Where did Yzerman go wrong with the rebuild?

rangersblues

Registered User
Mar 21, 2010
2,871
3,113
Shouldn't be difficult to attract a good coach. Original 6 franchise with a deep prospect pool and an established NHL GM. There are much worse jobs an unemployed coach could take.
I don't think the prospect pool is as deep as many believe. We're still years away from competing for a championship. Possibly even one more coaching cycle. Many teams that are closer will be firing coaches before that.
 

Shaman464

No u
May 1, 2009
10,488
4,613
Boston, MA
Shouldn't be difficult to attract a good coach. Original 6 franchise with a deep prospect pool and an established NHL GM. There are much worse jobs an unemployed coach could take.
Detroit has no high end offensive talent, thin on defense and no goalie. A bad few years behind the bench can kill a coaching career for all but the most established coaches. Why would a good coach risk his career?
 

JohanFranzenstein

Registered User
Dec 6, 2013
2,736
3,359
One problem here is the same problem Leafs had when they were bad. People still pay to go see this trash heap. If you want change, vote with your money.
Problem is, I'd say 80% of the people in attendance aren't die hard Red Wings / hockey fans like the large majority on this board. They're just people looking for something fun to do downtown. Which is fine, but it's actively hurting the people who actually care about the on ice product.

Chris I. doesn't see any difference in our dollars spent however. Such is life in corporate America.
 

LongTimeDRWF

Registered User
Feb 10, 2024
469
303
NS
I'm unsure what anyone thinks Yzerman can do with this particular team. Firing the coach is obvious but that's easier said then done. I think they're going to have some difficulty attracting an established coach because they'd be waiting for more attractive situations. I fairly certain the next coach is being searched for at this point.

It took 2 months to hire Lalonde after Blashill didn't get his contract renewed. I'm guessing this will take similar or more as it's harder to do an extensive search midseason than at seasons end. Firing Lalonde is akin to shuffling the deck chairs on the Titanic at this point. It's highly doubtful it would make any significant difference to this season and if it did it would only worsen our draft pick. All we can hope for this season is our prospects develop in the minors, and frankly I'm no where near as optimistic about that as some.

Does anyone know what the rules/standards are about contacting coaches outside the organization midseason for interviews etc?
If a coach is already or still under contract, you can not even call or make any contact with them. If a coach has been relived of their duties, but still under contract (the usual case of firing), you must ask for permission from his employer to make contact and/or hire.

BTW, luv the Kitchener Rangers avi, that you?
 
measuring expectations New

Winger98

Moderator
Feb 27, 2002
23,476
5,760
Cleveland
There's been a lot of talk this year about how Yzerman's had plenty of time to turn it around, so I started looking around the league. I counted a rebuild having been started when a team misses the playoffs two straight years and for them to be out of the rebuild if they make the playoffs for two straight years.

Chicago: missed playoffs 9 out of 10 years. Currently missed 6 of last 7.
Pittsburgh: missed 4 years.
Arizona: missed 11 of last 12 playoffs
Ottawa: missed last 7
Tampa: missed 5 of 6
Edmonton: missed 12 of 13
Vancouver: has missed 7 of 8
St. Louis: missed 5 of 6
Washington: missed 3 in a row
New Jersey: missed 9 of 10 and 10 of 12 (still haven't made the playoffs in consecutive years)
Buffalo: has missed 13 straight

One, I know we missed the playoffs 3 years previous to this under Holland, but I have a hard time crediting those years to Yzerman's rebuild. Our 1st round picks in those years were Zadina, Ras, and Cholowski. If we had grabbed guys who actually helped us and played pivotal roles, I would have viewed them differently.

Short rebuilds look like a rarity. If you're crazy lucky, you pull guys like Crosby, Malkin, and Ovi from a draft and your rebuild is essentially over. If you're just regular lucky, you get out in 7ish years. 10+ isn't exactly a rarity, though. Yzerman has missed 5 years, which is at the very low end of these rebuilds. Even with Holland's last three years tacked on, it's not a crazy long run in context with these other rebuilds.
 

Retire91

Stevey Y you our Guy
May 31, 2010
6,351
1,822
This hockey is not more boring than post Datsyuk era Holland, because at that time it was truly hopeless. We have the building blocks already, this is growing pains, not a trend.
 
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The Zermanator

In Yzerman We Trust
Jan 21, 2013
3,530
1,550
There's been a lot of talk this year about how Yzerman's had plenty of time to turn it around, so I started looking around the league. I counted a rebuild having been started when a team misses the playoffs two straight years and for them to be out of the rebuild if they make the playoffs for two straight years.

Chicago: missed playoffs 9 out of 10 years. Currently missed 6 of last 7.
Pittsburgh: missed 4 years.
Arizona: missed 11 of last 12 playoffs
Ottawa: missed last 7
Tampa: missed 5 of 6
Edmonton: missed 12 of 13
Vancouver: has missed 7 of 8
St. Louis: missed 5 of 6
Washington: missed 3 in a row
New Jersey: missed 9 of 10 and 10 of 12 (still haven't made the playoffs in consecutive years)
Buffalo: has missed 13 straight

One, I know we missed the playoffs 3 years previous to this under Holland, but I have a hard time crediting those years to Yzerman's rebuild. Our 1st round picks in those years were Zadina, Ras, and Cholowski. If we had grabbed guys who actually helped us and played pivotal roles, I would have viewed them differently.

Short rebuilds look like a rarity. If you're crazy lucky, you pull guys like Crosby, Malkin, and Ovi from a draft and your rebuild is essentially over. If you're just regular lucky, you get out in 7ish years. 10+ isn't exactly a rarity, though. Yzerman has missed 5 years, which is at the very low end of these rebuilds. Even with Holland's last three years tacked on, it's not a crazy long run in context with these other rebuilds.
I don't know how anyone could possibly hold Yzerman responsible for what occurred before his tenure. One needs only to look at the state of the team at the time he inherited it to see that he was starting from zero. He had Larkin (and to a lesser extent Hronek) and that's it. If you consider the state of the team outside of those two in terms of NHL talent, contracts, prospect pool, etc, he wasn't even starting from zero. He found himself at the bottom of a large hole he needed to dig the team out of.

He's done a remarkable job IMO, and the worst criticisms people can levy towards him revolve around non-factors like Walman and Copp who have no bearing on the actual rebuild taking place. One is an inconsistent showboat who can put up numbers being gifted prime ice time on the worst teams in the league, and the other is a warm body placeholder until the real reinforcements arrive. Strip away all that noise and looking purely at the core of the rebuild, and the Wings are in an excellent spot, a night and day difference from where the team was when Yzerman took over.
 

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