It goes both ways. You can't then say that the rebuild should be ending because of a 3 game winning streak against top teams.
Agreed, but people aren't really saying the rebuild is over because of those 3 games, they are saying it's over because after 38 games we are very much a team in mix and not one that is at the bottom of the standings looking at another high pick.
Those 3 games are used to dispute certain claims such as we are only in the mix because of an "easy schedule" and wins against bad teams. I mean the post you made about the 3 games, you quoted someone responding to the claim that we will only start winning against good teams next year. Which is plainly false, and as I pointed out the wrong way to look at things because winning games against good teams isn't a reliable measure. The reliable measure is winning over the long term, and from that we can say this team is in the mix.
Whether being in the mix means the rebuild is over or not depends on your definition of what a rebuild is.
This team still relies too much on great goaltending to win games. This team also does not have the depth to be able to overcome missing one key player.
Remember whenever Price went down? Laine missing? The team is a lottery level team.
FIrst the goaltender is part of the team, if Ottawa holds on and makes the playoffs it will because of great goaltending from Ullmark. And plenty of good teams fall flat because they don't have good goaletnding. Like many other positions it can be a strength or a weakness, like every other position if it's a strength it can coverup for other holes in the lineup. McDavid covers up for a lot of holes on defence and goaltending for example.
Let's look at Tampa for an example. Everyone here loves to crap on them because they supposedly circumvented Cap rules by LTIRing Kucherov for the season, then bringing him in for the playoffs. We should all be applauding them for building a team that could withstand the loss of one of, if not their best player for the regular season, and still make the playoffs rather easily. They should be the model to follow, as much as I dislike them.
That's a weird argument since a big reason Tampa did well even though they lost their top player was because they turned around and spent his money on replacements. So the team didn't just absorb the loss and still play well, they brought in guys to help replace and offset that loss.
Also worth noting that Tampa relied heavily on goaltending that year. Vasilevsky was 7th in Hart voting the year they lost Kucherov. They didn't have a single PPG player and relied on goaltending, stingy D, and depth scoring, sound familiar?