Off Sides
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- Sep 8, 2008
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I'll re-ignite the TDA convo in the Georgiev thread.
Great, I have an excellent conspiracy theory involving Smith also going to the Canes.
I'll re-ignite the TDA convo in the Georgiev thread.
Yes and no.
We have three players who will be crossing or approaching that threshold in the next year or so - Buchnevich, Duclair and Skjei.
Toronto does not.
If we expand the time period in question, it actually doesn't do Toronto any favors because if we go back to 2007 we'd also have to include Fast, Stepan, Weise and Hagelin as picks outside the first we generated that they didn't over the same period. And that's also with excluding guys like Miller and Kreider from our first rounds.
So if we're looking at the same time periods, expanding the criteria boosts our numbers more than their numbers. That's just a fact.
Looking more closely, our 2018-2020 drafts also look considerably more promising than theirs. Even taking Laf and Kakko off the equation, we've found some very promising talent with very encouraging post draft success. Again, that's without our top picks.
Right now, even going with your approach, we're outpacing them by quite the distance.
Yes and no.
We have three players who will be crossing or approaching that threshold in the next year or so - Buchnevich, Duclair and Skjei.
Toronto does not.
If we expand the time period in question, it actually doesn't do Toronto any favors because if we go back to 2007 we'd also have to include Fast, Stepan, Weise and Hagelin as picks outside the first we generated that they didn't over the same period. And that's also with excluding guys like Miller and Kreider from our first rounds.
So if we're looking at the same time periods, expanding the criteria boosts our numbers more than their numbers. That's just a fact.
Looking more closely, our 2018-2020 drafts also look considerably more promising than theirs. Even taking Laf and Kakko off the equation, we've found some very promising talent with very encouraging post draft success. Again, that's without our top picks.
Right now, even going with your approach, we're outpacing them by quite the distance.
At the end of the day, we're not poaching someone from Tampa, or Carolina, or LA, or some of the other teams we admire.
If this wasn't announced, no one would be saying, "I know what we need! Let's grab someone from Toronto. They've clearly got their shit together in the scouting/drafting department!"
So, the point of others, we can't say anything definitively at this time. But it's also not a move where you go, "Wow, this looks really good on paper and I think we really nailed this one."
I get it, it's unfair to expect Das Wunderkind to perform magic right out of the gate. But I was hoping for a bit more than what we've seen and by the time get to the third and fourth move, there is a pattern of decent but underwhelming.
I don't think we've done bad. I don't think we've done great. I do think we need to be closer to great to take things to the next level though.
Great, I have an excellent conspiracy theory involving Smith also going to the Canes.
The last Ranger selected to play more then 400 games in the NHL was selected in 2011!!! Including 1st rounders. Thats 10 years with 0 players playing 400 games. Its almost like it takes most players 3 years to develop and then it takes about 5 years to play 400 games, so you are discounting the last 8 years with this metric and it would only include his time as an armature scout with the Leafs. Also, both teams will have players getting their 400th game from later drafts next season.
The Rangers last player selected outside the first round to play 100 games in the NHL was also selected in 2013. Even looking at Tampa, their last player with 100 games outside the 1st round was selected in 2015. So the it not like Leafs are not too far off.
Anyway, the 2021, 2020 and 2019 Leaf drafts where Liley was director look good so far.
I have no problem with this hire. I don't know enough to really judge Lilley. I'm sure Drury did his due dilligence and we can debate whether or not Lilley was the right choice. But as you alluded to, the cream of the crop isn't available.
You're not getting the guys who are top-3 in their profession. Not everyone wants to live and work in New York. But also, one person doesn't have enough impact to turn around a franchise. Scouting and drafting relies on so many facets, that it's simply impossible to just say "Let's hire this guy and we will draft better".
I just hope the guy doesn't get criticized based on unfair expectations.
Toronto has Connor Brown, 2012. Idk why we'd go back to 2007 at all? He was a rookie amature scout then, I doubt he had a large say in anything the Leafs did.
