baconandbread
Registered User
- Oct 30, 2019
- 496
- 975
Svech had a really good chance during the 6 on 5 on a Rantanen rebound. I would very much like them to stay together
He looked genuinely dangerous in the 3rd. Especially on that 2 minute O-zone shift where he and Ghost were on fire.Svech had a really good chance during the 6 on 5 on a Rantanen rebound. I would very much like them to stay together
This is why I don’t think Daniels even runs the powerplay. Rod is on the board for 6 on 5.
There’s been a lot of talk about having as many RH shots with him as possible to simulate McKinnon and Makar because that’s what he’s used to. Guess what? Theres no Mckinnon or Makar here, so f*** all that. Physically is there anyone who matches up with a Svech-KK-Rantanen line? Then you have to choose to check them or something like Hall-Aho-Jarvis.Svech had a really good chance during the 6 on 5 on a Rantanen rebound. I would very much like them to stay together
I mean I really don’t know what any assistant's coaches do. Gleason runs the D and PK. Its good. Is he a great coach or is Slavin that f***ing good and that’s why the PK has been in the upper 80s the entire time he’s been here?You may well could be right but it begs the question. If that's the case what does Daniels actually do here?
I'm frustrated with him because I watched him coach in Charlotte and he had absolutely no emotion, no anything. Players would yell at him on the ice for some kind of guidance or direction and hed have nothing. He would just stand there with his mouth slightly open just watching. He might as well had been a tree. Granted he didn't have the greatest roster in Charlotte but no one was sad when the Checkers moved on from him.
Minnesota is a house of horrors. In like 20 games there they have something like 4 wins.
Before tonight, Necas only had 1 goal in 6 games with Colorado with increased ice time. Rantanen 1 in 5 including tonight with decreased ice time.Necas fitting right in with Colorado meanwhile Rantanen has the canes goal scoring allergy now
Before tonight, Necas only had 1 goal in 6 games with Colorado with increased ice time. Rantanen 1 in 5 including tonight with decreased ice time.
I watched the second game for Colorado after the trade. Nachos had like 3 one time posts in the game.Necas would have buried that one timer tbh
You may well could be right but it begs the question. If that's the case what does Daniels actually do here?
I'm frustrated with him because I watched him coach in Charlotte and he had absolutely no emotion, no anything. Players would yell at him on the ice for some kind of guidance or direction and hed have nothing. He would just stand there with his mouth slightly open just watching. He might as well had been a tree. Granted he didn't have the greatest roster in Charlotte but no one was sad when the Checkers moved on from him.
Nothing about him screams coach. Head or assistant.
I always thought he was in charge of butt patts to get the boys hyped.This is why I don’t think Daniels even runs the powerplay. Rod is on the board for 6 on 5.
Lmao Rod. The powerplay has sucked for like 5 years so much it's a trope. Even the punishment of year after year and needing ONE ppg on 16 chances vs the raga last year still didn't shame you guys into a fix.
Lol I love rba but damn man.
Part of it likely has to do with the fact that we are so incredibly PREDICTABLE. Most plays, especially on the PP, I can tell exactly what the team is about to do before they do it because it's our system and we don't deviate (and we're terrible about telegraphing what we're about to do). During the regular season, when every team is playing "their system", it works great because nobody is drastically going to change their system every game to counter opponent tactics. Everyone sticks to their standard game-plan/system, and our system is effective against most teams. In the playoffs it's different. You're facing the same team multiple games and absolutely have incentive to change your tactics up when they're not working or you're going to be out. We simply don't. It's why our special teams (PP & PK) turn into absolute turds and our offense slams face-first into a wall...because we're so predictable it's easy for teams to adjust at that point to counter us and we seem to stubbornly refuse to change things up other than maybe a line-blender. Hell last year we watched Freddie get worse and worse with each game and still f***ing played him until he completely collapsed in game 6 against the Rags (not that I thought we'd win the series but ruined an epic comeback push)See, you’d think that, but it’s simply not true.
Last year, our PP was 2nd in the league (26.9%). It only shit the bed in the playoffs (though even then, it was 19.4%)
2022/23 - It was 19th in the league at 19.8%. Playoffs - 17.7%
2021/2022 - 13th in the league at 22%. Playoffs - 13%
2020/2021 - 2nd in the league at 25.6%. Playoffs - 18.8%
2019/2020 - 8th in the league at 22.3%. Playoffs - 13.8%
So there’s obviously a major drop each year when it comes to our regular season success on the PP vs. the playoffs. And I think it’s the same issue that we’re seeing currently: This team absolutely sucks on the road. Like, just flat out looks like a completely different team. I assume the reasoning is because they’re not getting the favorable line matchups that they would at home. But then you’ve got to question why, for a team and system that’s supposed to favor defensive responsibility, there’s such a stark difference between a home and away record. Theoretically, the line matchup difference should be minimalized, not enhanced, if we’re a well rounded, defensive team,
Whats even more frustrating is that we haven't deviated from it year over year, so its become easier for teams to adjust their game plans on the fly to counter us, because they've likely seen it enough they know how to do it.Part of it likely has to do with the fact that we are so incredibly PREDICTABLE. Most plays, especially on the PP, I can tell exactly what the team is about to do before they do it because it's our system and we don't deviate (and we're terrible about telegraphing what we're about to do). During the regular season, when every team is playing "their system", it works great because nobody is drastically going to change their system every game to counter opponent tactics. Everyone sticks to their standard game-plan/system, and our system is effective against most teams. In the playoffs it's different. You're facing the same team multiple games and absolutely have incentive to change your tactics up when they're not working or you're going to be out. We simply don't. It's why our special teams (PP & PK) turn into absolute turds and our offense slams face-first into a wall...because we're so predictable it's easy for teams to adjust at that point to counter us and we seem to stubbornly refuse to change things up other than maybe a line-blender. Hell last year we watched Freddie get worse and worse with each game and still f***ing played him until he completely collapsed in game 6 against the Rags (not that I thought we'd win the series but ruined an epic comeback push)