Lt Dan
F*** your ice cream!
You keep these great posts up and you will soon be promoted to GinormousKing!Blake inherited a team capable of black holing or maybe winning one playoff round. Pipeline was pretty barren so his initial mandate was to get that back on track while still contending.
The 2018 team had a Top 4 of Doughty/Muzzin/Martinez/Forbort. Behind that, you're getting 65 games out of Frolin, 34 from Big Mac, 26 from The Dion, 27 from Fantenberg. Rough. They had a roster capable of winning games but it couldn't handle an injury to anyone important, like, a #4 defenseman going down meant they were screwed. We already saw this with a better roster in 2016: Martinez is hurt so we've got four games of Jamie McBain in the playoffs coupled with five Corpse of Scuderi games.
Point being is that *everything* had to go right. Losing Carter isn't everything going right, but that got covered up by Kopitar's huge season, Carter scoring a bunch of goals on one leg upon his return and the Kings back-up goalies going a combined 12-1-5, kind of like Copley's record last season. Well, Muzzin gets banged up and we're right back to having four games of Folin and Fantenberg. Two games of Ladue. One of Gravel. This is not a roster close to contending but, no, all it needs is more scoring even though Quick had to put up a .947% to make a sweep seem "close".
Do you believe the outlier season of 92 points for Kopitar or do you think he will probably settle back to normalcy? Carter was never the same player after the ankle cut and was saying he wasn't 100% at the start of camp, meaning he wasn't 100% when Blake tried to trade a 1st for Pacioretty and then signed an old guy that chose to play here only because of the extra year on the deal. Once again betting on nothing going wrong in a season that features a defense depending on Fantenberg, because he supposedly was good in one playoff game, and scrap heap Dion Phaneuf. Poof.
All this to say that he did inherit a team capable of winning games. It was a better NHL team than Taylor or Lombardi inherited but the latter inherited a much better pipeline: Taylor inherited jack shit. Blake either completely miscalculated how good that roster really was, or he just didn't want to make tough decisions so he mostly did nothing. Neither is acceptable.
Then he was given the chance to blow it all up and do what he wanted. Once again, he doesn't read the roster correctly and here we are with PLD except, this time, there can't be an argument of "it didn't cost the Kings anything" or "they won the Jennings last season and just need more scoring": he traded for a center when he used half of his draft picks on them, re-signed Kopitar for two more years after this one and already has Danault and a former 2OA on the active roster.
IndeedRob Blake, Nelson Emerson, Marc Bergeron, Luc Robitaille, Glenn Murray, Matt Greene, Jared Stoll, Sean O'Donnell.
No problem with a few of those guys, but back in the Lombardi days the Kings had a mix of former executives, lawyers, and players.
Soloman and Futa left.
Now it's just all Blake's friends and ex players.
The nepotism is killing our organeyezation