Wow anyone see how happy the bench was for msl? Love it
Wow anyone see how happy the bench was for msl? Love it
No, but let's also look at what is the NOW. NOW, they sit higher in the standings than the Rangers and not a leap of faith to say that they might have the better team. And they are better set up for the future, with more cap space and a fertile farm system.Let's stop acting like their team has been the pinnacle of correct roster building.
It's hard not to smile at that picture of MSL at the bench right after he scored.
No, but let's also look at what is the NOW. NOW, they sit higher in the standings than the Rangers and not a leap of faith to say that they might have the better team. And they are better set up for the future, with more cap space and a fertile farm system.
Which team looks better for the NOW and THEN?
You're comparing us to a team that in the past six seasons drafted 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 6th and 10th overall picks... and that makes any sense to you whatsoever?
What makes sense to me is to accumulate picks not discard them. In a salary cap league, they are currency.You're comparing us to a team that in the past six seasons drafted 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 6th and 10th overall picks... and that makes any sense to you whatsoever?
What makes sense to me is to accumulate picks not discard them. In a salary cap league, they are currency.
And as Jersey Girl said, a proper rebuild makes more sense than being stuck in neutral.
An argument can be made not that teams should be expected to consistently draft better than teams that draft higher than them, but that it is better to go through a proper rebuild than draft in the 15-20 range almost every year.
Remind me again how this team is supposed to go through a "proper rebuild" with Lundqvist and McDonagh on the squad....unless you're advocating trading them both and starting from scratch.
While an argument can be made for that, I think its a much higher risk than the point you're trying to make.
People tend to remember the success stories like Pittsburgh and Chicago, and forget the multitude of train wrecks that outweigh those successes (Islanders, Florida, Edmonton, Columbus, etc)
Remind me again how this team is supposed to go through a "proper rebuild" with Lundqvist and McDonagh on the squad....unless you're advocating trading them both and starting from scratch.
While an argument can be made for that, I think its a much higher risk than the point you're trying to make.
People tend to remember the success stories like Pittsburgh and Chicago, and forget the multitude of train wrecks that outweigh those successes (Islanders, Florida, Edmonton, Columbus, etc)
Remind me again how this team is supposed to go through a "proper rebuild" with Lundqvist and McDonagh on the squad....unless you're advocating trading them both and starting from scratch.
While an argument can be made for that, I think its a much higher risk than the point you're trying to make.
People tend to remember the success stories like Pittsburgh and Chicago, and forget the multitude of train wrecks that outweigh those successes (Islanders, Florida, Edmonton, Columbus, etc)
I'm not making the argument either way, but history is telling us constantly saying 'how can we go through a proper rebuild with x (Jagr/Straka/Naslund/Drury/Lundqvist/McDonagh/St Louis) on the team' means we never go through a rebuild. And, arguably, never get past the point of fighting for the last few playoff spots most every year.
The train wrecks are for the most part because of horrible management. Columbus is trending higher (and younger) the last couple of years because of better management. Boston, Anaheim, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Los Angeles, etc., went through rebuilds and are stronger for it, and still have prospects on the way. Tampa Bay, St Louis, Colorado and others seem to be on the same path, though time will tell.
And I do agree Sather has painted us into a corner where we probably have no choice but to constantly go for whatever big name is available at the time, year after year, until he finally draws to that inside straight flush.
Or never does, and finally goes away in 20-30 years.
Sather is an idiot but saying he "painted us into a corner" because we have a franchise goalie and defenseman on the roster is... an odd way to view things.
No, but let's also look at what is the NOW. NOW, they sit higher in the standings than the Rangers and not a leap of faith to say that they might have the better team. And they are better set up for the future, with more cap space and a fertile farm system.
Which team looks better for the NOW and THEN?
They had the 3rd worst record in the league last season, and much of the reason they are slightly higher in the standings than the Rangers this year is because they're beating up on their own division, which houses 3 of the 4 worst teams in the East (and probably one of the worst of all time in Buffalo).
TBL looks to have a bright future, but as I'm sure you know as a NY sports fan, nothing is certain in sports.
What is certain, is that the Rangers have been one of the better teams since the lockout, and significantly better than TBL that time as well (373-251-75 to 320-296-82 to be exact).
If you're going to sit here and whine that you're upset the Rangers just haven't full out sucked the last 8 years on purpose in hopes of getting a generational talent and building a "dynasty," and instead made the playoffs and been an above average team for about a decade, I think you should reevaluate how you get enjoyment out of sports, or stop basing your ideas on franchise building from NHL 14.
I find it amazing that the Rangers just 7-1 and all I read is posts crying about lack of toughness, lack of prospects, how much the team sucks.
People tend to remember the success stories like Pittsburgh and Chicago, and forget the multitude of train wrecks that outweigh those successes (Islanders, Florida, Edmonton, Columbus, etc)
A winning streak doesn't change inherent flaws within the organization.