I also like our drafting the past few seasons, but Toronto looks like it will also have success with some later picks from under Lilley's tenure. They had 3 players from later rounds in the top 6 in scoring at the World Junior Summer Showcase, also Robertson 53rd, is starting to get a look in the NHL. So while I agree that I like our picks better, its not the end of the world were we hired some scrub who has missed on every pick ever. In fact after promoting Lilley the Leafs drafts seemed to get drastically better.
It's just folly to try to compare what the Rangers have done on draft day over the past X number of years to what Toronto has done, and try to use that comparison to draw conclusions about Lilley, who was working in a more junior capacity for most of the time Clark was steering our ship.
Bad front offices and scouting departments are littered with good people, and vice versa. Daniel Dore has been a scout for us for almost 15 years and was in the same capacity with Boston for a decade prior to that. Over the past 20 years Peter Stephan went from VP of Hockey Ops to Pro Scout to Amateur scout with us. Anyone want to tell me about him? Please, share with me your favorite stories about Rich Brown's time as an amateur scout over the past 20 years. When we were drafting poorly was it because these guys sucked? Who sucked more? Were some of them good and some bad? Which of these guys is responsible for drafting which players? Come on.
I'm interested in what Lilley has done the past five or so years when he served in a leadership capacity and had much more input in the decision-making process. What Toronto did in 2008 in the guy's second years as a scout is absolutely f***ing irrelevant to me. If you want to make the point that that Toronto has drafted poorly because they're poorly staffed, sure, that seems reasonable, but as I mentioned even bad departments have good employees.
So, do we want to look at Toronto's last five or six drafts, or are we just going to continue coming up with arbitrary metrics and half-assed analyses that don't demonstrate a single f***ing thing about individual employees of Toronto?This is actually a rhetorical question because other than the drafts from 4 or 5 years ago, it's still too early to tell what we're looking at.
Anyway, I said I'd steer clear of this and now I really will. Promise.
I think it's fair to try to evaluate him since he took over as Director of US Scouting. I just think it will be difficult and particularly subjective since many of those players are still works in progress. His time as Director of Amateur Scouting would be the most telling, but that's even more difficult to evaluate since we're talking about lots of picks that are still teenagers. But, if we really want to do that, sure, let's do it.Fine, we can't judge anything he's done.
So tell me what over the last five years intrigues you. Tell me what you think they did better than us. Tell me how their US scouting was --- any year. Show me his finds. Show me his results. Show me something tied back to him that moved the needle. Keeping in mind that we didn't just higher him to be a scout, but to help oversee the scouts.
We don't have to use any arbitrary metrics and half-assed analysis. Give me something to go on other than "I don't know, I can't judge, or it's too soon to know."
Because if that's all we have, that's why there is some concern or should be.
I'm looking at the entire tenure of what Lilley has done as a professional, from his work as a scout to his work as a front office leader.
And, looking over the entire scope of his career, we have yet to find anything particularly noteworthy or better than what we had.
He was over US scouting and yet we don't have any standout US players to point.
He was a key player in the overall draft strategy and I don't think we came away with compares to what we did in the same slots.
So it begs the question, outside of not being able to judge him, what exactly do we think we're looking at here?
Let's just focus on THAT for a second.
I think it's fair to try to evaluate him since he took over as Director of US Scouting. I just think it will be difficult and particularly subjective since many of those players are still works in progress. His time as Director of Amateur Scouting would be the most telling, but that's even more difficult to evaluate since we're talking about lots of picks that are still teenagers. But, if we really want to do that, sure, let's do it.
I don't think I've ever said not to judge him; I just took issue with you making apples-to-oranges comparisons and using Toronto's overall organizational failings as an indictment of him as an individual. And I said I, personally, do not have enough information to judge him. An extension of that is that I would think it's unreasonable for others to do so, but if you think you know enough about him to make that judgment, go for it.
I can't show you his finds. I can't show you his reports. I have no idea what he brought to the table as a scout. Literally, no idea. Do you? Do any of us? I addressed this myself in an earlier post. Continuing with the trend of you completely ignoring what I've actually said in my posts, while instead making demands that I justify why I like this hire (even though I said I had no opinion on it, like, 30 times), I said this a couple pages back:
"Which brings me back to Lilley. I do believe it's bordering on absurd to judge his ability to succeed in these positions by looking at what an entire organization did when he was an amateur scout for a decade; unless someone has actual insight into the job he did, the reports he filed on specific players, the guys he advocated for and against, there's really not a lot to glean from that. I do think it's appropriate to evaluate his brief tenure as Director of US Scouting and then as Director of Amateur Scouting."
