Management Montgomery fired - Sacco named interim coach Sacco - Blues hire Monty

PlayMakers

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Aug 9, 2004
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As the GM Sweeney has had 58 players drafted. I typically don't look at players drafted within the last 3 years because odds of them being NHL regulars is slim. That leave us with 43 players.

If you sort the picks by games played you quickly see that 4 of the top 5 players are defensemen and 2 of them don't even play for Boston. Here is where I look at this draft history under Sweeney and cringe.....

Top 10 Forwards drafted by Sweeney (based on pts)
1. Jake DeBrusk
2. Trent Frederic
3. Jack Studnicka
4. Jakub Lauko
5. John Beecher
6. Oskar Steen
7. Jakob Forsbacka-Karlsson
8. Zachary Senyshyn
9. Joona Koppanen
10. Cameron Hughes

HOLY f***ING WOOOOOOF

That’s has to be among the worst in the NHL for that timespan

81% of drafted players don't play in the NHL.

The fact that Sweeney has pulled 13 NHL players out of 43 draft picks (almost all of which are late picks), including two franchise cornerstones in McAvoy and Swayman is much better than average drafting.
 
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GordonHowe

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Milbury wasn't fired by the Bruins. He quit.
Mad Mike had too much pride (and sense, at least in this case) to take the cheese 🧀.

It would have been hilarious had he stayed.

Instead, we got... Mike O'Connell.

The very definition of "Inert gray matter" and "Dumb as a rock."

Dark days.
 

Fenway

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IveGotToBeMe

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I wish Monty well professionally and personally. That said, it was time for him to go in Boston. You can blame the players but the coach is ultimately the guy in charge of the day to day on ice results. All coaches know their expiration date starts when they are hired. With Monty, it seemed as if he lost interest after the collapse in the playoffs last year but I still had hopes for him this season. With the lack of spirited play, he took the hit. We'll see if the effort we've seen in the last two games continues, if so, then I say it was directly Monty's fault. As a long time fan and realist this new found energy is not surprising in the short term. We just have to wait and see whether it was the right move for the longer run. If not, then the front office needs to be addressed in the offseason. I'd still be in support of some honest "hockey trades" to improve some of the offensive holes the team has and will continue to have without any changes to the current roster.
 
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The don godfather

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I wish Monty well professionally and personally. That said, it was time for him to go in Boston. You can blame the players but the coach is ultimately the guy in charge of the day to day on ice results. All coaches know their expiration date starts when they are hired. With Monty, it seemed as if he lost interest after the collapse in the playoffs last year but I still had hopes for him this season. With the lack of spirited play, he took the hit. We'll see if the effort we've seen in the last two games continues, if so, then I say it was directly Monty's fault. As a long time fan and realist this new found energy is not surprising in the short term. We just have to wait and see whether it was the right move for the longer run. If not, then the front office needs to be addressed in the offseason. I'd still be in support of some honest "hockey trades" to improve some of the offensive holes the team has and will continue to have without any changes to the current roster.
Still pissed with that bumbling debacle losing a 3 to 1 lead against cats with that superpower team. I blame monty for that one for sure.
 

crimsonace

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Mar 7, 2010
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I don't think I've ever seen a GM go "on second thought, go away" like Armstrong did to Bannister not even two full months into his first year as the full time head coach lmao.

I get why he did it though. Monty was very well liked as an assistant and I said it would either be there or Montreal.

Hope nothing but the best for him. It didn't work out here but I still truly believe he's a great coach
Different sport, but the Cubs basically did that to Rick Renteria when Joe Maddon became available (which turned out to win them a World Series) ... and then again to David Ross when Craig Counsell became available.

They’ve had regular season success sure. But 8 out of the 9 season Sweeney has been GM the bruins have won 1 or less playoff series.

So sure they have a lot of picks in the early to mid 20s but it’s not like they are going on deep playoff runs making them have very late picks.

Also there’s two top-15 picks in there as well.
If you make the playoffs, you're drafting in the bottom half of each round. A run into the conference finals means you're drafting between 29-32, but you're not going to be better than 17th if you're the team with the worst record in the postseason.

And the B's traded a lot of their first-round picks.
 

bobbyorr04

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So let me get this straight. Somehow Monty, while tanking the Bruins season so he could get fired, used his Jedi mind skills to control the fate of the St. Louis Blues franchise, so they would under-perform and fire their coach, thus opening the door for them to hire him! Or was it his wife who has the Jedi mind skills?

The cynical mind is ever fascinating.
or...

Monty and Armstrong had a handshake agreement on the 18th green at a St. Louis golf course this summer to set the wheels in motion

"Something is rotten in the state of Missouri"
 

PatriceBergeronFan

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That is a desperately optimistic writer.
 
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