Bender Duster
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I hope so…because that’s what he’ll be doing paired with Stanley tonight.Hasn’t Ville spent some time playing both sides?
I hope so…because that’s what he’ll be doing paired with Stanley tonight.Hasn’t Ville spent some time playing both sides?
What I am looking at is Heinola has played at the AHL level with both Perfetti and Lambert who are on the same line. Can those 3 find each other on the ice in scoring situations? Start from there. I'd like to see Stanley find his rythym, the Jets do need him to be impactful in a positive way.I've had the same thought about Morrissey and Heinola as well.
If he can handle playing 3rd pair with Stan on his offside, that pretty much means he is top 4 ready...
Arniel throwing him in the deep end and letting him swim, I like it.
I think he re-signs for less than open market value, leaves something on the table for his d-partner Samberg.What is Pionk going to make on the open market after this year?
Arniel tonight, after Stanley took 3 minors and was benched in the 3rd because he couldn't be trusted...
"Stanley's a big body and we need him in the top 6. He won't get better in the press box."
Heinola is cooked. No chance he's going to get a shot at an NHL career with the Jets.
I have a cousin, 6'5 320 lbs+. He's a big body who won't get better sitting in the pressbox. Whom do I contact in the Jets organization to get him in as a top-6 d-man?
You would have thought the Kovacevic and Chisholm experiences would have taught this organization something. Doesn't seem to be the case so far.
The Kovacevic one is really odd because he's almost as big as Stanley and a right shot which we really coveted at the time. 6'5 230 lbs right shot stay at home defender that costs minimal.
At the time that we lost Kovacevic, our right side was set with established vets - Demelo, Pionk, and Schmidt
@WolfHouse has made the argument that they should have tried Kova on the 3rd pairing on the right side instead of going out and trading for Schmidt that summer - hindsight sees the validity in that point of view, but at the time, Kova hadn't shown much at the AHL level that would have indicated that he'd turn into what he has today
Thanks for keeping the PK on the table. A lot of discussions on here leave that very important variable out of the discussion. And agreed with Samberg out Morrissey is already taking on a lot of tough minutes. You wouldn’t want to add to this by giving him PK duty essentially with the added injury risk.I think special teams roles have a say. With Samberg down I don't think the Jets want to temper the impact they have with Morrissey 5 on 5 covering so much ice, by having him kill penalties, and Stan can use that big body to absorb some shots, where they may want to protect Ville's ankle coming back.
The thing I see is if Ville shows any acumen playing his offside, there is a chance to move him up to play with Morrissey at times, and have a pure skating d pair on par or above Toews-Makar. And move Melo down with Stan, which seems a little more stable. Might be your PK2 as well, as I think Pionk could easily be ahead of Melo in that role, at this point of the season.
I think it's experimental if nothing else. And until Samberg comes back, the Jets will have to experiment with different defensive combinations.
Stanley can't kill penalties from theThanks for keeping the PK on the table. A lot of discussions on here leave that very important variable out of the discussion. And agreed with Samberg out Morrissey is already taking on a lot of tough minutes. You wouldn’t want to add to this by giving him PK duty essentially with the added injury risk.
I made that statement at the time - and before. Not to say I told you so but to say that it wasn't hindsight for me.
He hadn't shown much at the NHL level, but he had shown enough at the AHL level to make it a reasonable prediction, to make it a reasonable thing to try before going to the market for a vet on the downside of his career.
Jets are at home so they probably won't call the marginal stuff. I'll take the under.I have no idea why Arniel continues to trot Stanley out there in top 6 role. They can’t be showcasing him for trade since the more he plays the further his stock drops.
Over under Stanley taking 2 penalties tonight?
The team Dr. Ask for a referral to an endocrinologist.I have a cousin, 320 lbs+. Whom do I contact in the Jets organization?
He'd been excellent at the AHL level, and had played well if cautiously in his limited NHL showings. Plenty of people who'd watched him in the A thought he was a natural to progress in at at least a bottom-pairing and PK role, especially given the character and determination he'd shown as a late bloomer in getting as far as he had.
Also, the Jets were not particularly strong on the right -- Schmidt was already on a downward swing, Pionk was entering The Chaos Years, and may/ may not have been carrying a longterm foot injury. DeMelo was a player the Jets had already exposed in the draft IIRC. A big, quick, mobile and physical RHD who had been developed in-house, could play a solid stay-at-home game while also being a strong PKer with a good transition game was a natch, on a side the Jets had been weaker on, and costing little.
The Jets see what they see in Stanley. They spent to get him, and have spent arguably more to keep him. He's not a guy who's likely to carry them over the top and far from the reason they're on the current slide -- but at some point they need to cut bait and recognise that whatever they might lose in Logan they've already lost, and more, by keeping him.
Hopefully they can grind out a win against STL and buy a bit more time for the wounded to heal. And play Coughlan, and maybe SomeoneNotStan.
A gem from Garret's longform piece. Yes, it's analytics, Jim, but not as we know it:
Adjusting for usage, Stanley’s RAPM Corsi and expected goal differentials resemble Beaulieu’s and Morrow’s but are even worse. He’s outshot and outchanced at a rate similar to Anthony Bitetto and Jay Harrison.
well, he's in the line up so there's your answer.I'm really really hoping that Arniel was just speaking in platitudes and did not want to throw Stanley under the bus. I am really hoping that the brain trust of this team does not serious believe that Stanley is a player that absolutely needs to be in that top 6. Time will tell I guess.
