those guys left alone? What exactly is Wahlstrom supposed to do here other than go towards the point like he's doing?
View attachment 760789
The third goal was a tap in because they lost their coverage. In both the second and third goal the winger did attack the point. Also, just a note, you seem to think point shots with screens are a unique strategy teams employ against the Islanders. It isn't. Every team in the NHL uses point shots with screens because they're easy opportunities to get.
And you're going to chalk this difference up to a system change?
Oh, open it up when it it leads to goals for but not for goals against. Got it.
Your posts are like this, regardless of how the game was actually played:
"See, they won the game because they scored more doing the things I said they should do!"
"See, they lost the game because they didn't do the things I said they should do!"
You use results of the game to defend your "opinions" and completely ignore anything that actually happened in the game.
Actually looked like it bounced back up into him. Puck was bouncing all night.Horvat has been excellent. Unfortunate he gave that away in OT. Looked like he was trying to play it back for possession and didn’t get enough on a bouncing puck. Might have had barzal with a chip up the wall. Oh well, didn’t deserve the 2nd point anyway after that disgusting 5min stretch. Team could really use mayfield right about now. Bolduc/Aho pairing is bad.
On the first goal they stopped skating a for a few shifts which allowed the Wings to build momentum. That's the point when I mentioned in this thread that I didn't like what I was seeing. A minute later they scored their first goal.
On the second goal they did what they always do. They allowed the rushing forwards too much room to enter the zone because they always collapse right in front of Sorokin. They need to slow up the oncoming forwards not just retreat towards the net. As per usual there were one too many defenseman standing in front of the net. There was only one opponent to contend with at the net yet they always have two defensemen needlessly crowding the front of the net blocking Sorokin's vision. He's being screened HIS OWN PLAYERS. Like I said in the game against NJ, Sorokin just needs to see the puck and he will be able to stop it. The opponent more often than not scores in these situations. The Isles are positioned like they are on a PK when they are still playing 5 on 5. This collapsing in front of the net bullshit is what's causing the Islanders so many late period collapses. The defensive system has to change. They just have to persist with their man on man coverage in the D zone and they will be fine. Creating a wall in front of one of the best goaltenders in the league is mindnumbingly stupid. Let Sorokin be Sorokin. He will be fine if you just let him see the puck.
Watch the video at the 5:30 mark and you will see exactly what I am talking about.
In general, when the game gets late this Islander squad either because of mental weakness or something Lambert has them doing causes them to turtle and protect narrow leads.
On the first goal they stopped skating a for a few shifts which allowed the Wings to build momentum. That's the point when I mentioned in this thread that I didn't like what I was seeing. A minute later they scored their first goal.
On the second goal they did what they always do. They allowed the rushing forwards too much room to enter the zone because they always collapse right in front of Sorokin. They need to slow up the oncoming forwards not just retreat towards the net. As per usual there were one too many defenseman standing in front of the net. There was only one opponent to contend with at the net yet they always have two defensemen needlessly crowding the front of the net blocking Sorokin's vision. He's being screened HIS OWN PLAYERS. Like I said in the game against NJ, Sorokin just needs to see the puck and he will be able to stop it. The opponent more often than not scores in these situations. The Isles are positioned like they are on a PK when they are still playing 5 on 5. This collapsing in front of the net bullshit is what's causing the Islanders so many late period collapses. The defensive system has to change. They just have to persist with their man on man coverage in the D zone and they will be fine. Creating a wall in front of one of the best goaltenders in the league is mindnumbingly stupid. Let Sorokin be Sorokin. He will be fine if you just let him see the puck.
Watch the video at the 5:30 mark and you will see exactly what I am talking about.
In general, when the game gets late this Islander squad either because of mental weakness or something Lambert has them doing causes them to turtle and protect narrow leads.
I thought that was the goalhorn going off and was confused.I was urgently destroying a UBS stall when Detroit and isles scored their third goals. Guess it didn’t help.
100% correct. Lou is going to trade a 2nd before the deadline to acquire such a player. Find a older vet D-man with good character on a non-playoff team on an expiring contract and you've probably identified Lou's target.
I want them to stop blocking Sorokin's vision and convert this anchoring in front of the net to man on man coverage. This system has failed the team several key moments in pivotal games. It's not because it was Aho and Bolduc, this team gives up goals in the same manner regardless who is in front of the net. It's been happening more since Lambert took over.The moment of the video you decided to point out is two of the worst defensmen on the team making egregious defensive mistakes. Which has nothing to do with a defensive system.
If I am reading correctly, are you advocating for Islanders players to not block shots?
They gave up 222 (2.7 per game) goals last season. Good for 6th in the league and an improvement over Trotz's last year. So far this year they are at 2.8 goals per game. 10th in the league.I want them to stop blocking Sorokin's vision and convert this anchoring in front of the net to man on man coverage. This system has failed the team several key moments in pivotal games. It's not because it was Aho and Bolduc, this team gives up goals in the same manner regardless who is in front of the net. It's been happening more since Lambert took over.
On the first goal they stopped skating a for a few shifts which allowed the Wings to build momentum. That's the point when I mentioned in this thread that I didn't like what I was seeing. A minute later they scored their first goal.