I don't know, man. I just don't see enough to evaluate him individually. You seem to want to look at him skeptically because he came from an organization that hasn't drafted well in the past. That's fine. I'm not interested in doing that. I see in your other post, you mention that you don't see anything from him in his past that is "better than what we had." That last part, to me, is key--I'm not looking at this move in the context of, "Are we better now than we were with Clark?" And that's because Clark stepped back before Gorton and JD left. This isn't a situation where we cut loose Clark and replaced him with this guy. We had to replace Clark whether Dolan intervened or not. Which, again, brings me back to the whole idea that some people seem to be assessing this move based on the emotions that have arisen from Drury's other moves, which to me isn't the way to do it.
This whole thing, to me, feels like the day after the NFL draft when everyone is rushing to get out their draft grades and fanbases are literally out for blood if their GM has done what is perceived to be a poor job. What's the rush? The paint hasn't dried. Let it settle. Maybe the guy is terrible. Maybe he's going to be the Next Big Thing. I don't know. Drury, who was so revered by this board and this fanbase as recently as a few months ago, seems to have faith in him. I'll wait and see. You panic.
Please have the last word. This is one of those discussions that isn't going to resolve itself in any positive way.
I fairly sure Drury is happy and confident with his choice. If the team can’t draft well, it will probably kill his career.The last player they took outside the top 10 that played more than 400 games in the NHL was selected by them in 2007. That's 14 years!
The last player selected by them outside of the first 34 picks to play more than 100 games in the NHL was selected 8 years ago.
If anything, based on pure coincidence, the last time they had a draft with mid and later round gems was 2006 ---- the year before Lilley joined the organization.
This is their draft record guys:
Toronto Maple Leafs Draft History at hockeydb.com
I fairly sure Drury is happy and confident with his choice. If the team can’t draft well, it will probably kill his career.
I feel about the same way I did when John Davidson brought in half his family to the scouting department. Concerned, but not crazy. That seemed to work out OK. Frankly, I hope they keep Morehouse around.
Neither you or I know how much control Dubas exerted over the draft. Given his background, I suspect it was a lot. Much different that Gorton.
I’m always concerned but I can’t control it, I don’t have inside information about it and I’ll have to live with it.
Being the optimist that I am, you could look and say he was working for a mess of an organization that was the Leafs until 2015. I don't even know how we outsiders could judge an individual scouts performance without knowing the recommendations he made that they passed on or took.
As to his work as a front office leader, I think you can look at the Leafs drafting and say its much better since the 2019 draft when they promoted Lilley to director. Like you said they have sucked at drafting since before 2007, and looking at their 2020 draft, they might have a couple late round picks who will make it to the NHL.
Also, and correct me if I'm wrong, but the position he is taking is currently vacant. With Gorton and JD having moved Clark to a Scout/ senior advisor role. Do you know who they had in mind for the position? Because it feels like you really hate Lilley.
I'm bullish on what Chytil can do with the 2C spot. So much that it kind of makes my head hurt thinking about how hard we're trying to solve an issue that has a strong part of the solution in house.The key with Drury will be the upcoming moves - how we approach the center position, who we keep, who we lose, who we bring in.
I think we're a more balanced team, on paper. I think we're more a versatile team, on paper.
Our success will owe a lot to whether Kakko, Lafreniere and Chytil really step up. If they all really begin to establish themselves as legit, performing top six players you'll have a lot of questions answered. If they struggle, we've got more questions we need to address and the fallout of potential moves.
They key will be patience though. We can't be looking to abandon ship 15 or 20 games in. I think a full season will help with our ebbs and flows.
I think we're at a sink or swim point with Chytil as a second line center. I think Kravtsov can very well start the season on the third line and be better for it --- and we have the potential to make it worthwhile. I think a Kreider, Goodrow, Kravtsov third line would be good for him.
I think moving Strome eases a log-jam. If we try to jam him into things, or jam Kreider into a top six role I think things get more difficult.
