Nope.My Swedish speech is more fun than my mother tongue, more speech in Swedish.
Two nice Dahlin and Power among Buffalo's defence.
Nope.My Swedish speech is more fun than my mother tongue, more speech in Swedish.
Two nice Dahlin and Power among Buffalo's defence.
He's playing great this season too.Dahlin played some unreal hockey 2 years ago and last year ( And where did that get them ) I think he should get the benefit of the doubt a little bit for a rough start all while recovering from an injury, although I'm not a buffalo fan so I can't really comment.
Surely Dahlin is the least of their worries
Yeah, let's make the dude that has problems regulating his emotions the captain. Makes perfect sense.Coach Lindy Ruff said this today on WGR550 when asked about Dahlin's ill timed penalties:
"It's something that he's going to have to get over. It's repeated now, it's something in his DNA. Part of the DNA is his emotion is running really high. Part of that DNA was wiring that slap shot on the power play that says we're going to make sure we get into this game. At the same time that type of DNA is hurting him. It's something that mentally he has to get past. We have to help him get past that. As the captain of the team you're the leader. The guy who sets the tone. So it's something in Dahls case that he knows he has to be better. He knows he can't take that situation.
Every player has a trigger. Can you control that trigger whether it's an emotional trigger, physical, at a key moment? We have to be able to conquer those hard moments. That is a moment that he has to let go. He's going to have to learn to let go. He hasn't been able to do it yet....."
Also said this after a follow-up question:
"Learn to control. Learn to move on"
I think that this was some good stuff by Lindy Ruff but even so, this is all talk at this point.Coach Lindy Ruff said this today on WGR550 when asked about Dahlin's ill timed penalties:
"It's something that he's going to have to get over. It's repeated now, it's something in his DNA. Part of the DNA is his emotion is running really high. Part of that DNA was wiring that slap shot on the power play that says we're going to make sure we get into this game. At the same time that type of DNA is hurting him. It's something that mentally he has to get past. We have to help him get past that. As the captain of the team you're the leader. The guy who sets the tone. So it's something in Dahls case that he knows he has to be better. He knows he can't take that situation.
Every player has a trigger. Can you control that trigger whether it's an emotional trigger, physical, at a key moment? We have to be able to conquer those hard moments. That is a moment that he has to let go. He's going to have to learn to let go. He hasn't been able to do it yet....."
Also said this after a follow-up question:
"Learn to control. Learn to move on"
I'm pretty sure Eric Johnson is the only vet that's been with the team more than 60 games....... Dahlin has been the oldest defenseman of the team at 24 for almost 6 years other than when Bogosian was spending 75% of his time here on IR.When was the last time a team full of kids did anything? Buffalo has zero vets and have arrogantly held onto their prospect pool thinking they can be different. Maybe it’s an overcorrection from Eichel, who knows. But the fact they haven’t acquired a real veteran RHD, among other things, is inexcusable. Dahlin will have his moment
The answer is because the goalies couldn't make a save but that's boringI'm pretty sure Eric Johnson is the only vet that's been with the team more than 60 games....... Dahlin has been the oldest defenseman of the team at 24 for almost 6 years other than when Bogosian was spending 75% of his time here on IR.
Dahlin is pretty great when he isn't in his own head but yeah he's not that good in a 6v5 situation which isn't favorable to the offense anyway. The real discussion is why are the Sabres even in a 6v5 situation when they already scored 5 goals? Owen Power was -4 on the game you would think the criticism would be have aimed at him when the Canadians normally don't score that much.
not being smug, Dahlin was not close to being a dud. I just wanted to point out that the cover was not wrong, there was indeed a quasi-generational level talent in that draft class after all (What are the chances of that?). They just listed him at 8 or sth behind Wahlstorm and Boqvist etc.Chill. I too can't believe how lucky we are to have Hughes but we don't need to be smug and insert it unnecessarily into unrelated threads.
Dahlin' been completely unsupported by veterans or useful systems, so it's possible he's adopted some terrible habits.
But he's still a superlatively skilled player. Either in Buffalo, or if they stupidly trade him elsewhere, he will be a key part of some long playoff runs eventually.
not being smug, Dahlin was not close to being a dud. I just wanted to point out that the cover was not wrong, there was indeed a quasi-generational level talent in that draft class after all (What are the chances of that?). They just listed him at 8 or sth behind Wahlstorm and Boqvist etc.
you can interpret it however way you want, I can assure you, my intention was not to point out who was right and who was wrong, Dahlin is a rare talent, and Sabres brass is not wrong to draft him, even though the title of this topic suggests otherwise. I was simply commenting on a cover with an outrageous hyperbolic caption being actually correct for once, but the prospect turns out to be a different guy. I guess I could've worded my initial post as "2018 defensive prospect that shall remain nameless".Coming into a topic about one player and bragging about how you got it right and the Sabres got it wrong is smug as f***, sorry to say.
I wouldn't go as far as to call him Risto. But he's definitely taken a step back over the past 2 seasons since 2022-23.The Buffalo Sabres ruined him and are continuing to ruin him. Either they told him - the most skilled defenseman I've ever seen - to play more like Derian Hatcher, and he took it to heart, OR, he decided to do that on his own and they didn't stop him. Either way, who cares, the result is the same. He was never fast, but he bulked up a lot, and now he's *extremely* not fast. Could you imagine what Quinn Hughes would be like if the Canucks told him to put on 30 pounds and fight guys? I mean...wtf?
Here's a guy who, as a prospect and as a rookie, would routinely fake professional hockey players out so bad they'd literally fall down, and now all he does is take clappers into shin pads on the power play and scrum after the whistle. He is a shell of the player he was as a teenager. To put it in statsbro speak, he's a guy who generally still does good corsi and xgf, but he plays like Rasmus Ristolainen (who...not coincidentally...was also a Buffalo Sabre....). He maintains relatively good stats probably because he is so talented and has vision that can't be taught, but he plays the way you would expect a "bad defenseman" to play. Static, lumbering, clappering, scrumming. It's sad, actually.
I thought he had a pretty damn good season last year. He played good in his own zone and was in the race for most goals for a defenseman. He also excels at moving the puck up the ice.I wouldn't go as far as to call him Risto. But he's definitely taken a step back over the past 2 seasons since 2022-23.
Is saying "please discuss..." just another way of saying please agree with me lol?
very well said on Ruff's part.Coach Lindy Ruff said this today on WGR550 when asked about Dahlin's ill timed penalties:
"It's something that he's going to have to get over. It's repeated now, it's something in his DNA. Part of the DNA is his emotion is running really high. Part of that DNA was wiring that slap shot on the power play that says we're going to make sure we get into this game. At the same time that type of DNA is hurting him. It's something that mentally he has to get past. We have to help him get past that. As the captain of the team you're the leader. The guy who sets the tone. So it's something in Dahls case that he knows he has to be better. He knows he can't take that situation.
Every player has a trigger. Can you control that trigger whether it's an emotional trigger, physical, at a key moment? We have to be able to conquer those hard moments. That is a moment that he has to let go. He's going to have to learn to let go. He hasn't been able to do it yet....."
Also said this after a follow-up question:
"Learn to control. Learn to move on"
Nope. Im not trading Petterson for DhalinExactly... in fact, I would strongly consider trading pretty much anyone else on our roster for him.
Outside of Hughes.