I will also say that on some level I do get what the Jets are looking for. I personally think that defense pairings can be an example of the sum being greater than its parts. Samberg and Pionk being a great example. Pionks isolated numbers look terrible and while yes I get that Samberg is pulling him up that pairing together has displayed results well above either guys ability. Their skill sets just compliments each other really well, Samberg makes excellent defensive zone reads and makes good zone exits (an area that Pionk really struggles in). Pionk is much better in the offensive zone he makes good passes and keeps plays alive in the offensive zone (Way better than Samberg) together it's just a pairing that works to generate shots and goals when they are on the ice.
A long way of saying I think they are trying to create that meshing of skill sets in all thier pairs. They feel like they have it on P1 and up until this year I would have agreed. They now have it in P2 when Samberg is healthy and I can see how they may feel that Stanleys skill set gets them closer to that with Miller on P3. I don't disagree thats what you want in your pairs but I would much rather see them experiment with Heinola and if he proves to be competent then go out and try to get a partner for him that you feel will give you that balance.
We’ve all owned a vehicle like Stanley. It hurts to finally move on from the bad decision until you pass it broke down on the highway with its next sucker. ….Maybe it was a girlfriend not a truck.Sunk cost fallacy in play?
And maybe a bit of the grass being greener on the other side in Kova's case (Chisholm too!). With both of those guys its like they just didn't want to believe what they saw. 4th & 5th rd picks can't be that good???? The old known bad vet over unknown prospect thing? But Stanley just keeps getting more and more rope. At some point it has to come to an end.
It isn't the sole reason for the current slide but he might have been the difference between an L and a W in that last game. The PK was great (without Stan) but all that PK'ing has to put them off their game at least a little and the difference was only a little.
First time playing RD in his career was training camp 2023 when he was paired with Dillon for pre season games while Schmidt was day to day.I hope so…because that’s what he’ll be doing paired with Stanley tonight.
This was Garrett’s article yesterday entitled “Monday Review: It Is Time That Logan Stanley Experiment Ends”He'd been excellent at the AHL level, and had played well if cautiously in his limited NHL showings. Plenty of people who'd watched him in the A thought he was a natural to progress in at at least a bottom-pairing and PK role, especially given the character and determination he'd shown as a late bloomer in getting as far as he had.
Also, the Jets were not particularly strong on the right -- Schmidt was already on a downward swing, Pionk was entering The Chaos Years, and may/ may not have been carrying a longterm foot injury. DeMelo was a player the Jets had already exposed in the draft IIRC. A big, quick, mobile and physical RHD who had been developed in-house, could play a solid stay-at-home game while also being a strong PKer with a good transition game was a natch, on a side the Jets had been weaker on, and costing little.
The Jets see what they see in Stanley. They spent to get him, and have spent arguably more to keep him. He's not a guy who's likely to carry them over the top and far from the reason they're on the current slide -- but at some point they need to cut bait and recognise that whatever they might lose in Logan they've already lost, and more, by keeping him.
Hopefully they can grind out a win against STL and buy a bit more time for the wounded to heal. And play Coughlan, and maybe SomeoneNotStan.
A gem from Garret's longform piece. Yes, it's analytics, Jim, but not as we know it:
Adjusting for usage, Stanley’s RAPM Corsi and expected goal differentials resemble Beaulieu’s and Morrow’s but are even worse. He’s outshot and outchanced at a rate similar to Anthony Bitetto and Jay Harrison.
Good call.Jets are at home so they probably won't call the marginal stuff. I'll take the under.
To me it's fascinating that Stanley is somehow a +6 on the team this year, tied for 3rd among d-men. I think it must be the Ehlers effect. +23 in his career is respectable. Maybe it's the same reason Beaulieu was a team high +15 in 2020-21 (38 games), goaltending makes up the difference. Or strong team play.He'd been excellent at the AHL level, and had played well if cautiously in his limited NHL showings. Plenty of people who'd watched him in the A thought he was a natural to progress in at at least a bottom-pairing and PK role, especially given the character and determination he'd shown as a late bloomer in getting as far as he had.
Also, the Jets were not particularly strong on the right -- Schmidt was already on a downward swing, Pionk was entering The Chaos Years, and may/ may not have been carrying a longterm foot injury. DeMelo was a player the Jets had already exposed in the draft IIRC. A big, quick, mobile and physical RHD who had been developed in-house, could play a solid stay-at-home game while also being a strong PKer with a good transition game was a natch, on a side the Jets had been weaker on, and costing little.
The Jets see what they see in Stanley. They spent to get him, and have spent arguably more to keep him. He's not a guy who's likely to carry them over the top and far from the reason they're on the current slide -- but at some point they need to cut bait and recognise that whatever they might lose in Logan they've already lost, and more, by keeping him.
Hopefully they can grind out a win against STL and buy a bit more time for the wounded to heal. And play Coughlan, and maybe SomeoneNotStan.
A gem from Garret's longform piece. Yes, it's analytics, Jim, but not as we know it:
Adjusting for usage, Stanley’s RAPM Corsi and expected goal differentials resemble Beaulieu’s and Morrow’s but are even worse. He’s outshot and outchanced at a rate similar to Anthony Bitetto and Jay Harrison.