Embiid
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Sounds to me that Lavi is going to double down based on the second article....remains to be seen how much he'll adjust when we play more defensive teams like NJ, NYR and even Tampa. He better have a plan other than just attacking..
I think this bears watching and like I said...Bryz and Lavi better make a pact to save each other's jobs..they are being watched and rightfully so..
Lavi says...
I think this bears watching and like I said...Bryz and Lavi better make a pact to save each other's jobs..they are being watched and rightfully so..
Something that became abundantly clear after the Flyers' playoff elimination last year was that general manager Paul Holmgren wanted to see Peter Laviolette make a few adjustments to his offense-oriented system. The GM perceived a need for the club to improve its team defense and keep things a little bit more under control in front of Ilya Bryzgalov, as the team did during the month of March.
Holmgren was very straightforward about his views when asked about it on media day after the team's playoff elimination by New Jersey.
Said Holmgren, "There is no question in my mind that we have to do a better job with goals against. It is related to Ilya a little bit. It is related a little bit to how we play. We are an offensive team that can score. We just finished a five-game series where we didn't score a lot of goals. We certainly didn't generate a lot of offensive chances."
A step toward putting some action behind that ambition was asking John Paddock to be the eye-the-sky assistant coach looking primarily at the team defense aspects of the game and communicating his findings to Laviolette.
Another step: In his media availability session yesterday, Comcast-Spectacor chairman Ed Snider put some not-so-subtle pressure on Laviolette to sacrifice a bit of scoring in the name of lowering the team's goals against average.
Snider hammered home that message twice. First, he was asked about his expectations for Ilya Bryzgalov this year. Couched in an obligatory expression of confidence in the team's big-ticket goalie was a challenge to focus a little more on team defense.
http://www.hockeybuzz.com/blog/Bill-Meltzer/Meltzers-Musings-Captaincy-System-Adjustments/45/48508
Lavi says...
Flyers will be in attack mode again, Peter Laviolette says
Some folks, including the team's chairman, have suggested the Flyers need to change their style this season and tighten up their defense.
After the third day of training camp Tuesday in Voorhees, coach Peter Laviolette conceded that the Flyers can give goalie Ilya Bryzgalov more support this year, but made it clear he does not plan to change the team's modus operandi: attack, attack, attack.
And attack some more.
Laviolette likes to talk about playing with "jam," and his 2013 edition will not be different.
"I think teams always want to play good defense; they always want to take care of their own end," he said after another fast-paced practice. But . . . "I can tell you that the first thing I said to my team is that we're going to attack. We're going to put pucks behind and we're going to go after it."
A year ago, the Flyers allowed 2.74 goals per game, placing them 20th in the 30-team league.
Those numbers are why Ed Snider, chairman of the Flyers' parent company, Comcast-Spectacor, talked about his team's defense in a far-ranging news conference early Tuesday.
Just back from a week's vacation spent celebrating his 80th birthday on the Caribbean island of St. Barts, Snider talked optimistically about the season. But he mentioned last season's defensive struggles and its effects on Bryzgalov.
"I think a lot of his problems had to do with the different style we played as opposed to Phoenix," said Snider, referring to Bryzgalov's previous team, "and I really believe we'll probably tighten it up a bit to help him out. And I think he's a damn good goalie."
Laviolette, whose team has a bulked-up defense, understands his boss' concerns.
Just because the Flyers will be in attack mode, "that doesn't mean we can't take care of our own end," the coach said. He added: "Certainly I think the defense can be better, but so can our specialty teams and other areas of the game."
http://www.philly.com/philly/sports...attack_mode_again__Peter_Laviolette_says.html