On the second goal they did what they always do. They allowed the rushing forwards too much room to enter the zone because they always collapse right in front of Sorokin.
They need to slow up the oncoming forwards not just retreat towards the net. As per usual there were one too many defenseman standing in front of the net. There was only one opponent to contend with at the net yet they always have two defensemen needlessly crowding the front of the net blocking Sorokin's vision. The opponent always scores in these situations. The Isles are positioned like they are on a PK when they are still playing 5 on 5. This collapsing in front of the net bullshit is what's causing the Islanders so many late period collapses. The defensive system has to change.
Watch the video at the 5:30 mark and you will see exactly what I am talking about.
In general, when the game gets late this Islander squad either because of mental weakness or something Lambert has them doing causes them to turtle and protect narrow leads.
Man, would be nice to get some hunger and start playing with a chips on their collective shoulders. All the way from the coach to the highest paid player down to the 5th and 6th dman. If I was gambling man Mr Lou upstairs can't be too happy and the coach may have a short leashAfter being up 2-0, this should have been a clear win. However, the team just played very vanilla from there on. For about 10-15 minutes, the building was silent and you could hear the ‘crowd’ - not in a good way. Reminded me of some euro games where the team is playing and not much else going on.
They lost all on their own. Simple as that.
I think he was on a short leash from day one. But record-wise (both last year and currently being 4-2-2) tough to justify firing him. If they're on the outside looking in in a month, I can see Lou making a change.Man, would be nice to get some hunger and start playing with a chips on their collective shoulders. All the way from the coach to the highest paid player down to the 5th and 6th dman. If I was gambling man Mr Lou upstairs can't be too happy and the coach may have a short leash
Mistakes are going to happen from time to time so I'm not going to blame individual players like Bolduc or Aho for lost games just I won't blame Horvat for coughing up the puck in OT. This was the least of their problems.So you're argument is that momentum from previous plays is the cause for the breakdown on the play where the goal is scored? It's illogical to come to that conclusion. Why are you ignoring the aggression showed by Bolduc and how it backfired? It's not like there was an icing and a tired group out there or something.
Which is the exact opposite of what happened on the Bolduc play, but you're ignoring that. Why?
They also didn't collapse right in front of him. Pelech actually makes a play stepping up on the puck and whiffs when there's a cross ice pass.
Sometimes the play is to be aggressive at the blue line and other times it isn't. The lost coverage on the third goal is infuriating, but that isn't a strategy issue, it's an execution (and a simple one at that).
That's the least applicable to what you're talking about because that's on a rush. Aho plays it terribly, because he's bad, and it all stemmed from Bolduc being aggressive at the blue line (which again is what you want). Those are the types of break downs that can happen when you're overly aggressive and fail to execute. Aho should've done more than just wave at the guy but the predicament and going to the net to try and defend an odd man situation is correct.
I think they don't handle it well when other teams turn up the pressure because they simply aren't good enough. What we see from most of the players is their best effort and they don't have the ability to elevate to another level.
I appreciate the time you took with this one, so thank you. Way more specific and I like that.
Wahlstrom just has no awareness and he's terrible with his shot. Typical islanders 1st round forward bust who shows little to nothing.No question, one can't skate and the other just doesn't fit.
Mistakes are going to happen from time to time so I'm not going to blame individual players like Bolduc or Aho for lost games just I won't blame Horvat for coughing up the puck in OT. This was the least of their problems.
When there is a systematic breakdown in D zone late in game after game that's predictable then I start to worry. When I see a team frequently losing momentum and mental toughness then that's a problem.
If you want the details as I edited in my last post. The Isles have to move away from an anchor defense in front of Sorokin. It's causing more problems than helping and convert their system to man on man coverage or a smothering system when the opposing team enters the zone. Much like the Lightning deploy. Two men on either side of the net allowing the opposing team's easy entry into the D zone zone. It's just messing up Sorokin's game and playing to the opponent's hands. As anyone observes with Sorokin. He's phenomenal if he see's the puck, but the anchor system is blocking his view and I would prefer more man to man coverage over zone defense . It's failed at the most inopportune moment. Again it requires trust with our goaltenders and we have possibly the best tandem in the league.
I agree about the short leash. As for timing, they have 5 upcoming games and then a 4 game west coast trip and then 3 days off. If Lou isn't happy, we might know by the day after that trip ends (11/19). And it might not be just Lou - ownership might have something to say too, especially if they think they have a better alternative.I think he was on a short leash from day one. But record-wise (both last year and currently being 4-2-2) tough to justify firing him. If they're on the outside looking in in a month, I can see Lou making a change.
Get spicey, add some Quenville or Babcock.especially if they think they have a better alternative.
It's Lou so who really knows but I think he'll have more time than that. Now, if they were currently sitting at like 1-5-2, yeah I'd say he has about 9 games to the team on track.I agree about the short leash. As for timing, they have 5 upcoming games and then a 4 game west coast trip and then 3 days off. If Lou isn't happy, we might know by the day after that trip ends (11/19). And it might not be just Lou - ownership might have something to say too, especially if they think they have a better alternative.