Victims of "bad" tanks and rebuilds: How soon did you know something was going wrong?

Montag DP

Sabres fan in...
Apr 4, 2007
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...Maryland
For many years after tanking for Eichel and having decently talented teams that always failed, I blamed coaching. And we did have some terrible coaches. But after a few more years and a few more coaches of all sorts of different backgrounds, I had to admit that something much deeper is wrong with the Sabres organization. It's just rotten from the top down.
 

LEAFANFORLIFE23

Registered User
Jun 17, 2010
47,741
16,291
So Keefe isn’t a real coach yet they are 4 pts ahead of the leafs?

#1 the Leafs have 2, and after tomorrow it will be 3 games in hand.

#2 the Leafs have beaten the Devils twice this year, the first time with their 5th string goalie.

#3 what Keefe does in the regular season is irrelevant, the Devils being good in the regular season doesn't surprise me, they would have been good last year but they were NEVER healthy.

Talk to me in April/May when Keefe gets out coached, AGAIN.

Even in the series he won, he won it because Vassi was AWFUL.

the man NEVER makes adjustments.
 

black hawks matter

Registered User
Nov 19, 2024
11
8
Obv it was the Germans who had the baddest tanks. Seriously tho, once your top picks are in there mid-late twenties and are due the big long term contracts that they have a high likelihood of underperforming once they are in thier 30s you need to have it put together by them or else you are either moving/losing those guys and starting over or you are signing them and stuck in the dreaded bubble of mediocrity.

The best way to do it is build from the back end out, or maybe not best but at least ideally if you are lucky. That way your dmen who take longer to develop get the time they need. Then when they are ready you add your high end forwards who are ready sooner. As mentioned before like with the kyndasty hawks.
 
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Bond

Registered User
May 10, 2012
4,440
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I genuinely think that a lot of people don't understand how important intent is in situations like this.

Like the Penguins, Blackhawks, Kings, and Lightning cores were built, in part, with high picks, yes. But mostly these were teams going through serious ownership adversity, or other kinds of limiting factors while trying their darndest.

One can overcome adversity if one maintains their integrity and pride. This is especially true of interdependent groups. Overcoming a big hurdle is possible.

But intentionally quitting, throwing in the towel. I firmly believe that this creates a stink that is very, very hard to shake.


Group psychology in sports is woefully, woefully misunderstood.

Flames should be consistent cup winners if this way true haha
 

Lazlo Hollyfeld

The jersey ad still sucks
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When Holland signed a 28 year-old Justin Abdelkader to a 7-year contract.



Holland: "if it's too long, you worry about it 6 years from now."

Except it was bad before the ink dried. Even in that interview he can't come up with reasons related to Abdelkader's performance to justify that contract.
 
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Pokecheque

I’ve been told it’s spelled “Pokecheck”
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Avs finally tanked starting in 2008, came away with the best draft class in franchise history in 2009 (Duchene, O'Reilly, Barrie) and we thought the future was bright. Turns out it was, just not for another decade-plus and without a single player from that draft on the roster, though the trades of all three brought in key players for the Avs' 2022 Cup win.

I don't remember exactly when I realized it went wrong, probably not really until 2014 when the shine of Roy's first season behind the bench wore off.
 

JKG33

Leafs & Kings
Oct 31, 2009
7,722
11,697
Winnipeg
For the Leafs, in hindsight the signs were there prior to acquiring each of the big 4.

With Matthews, it should've been obvious when he chased money in Europe since he was "too good" for the CHL or NCAA. Marner was a diva in London already, the nonsense with his dad comes to mind. Speaking of, the shit apple didn't fall far from the shit tree with Nylander either, his dad was always a money first type too. And Tavares was already too far gone, having wasted the first decade of his career with a loser team.

The 4 of them have all of the talent in world, but only care about padding regular season stats and bank accounts.
 

benfranklin

Registered User
Jun 29, 2024
716
611
Sabres. It was the Okposo signing I believe. Instantly knew they were "going for it" too soon after the Eichel draft. One more tank and who knows, they couldve had Eichel/Matthews as their 1-2.
 
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norrisnick

The best...
Apr 14, 2005
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There's an interesting pattern with the two most successful tanks of the last 25 years (Hawks and Penguins).

Both got a least one superstar with a high, but not first overall pick (Malkin 2nd overall, Toews 3rd overall)
Both had a superstar go first overall (Crosby, Kane), though obviously Crosby is in a class of his own
Both had a superstar draft pick after the first round (Letang 2nd round, Keith 2nd round)
Both had multiple good players get drafted outside the top 10 as well (Seabrook/Crawford/Byfuglien/Brouwer/Bickell/Hjallmarsson and Whitney/Talbot/Goligoski)

Pittsburgh has the higher highs in drafting, and obviously Fleury and Staal are outliers in this regard.

But both teams combined superstars at #1 with 5+ good picks elsewhere.

Getting three superstars in the draft (Crosby,Malkin,Letang Keith/Toews/Kane) in a few years is a huge get. Filling the team with other great picks goes a long way too. Both teams had to retool significantly after their first Cup, but the depth charts from strong drafting helped a lot.

You can add Tampa to this too. Hedman and Stamkos were high picks, but Vasilevsiky was a mid 1st rounder, Kucherov a 2nd round pick, and Point a 3rd rounder.
Calling Pittsburgh a successful tank is very generous. They weren't tanking. They were divesting of assets because they were getting sold off to the highest bidder. They clusterf***ed themselves into a contender with some pretty suspect help from the league as well...
 

Dread Clawz

LAWSonic Boom
Nov 25, 2006
28,127
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Pennsylvania
One of the challenges appears to be having the talent coming through the pipeline while also having a sufficiently positive veteran presence to help develop those players in the right way.

If you are too flush with mediocre veterans, it may prevent you from getting into the top 5 in drafting on a regular basis and acquiring the necessary talent to get out of the playoff bubble cycle.

But if there are too few, or they are the wrong guys, the potential that everyone is raving about never really pans out and the youngsters only learn about how to lose.

I agree, this is really the biggest key. It's a delicate dance and crucial for the last step of the rebuild.
 

tarheelhockey

Offside Review Specialist
Feb 12, 2010
86,891
145,140
Bojangles Parking Lot
The best way to do it is build from the back end out, or maybe not best but at least ideally if you are lucky. That way your dmen who take longer to develop get the time they need. Then when they are ready you add your high end forwards who are ready sooner.

I remember when Jim Rutherford refused to draft top defensemen because they would be at the end of their ELC by the time they started to enter their prime. He didn’t want to pay them before he knew what he was getting.
 
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kerrabria

Registered User
May 3, 2018
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It doesn't take a genius to understand that lottery picks don't automatically live up to their draft hype. The players should only enter the NHL if they're NHL-ready, not sooner.

A rookie center should be sheltered by two veteran centers who take the difficult minutes, and the rookie should have legit wingers who do things well. The linemates don't have to be veterans per se, but they should be effective NHLers with skillsets that compliment the rookie. Defensemen should have a stable, high IQ veteran partner for as many years as the cap allows. And they should never be deployed as the Top Pair at 5v5 until the rookie dman can actually handle it.

TL;DR Your Top 5 pick has talent, but he isn't actually good yet, and he won't just magically figure it out without substanial support.
 

Konnan511

#RetireHronek17
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This most recent offseason. It was painfully obvious we took a step back with our free agent signings. (Red Wings).

We had all of the momentum from the end of the season, and then we let go character guys and guys with production and replaced them with no one of consequence and downgrades.
 

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