Lempo
Recovering Future Considerations Truther
- Feb 23, 2014
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I say we clone 2009 Cam Ward.
It's a Doctor Doom plan when as the phase one you need a time machine and the cloning technology.
I say we clone 2009 Cam Ward.
I liked Gardiner’s game again. The coaches did too, evidently. He played 3:25 more than Slavin at EV in regulation. Until a better solution is found next to 74, Gardiner - Pesce is basically the top pair. Hopefully it holds up against faster clubs.
I’d still like to see Bean at some point. The puck movement outside of that pair was ugly. The opposition just has to shade over to Slavin and force him to throw it off the glass or pass it over to Edmundson to exit the zone. Fleury - van Riemsdyk was pretty disappointing in that regard given how much they’ve played together over the years.
Side note: Ned has faced 8 shots in 33 minutes but only stopped 6.
Make that he has stopped 6 of 9.
5-3 checkers, end of 2.
Much like the back-up QB in football, the prospect is the most discussed.Quotes from the Checker's thread and this thread.
I know that some have been clamoring for Ned to get a call-up, but from what I can tell, he's been as inconsistent and performing no better (or worse) in the AHL as Mrazek and Reimer have performed in the NHL. Maybe it's the team in front of him, but it seems he's taken a step back this year? I don't watch the Checkers often though, so going off other peoples feedback and stats only. Seems like the Checker's are dealing with some inconsistent goaltending from both tenders right now, but scoring enough to compensate for it.
Quotes from the Checker's thread and this thread.
I know that some have been clamoring for Ned to get a call-up, but from what I can tell, he's been as inconsistent and performing no better (or worse) in the AHL as Mrazek and Reimer have performed in the NHL. Maybe it's the team in front of him, but it seems he's taken a step back this year? I don't watch the Checkers often though, so going off other peoples feedback and stats only. Seems like the Checker's are dealing with some inconsistent goaltending from both tenders right now, but scoring enough to compensate for it.
I've watched a lot of Checkers games this year. Other than at the beginning of the year, Ned's looked quite good this year. In some ways, his and Forsberg's mediocre SV% is misleading because Charlotte is so good at shot suppression as a team, especially since the Kaski deal that fortified the 3rd pairing. A lot of times, it's more difficult for goaltenders to get really high SV% without seeing the usual barrage of shots, even if they're playing well.
Thanks for the feedback.
The same thing apply with the Canes goalies as aren't the Canes the #1 shot suppression team in the league?
I just find it hard to think Ned, with a career AHL .905SV% and .905SV% this year is going to do better than that when he gets to the NHL against tougher competition. Hopefully he does if/when he gets here.
Thanks for the feedback.
The same thing apply with the Canes goalies as aren't the Canes the #1 shot suppression team in the league?
I just find it hard to think Ned, with a career AHL .905SV% and .905SV% this year is going to do better than that when he gets to the NHL against tougher competition. Hopefully he does if/when he gets here.
Not arguing the main point with you here (I don't think Ned is the answer right now), but AHL to NHL sv%s are very weird. Mainly because defenses aren't nearly as good and chances can be higher danger. I think AHL to NHL save percentage is not nearly a linear translation, and it's not unheard of for a guy's sv% to actually increase when getting to the NHL.
Ilya Samsonov last year in 37 AHL starts: 0.898 sv%
Ilya Samsonov this year in Washington: 0.927 sv%
Tristan Jarry last year in 47 AHL starts: 0.915 sv%
Tristan Jarry this year in Pittsburgh: 0.929 sv%
Alex Georgiev last year in 11 AHL starts: 0.883 sv%
Alex Georgiev this year with the Rangers: 0.913 sv%
Pavel Francouz last year in 49 AHL starts: 0.918 sv%
Pavel Francouz this year in Colorado: 0.926 sv%
Seems almost like the rule rather than the exception, at least for guys who eventually become solid NHLers. You never know until you try.
Ilya Samsonov last year in 37 AHL starts: 0.898 sv%
Ilya Samsonov this year in Washington: 0.927 sv%
Tristan Jarry last year in 47 AHL starts: 0.915 sv%
Tristan Jarry this year in Pittsburgh: 0.929 sv%
Alex Georgiev last year in 11 AHL starts: 0.883 sv%
Alex Georgiev this year with the Rangers: 0.913 sv%
Pavel Francouz last year in 49 AHL starts: 0.918 sv%
Pavel Francouz this year in Colorado: 0.926 sv%
Seems almost like the rule rather than the exception, at least for guys who eventually become solid NHLers. You never know until you try.
Slavin's rough is a good game for everyone else. Elite is elite.
Ilya Samsonov last year in 37 AHL starts: 0.898 sv%
Ilya Samsonov this year in Washington: 0.927 sv%
Tristan Jarry last year in 47 AHL starts: 0.915 sv%
Tristan Jarry this year in Pittsburgh: 0.929 sv%
Alex Georgiev last year in 11 AHL starts: 0.883 sv%
Alex Georgiev this year with the Rangers: 0.913 sv%
Pavel Francouz last year in 49 AHL starts: 0.918 sv%
Pavel Francouz this year in Colorado: 0.926 sv%
Seems almost like the rule rather than the exception, at least for guys who eventually become solid NHLers. You never know until you try.