Another post where the user focuses on an extreme outlier to try and make their point, as opposed to the real issue at hand. Very cool.
Yup - In 2019 the Blues won the Cup. To leave it at that and use that solely as your basis for any argument is as disingenuous as it comes. If you really want to have a real conversation about how to help the Islanders going forward then we need to get into the weeds on it...
The Blues were literally the worst team in the entire league in January of 2019...Until Binnington came along and had perhaps the best single half-season performance any athlete has given us in the past decade in terms of their performance leading to team success. Down the stretch of that season Binnington went 24-5-1 with a .927 save % and 1.89 GAA and had 5 shutouts...As a rookie.
Do you fully comprehend those numbers given the circumstance he was thrust into? I encourage you to watch game 7 of the Cup that year vs the Bruins and watch what Binnington did. It was jaw-dropping and if not for him they not only still don't have a Cup in their franchise's history, but they are a lottery team that year.
So did you fully understand what Binnington did when you tried to avoid the point of my previous post by flippantly saying the "Blues weren't stacked"? Now that we're discussing...Is that seriously the way you want to build a team - Needing your goaltender to have a historic NHL season to be relevant? I guess since Sorokin is easily a top 5 goalie in the league when he's on, you'd be ok if we just keep putting "non-stacked" talent around him, because perhaps one year he'll have a "Binnington-esque" performance and we can plan a parade?
Seriously? That's what you're hanging your hat on?
That plan is like giving up your job and counting on winning the lotto for your income. Could it happen? Sure. Is it likely to happen or is it even smart to do...Not at all. And to further how rare what Binnington did was in 2019, you'll also notice that Blues weren't near a Cup before or after that one historic season.
This isn't about what I, or anyone else, want to do - This is about facts. If you'd stop cherry-picking because you just and try to look at the data objectively it shows that to build a strong Cup contender there is no guaranteed way, but the most successful way is to have a readily producing core of top-end players, mostly acquired through the draft, being paid what their worth (not overpaid), so that we not only increase our odds of winning a Cup, but have a window of years where we can be a contender.
If you want to keep arguing outliers, feel free, but regardless of how you, I, or anyone else feels, in terms of building a true Cup contender there is something called reality at work here.