But the top young talent we have is crucial to how things play out.
I'm bullish on what Chytil can do with the 2C spot. So much that it kind of makes my head hurt thinking about how hard we're trying to solve an issue that has a strong part of the solution in house.
I just don't see why you wouldn't want to move him there and hope for the best, not to mention there's perceivably no reason to not give him an 'audition' even if the team isn't as bullish.
Feels like to me a pretty good answer is staring them in the face.
The Kings fired Al Murray, the director of amateur scouting, and a large portion of the amateur scouting department Friday, a source close to the team said.
Murray has been with the team for 18 years, the last 13 as director of amateur scouting. Grant Sonier, the assistant director of amateur scouting, also was fired.
General Manager Dean Lombardi declined to comment.
Murray’s departure was the last step in the complete overhaul of the franchise, which began last spring when General Manager Dave Taylor was fired. While Taylor remains as a consultant, nearly everyone else in the front office has been fired or reassigned within AEG, the Kings’ parent company.
The Kings have had a spotty amateur draft record in recent seasons. They had eight first-round picks between 2000 and 2004 and only four of those players are still in the organization.
I'd like to push to see what we have with our young forward talent. These aren't the Callahan's and Dubinsky's of yesteryear. We need to develop them a bit differently. That means we need to move a forward and the likely candidate is Strome.
I think we have a more flexible and balanced lineup on paper right now. I think execution will be key.
Again I think this is why they moved Buchnevich too...it's unfortunate there was no good market for him, maybe there were subjectively better offers, but from all accounts there just didn't seem to be the kind of return we'd expect out there and the Rangers were both concerned about his contract cost and impact on the lineup time for the younger players.
Yeah, it'd be interesting to see what the team as constructed now would do but I suspect they have more moves they want to make before the season starts
He could have asked in a less "gotcha" way.
I know of at least one discussion that I preferred to what we got for Buch. I think the Rangers preferred Blais and what they think he can still become though. Generally speaking I think the Buch situation came down to preference rather than options. If they're right on Blais, it eases the sting. If they're not, the value gap widens.
I think the lynchpin on all of this is what comes next. A lot of these moves are set-up moves and so it's the next (or the one after) that feels like it ties everything together.
That lineup (more or less) is what I'm hoping to see and have been. Simply put, I don't see Ryan Strome as a reason to a) lose sleep b) stunt Chytil's growth or c) risk losing Chytil in a trade because we have a different solution in Strome. That's kind of first and foremost to me, I think his game is so so close. Grab some assets for Strome and move on.I feel like I'd be pretty comfortable going with:
Lafreniere-Zibanejad-Kakko
Panarin-Chytil-Blais (Kravtsov down the line)
Kreider-Goodrow-Kravtsov (swap with Blais down the line)
Hunt (Barron)-Rooney (Barron)-Reaves (Hunt)
Lindgren-Fox
Miller-Trouba
Nemeth (Robertson/Jones)-Lundkvist/Schneider
I'd prefer not to keep Strome for too long because I feel like we'd end up pushing Kravtsov right out of the top 9 in that scenario. I think Kravtsov can benefit from a third line role. I don't think the benefit is there having him on the fourth.
I'd prefer not to force Kreider into the top 9 and swap LAfreniere over to the right side. I think it has a similar impact as above and stacks the Rangers young talent into a situation that isn't to their full benefit.
If the Rangers believe Barron is a left wing, I think he eventually becomes Kreider's replacement on the third line. You can break him in the fourth this season.
If they believe Barron is a center, I'd give him a ton of reps in Hartford and have him come up a little later. In theory he becomes a third line center at some point, flanked by Goodrow and and Blais in a post-Kreider world.
I think I'd like to see Jones/Robertson and Schneider get a ton of time down in Hartford. I'm also not opposed to Lundkvist getting a ton of time to start as well.
I'd like to push to see what we have with our young forward talent. These aren't the Callahan's and Dubinsky's of yesteryear. We need to develop them a bit differently. That means we need to move a forward and the likely candidate is Strome.
I don't love the idea of Eichel right now, but it also depends on the cost and the timing.
I think we have a more flexible and balanced lineup on paper right now. I think execution will be key.