Ken Holland rumored to join Utah front office

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GarlicbreadTB

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Apr 16, 2015
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Yeah I cant imagine being as old as Holland/Lou/Poile and having made the money that they did in their careers and actually wanting a job lol

These guys are very wealthy. I can not understand why you would want to be part of NHL management team in late 60s to 80s.

Lots of wealthy people just wanna to wake up in the morning and go to work. Don't just wanna sit around and do nothing or play bunch of golf.
 
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Voight

#winning
Feb 8, 2012
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Smith is relatively new to hockey so there's a chance this a "resume" hire i.e. sees that he was the GM of multiple cup winners and his now former team just made the finals.

Wouldn't be surprised if hes going to be the liaison between Bill Armstrong & Smith.
 

Mosby

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Feb 16, 2012
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Bill Armstrong has done a very good job, but there is little in the organization to bounce ideas off of outside of Larry Pleau. I don't mind bringing in a voice with four rings.
 

Soundwave

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Mar 1, 2007
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Some people just like to be "in the mix", if you can still do something in your old age, I guess you should just keep on doing it if it makes you happy.

That said, he's lived a pretty charmed life as a hockey exec basically being gift wrapped Yzerman-Datsyuk + Lidstrom for most of his time in Detroit and then McDavid + Draisaitl all his time in Edmonton. Hockey life is not so easy when you don't have those security blankets.
 
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The Zetterberg Era

Ball Hockey Sucks
Nov 8, 2011
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Good. Let him ruin another team.
Teams where Ken Holland was heavily involved have won four cups and been to seven finals. People can get into the game has passed him by despite getting his latest team to the finals. I know superstars... But they couldn't consistently hit the playoffs until he showed up. I would think if he is on your advisory board as is this rumor that is a good thing. Devellano who I basically like to call drunk uncle still has always provided a lot of good insights and he did it at an advancing age. You look around the league and see several teams with these kind of guys.

I had hoped they might do the advisory role in Detroit that he had before going to Edmonton. I would have also put Dallas at the top of the list in this kind of capacity. Interesting for Utah, I really like the investments that the ownership is making out there.
 

Soundwave

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Mar 1, 2007
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Teams where Ken Holland was heavily involved have won four cups and been to seven finals. People can get into the game has passed him by despite getting his latest team to the finals. I know superstars... But they couldn't consistently hit the playoffs until he showed up. I would think if he is on your advisory board as is this rumor that is a good thing. Devellano who I basically like to call drunk uncle still has always provided a lot of good insights and he did it at an advancing age. You look around the league and see several teams with these kind of guys.

I had hoped they might do the advisory role in Detroit that he had before going to Edmonton. I would have also put Dallas at the top of the list in this kind of capacity. Interesting for Utah, I really like the investments that the ownership is making out there.

Granted though ... you almost have to try to f*** up a prime Lidstrom or prime McDavid + Draisaitl for your entire tenure almost. A lot of hockey execs probably look pretty smart in the situation given a long runway.
 

SirKillalot

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Feb 27, 2008
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That said, he's lived a pretty charmed life as a hockey exec basically being gift wrapped Yzerman-Datsyuk + Lidstrom for most of his time in Detroit
Gift wrapped?
He was part of the scouting staff drafting Lidstrom and he drafted Datsyuk.
Could they have won another couple of cups, sure. Were they more than competitive for other longer runs? Yes. But gift wrapped geez, head out of toilet please.
 

Soundwave

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Mar 1, 2007
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Gift wrapped?
He was part of the scouting staff drafting Lidstrom and he drafted Datsyuk.
Could they have won another couple of cups, sure. Were they more than competitive for other longer runs? Yes. But gift wrapped geez, head out of toilet please.

Judging by his drafting the past 12-15 years, he lost whatever draft touch he had a long time ago. I doubt he's the one that made the call on the Lidstrom pick was more likely one of their Euro scouts.

The Red Wings picked Mike Sillinger from Western Canada in 1989 (1st round 11th overall), he was a Western Canadian scout for the team then ... that wasn't exactly a slam dunk pick even though he eventually carved out a decent career for himself.
 
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SirKillalot

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Feb 27, 2008
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Judging by his drafting the past 12-15 years, he lost whatever draft touch he had a long time ago.
Which has nothing to do with your terrible statement.
Lidstrom retired 12 years ago.

You claim he was gift wrapped and he wasn't. He was part of building the teams, first as a scout, then as Director of Amateur Scouting for 7 years and 3 years as Assistant GM prior to getting the GM job. Pretty sure he was part of the group choosing who to draft as head of the department...and later on as GM.

One can argue the misses in later half of his Detroit-career, but has nothing to do with your statement.
 

Soundwave

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Mar 1, 2007
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Which has nothing to do with your terrible statement.
Lidstrom retired 12 years ago.

You claim he was gift wrapped and he wasn't. He was part of building the teams, first as a scout, then as Director of Amateur Scouting for 7 years and 3 years as Assistant GM prior to getting the GM job. Pretty sure he was part of the group choosing who to draft as head of the department...and later on as GM.

One can argue the misses in later half of his Detroit-career, but has nothing to do with your statement.

I don't think he had much to do with the Lidstrom pick at all. Mike Sillinger and Bob Boughner (their 1st and 2nd round picks in 1989)? Sillinger likely for sure, Boughner maybe.

He was the Western Canadian scout, this is the 80s now too, where widespread video internet was not a thing, the Lidstrom pick was almost definitely their Euro scout(s).
 

SirKillalot

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Feb 27, 2008
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I don't think he had much to do with the Lidstrom pick at all. Mike Sillinger and Bob Boughner (their 1st and 2nd round picks in 1989)? Sillinger likely for sure, Boughner maybe.

He was the Western Canadian scout, this is the 80s now too, where widespread video internet was not a thing, the Lidstrom pick was almost definitely their Euro scout(s).
Pretty sure it was a team effort.

"Rockstrom, a modest man, downplays his role in “discovering” Nick Lidstrom. He admits he did scout him and liked what he saw, but drafting Lidstrom was not part of his job.

“Everybody saw him a year before he got drafted and he went through the draft but the draft was only three rounds for (European) players like that,” Rockstrom said. “So, we saw him and he wasn’t one of the players picked in the top three rounds so the next year, he had made a lot of progress.”

What Rockstrom liked in 19-year-old Lidstrom’s game was his hockey sense and (unflappable) personality. He couldn’t really find a glaring weakness in his game.

“It’s more Neil (Smith) and Kenny (Holland) than me. I recognized him obviously. I had him high on my list but then they were the people that picked and decided,” Rockstrom said. “We had meetings like we always had so it’s teamwork. I find the player, I recognize the talent, I bring it to the next guy and then they make the final decision. I’m a piece of the puzzle but I’m not the decision maker."
 

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