I still subscribe to the old coaching book titled Practice Perfect.
You don't accept sloppy practice habits. they become sloppy game habits.
Practice like you play, play like you practice is an old adage that fits here.
I still subscribe to the old coaching book titled Practice Perfect.
You don't accept sloppy practice habits. they become sloppy game habits.
The Sixth longest tenured coach in the league after allowing six straight goals to lose 8-3
The year Dahlin came into the league I saw a team with far worse talent that was everything you just described and then some and who lost their best player for nothing finish 5th best in the league that season. We don't even need Trotz level coaching, just getting an average solid pro instead of the worst coach in the league would make so much difference.
You might be right, but it seems that either way you look at it, the coaching staff is failing at having the team ready at puck drop. Some of that does fall on the players (either poor mentality or inexperience...both).In my experience coaching and playing sports, tempo in practice has never affected how teams start games.
It does affect how players play in general and how they finish games. But, getting off to strong starts is 90% mentality and focus from the jump and not related at all to tempo in practice.
You might be right, but it seems that either way you look at it, the coaching staff is failing at having the team ready at puck drop. Some of that does fall on the players (either poor mentality or inexperience...both).
The coaching staff absolutely did not do a good enough job this season.You might be right, but it seems that either way you look at it, the coaching staff is failing at having the team ready at puck drop. Some of that does fall on the players (either poor mentality or inexperience...both).
Every NHL team uses small area games in practices. But, from everything that I have read about how Granato designs practices, he uses them more than other NHL coaches. I think that is OK if you are trying to develop players. I do not believe that it is the best approach when you are trying to win now.Small Area Games work. (At least at the levels I've coached.)
But they have to have a purpose and replicate real game conditions. (Close in work on the boards, rapid transitions.)
Despite what USA Hockey says, you don't employ them mainly for fun or to keep players from being bored and inactive standing around in line drills.
The high tempo to low tempo spectrum is different than the sharp to sloppy spectrum for me.I still subscribe to the old coaching book titled Practice Perfect.
You don't accept sloppy practice habits. they become sloppy game habits.
Practice Perfect mean getting it right in practice at game speed.The high tempo to low tempo spectrum is different than the sharp to sloppy spectrum for me.
You can have sloppy, high tempo practices and sharp, low tempo practices. Ideally, you have sharp, high tempo practices that try and replicate game pace when you have the recovery time to have the players recovered from the previous game and enough time to recover before the next game.
You've hit the nail on the head. Donny thinks he's developing. The fans want wins.The coaching staff absolutely did not do a good enough job this season.
I just think that some of the arguments that people are making based off of the comments by Mitts & Okie post-TDL are not the best arguments to make against the coaching staff.
The piss poor PP and the regression of most of the top producers from last year are the two best arguments against the current coaching staff.
Granato's practices are great for player development. That phase of this current build should have ended last season. Neither Granato, his staff, nor Adams shifted their approach after last season when they should have been moving to a different stage in the build. They neither evolved the roster nor their practice structure. And the results did not take the next step as a result.
Every NHL team uses small area games in practices. But, from everything that I have read about how Granato designs practices, he uses them more than other NHL coaches. I think that is OK if you are trying to develop players. I do not believe that it is the best approach when you are trying to win now.
Is this also Mittelstadt's fault for going so slow in practice? He just should have went faster regardless in which the speed of the drills are being held.Not blaming him for the poorly ran practices, but each and every player is responsible for the effort they put on the ice. If they are requiring the coaches to "motivate them" to practice or play harder, then I think they have the wrong attribute that I want in a Sabres player. The primary person responsible for pushing the players, are themselves.
I will say, my take may have come across harshly against Mittelstadt, but when we have seen games where the players have coasted, or not played hard, or did things on the ice where you question if they quit or done enough, and then one of those players says they never sweated that much in a morning practice, something that THEY can control themselves, it's just something I to commented on.
This isn't to waive any responsibility of the organization as it seems very obvious that they just aren't good enough of an organization in everything they do.
If KA doesn't fire Granato this offseason, then he (KA) will be looking for a new job in 2025. He must know this.
Practice does not make perfect it makes permanent so practice perfectly. It is really hard to change ingrained habits. See Thompson TageI still subscribe to the old coaching book titled Practice Perfect.
You don't accept sloppy practice habits. they become sloppy game habits.
If you don't play the way I want you to play, I nail your ass to the bench and the Press Box. And send you elsewhere.Practice does not make perfect it makes permanent so practice perfectly. It is really hard to change ingrained habits. See Thompson Tage
Adams just blithely/naively assuming that everyone in the top 6 would repeat career years, no one would get injured, Levi would be an effective NHL starter from day 1, and VO would be a passable long-term Quinn replacement on line 2 still pisses me off. He didn't have that many holes to fill, and yet, he still went with the Botterill plan of sitting on his hands and doing nothing.I think what frustrates me about this season is that it feels like a big step backwards. If we were Caps fans, we'd expect that because older team blah blah blah. But this is the youngest team in the league, who at least on paper became stronger in the off-season, and yet here we are, toiling. Clearly there needs to be a major shakeup, and the coach is the easiest shakeup to make.