WoofBased on Bruce’s interview
this is what the opening night lineup sounds like
Marchand Bergeron Pastrnak
Hall Coyle Smith
DeBrusk Haula Foligno
Frederic Nosek Lazar
Forbort McAvoy
Reily Carlo
Grzelyck Clifton
Ullmark
Sway
Woof
Yeah, someone needs to take a step back, look and this, and ask "is this a team that competes for, and wins, a Stanley Cup?"Woof
Based on Bruce’s interview
this is what the opening night lineup sounds like
Marchand Bergeron Pastrnak
Hall Coyle Smith
DeBrusk Haula Foligno
Frederic Nosek Lazar
Forbort McAvoy
Reily Carlo
Grzelyck Clifton
Ullmark
Sway
This team won't win the cup but I think they'll compete.
Halleleuiah! I've tried to have this conversation multiple times. Noone has really engaged. Hopefully it was just because of my poor writing.Ideally Mcdavid would be a great 3rd line forward too.
Smith is 30th in goals(23rd at ES), 38th in points for a RW over the last 3 years. 31st and 29th last season. Combine that offense with his 200ft game, hustle, and consistency and I don't see how Smith is not at the very least an above average 2nd line winger.
Having Pasta + Smith as your 1-2 punch making under 10m is a huge boon for the Bs. Smith is the 57th highest paid RW in the league and is significantly better than most guys in that range and closer to a 5m player in todays nhl. Now we'll see if they can improve the bottom 2 lines with their signing this year or internally but I have zero problem with Smith on the second line. If we can bump him down, awesome, but I think if the Bruins can get above average results from the #3 and 4 RWs then they will be all set there.
Based on Bruce’s interview
this is what the opening night lineup sounds like
Marchand Bergeron Pastrnak
Hall Coyle Smith
DeBrusk Haula Foligno
Frederic Nosek Lazar
Forbort McAvoy
Reily Carlo
Grzelyck Clifton
Ullmark
Sway
No stud then trade him away before he rots. So furious not playing the kid. Hes readyBased on Bruce’s interview
this is what the opening night lineup sounds like
Marchand Bergeron Pastrnak
Hall Coyle Smith
DeBrusk Haula Foligno
Frederic Nosek Lazar
Forbort McAvoy
Reily Carlo
Grzelyck Clifton
Ullmark
Sway
No stud then trade him away before he rots. So furious not playing the kid. Hes ready
Yes, exactly. You've absolutely got it right. This is why some of us have been critical of them. They didn't win ten cups in ten years.
if he's ready he'll have a monster camp and earn a lineup spot. i know i'm rooting for him.No stud then trade him away before he rots. So furious not playing the kid. Hes ready
I honestly don't understand this propensity to number defencemen #4, #5, #6, etc. I mean, sure, #1 I get – assuming there's a clear-cut stud D-man, such as McAvoy on the current Bruins roster.
But arguing that so-and-so is a "#5/#4 at best" - what does that even mean?
What's the difference between a #3 and a #4? Is one just slightly better than the other?
Seems to me it makes more sense to describe them in terms of being effective 1st/2nd/3rd pairings, and pairing is largely determined by complimentary skillsets, RH/LH (and is sometimes situational: 5-on-5, PK, PP, dying minutes of a game up by a goal, needing a goal, etc).
So in the context of the Bruins D roster, the guy who plays with McAvoy isn't necessarily the "#2" (I guess the #2 would be Carlo?); it's the guy who makes most sense to pair with McAvoy in a given situation. The guy who makes most sense playing with Carlo, label him a #4 or #5 if you want, but he's a 2nd-pairing defenceman, and if they're successful overall as a tandem, then he's a good 2nd pairing D-man.
It's like with forwards. Is your 2nd-line centre the 4th-5th best forward on the team? On some very stacked teams, maybe. But on other very successful teams the 2C is quite likely the "#2" forward. But again, it has to do with skillset and complementary context.
So let's get over this "Gryz/Reilly is a #5 at best." If they help the team win playing in a top 4 role, then they're top 4 D-men on this team. We once had Chara-Seidenberg as our 1st pairing. But on some other team, because of skillsets, LH/RH etc., Seidenberg might be deemed a "#3/#4". It's all rather academic.
I’m sure I’ll get crucified for this, but I honestly don’t think a Hall Coyle Smith second line is that terrible.
There’s a lot of hope it works out going on, but I just feel like Hall and Coyle could really own the puck, add in Smith’s unrelenting attack and I genuinely think they could be really effective.
We all prefer to have Krejci back, but you could do worse than Coyle in my opinion. They could totally crash and burn, but I’m really looking forward to seeing Coyle this year following the surgery. If he comes back to form I think they could surprise a lot of us.
yes, they have.Kings have missed the playoffs in 5 of those 10 seasons.
Your post is #1 in my book.I honestly don't understand this propensity to number defencemen #4, #5, #6, etc. I mean, sure, #1 I get – assuming there's a clear-cut stud D-man, such as McAvoy on the current Bruins roster.
But arguing that so-and-so is a "#5/#4 at best" - what does that even mean?
What's the difference between a #3 and a #4? Is one just slightly better than the other?
Seems to me it makes more sense to describe them in terms of being effective 1st/2nd/3rd pairings, and pairing is largely determined by complimentary skillsets, RH/LH (and is sometimes situational: 5-on-5, PK, PP, dying minutes of a game up by a goal, needing a goal, etc).
So in the context of the Bruins D roster, the guy who plays with McAvoy isn't necessarily the "#2" (I guess the #2 would be Carlo?); it's the guy who makes most sense to pair with McAvoy in a given situation. The guy who makes most sense playing with Carlo, label him a #4 or #5 if you want, but he's a 2nd-pairing defenceman, and if they're successful overall as a tandem, then he's a good 2nd pairing D-man.
It's like with forwards. Is your 2nd-line centre the 4th-5th best forward on the team? On some very stacked teams, maybe. But on other very successful teams the 2C is quite likely the "#2" forward. But again, it has to do with skillset and complementary context.
So let's get over this "Gryz/Reilly is a #5 at best." If they help the team win playing in a top 4 role, then they're top 4 D-men on this team. We once had Chara-Seidenberg as our 1st pairing. But on some other team, because of skillsets, LH/RH etc., Seidenberg might be deemed a "#3/#4". It's all rather academic.
No stud then trade him away before he rots. So furious not playing the kid. Hes ready
Stud is 22 when do they want him to start 26 ?? This is a epic disasterWhat kid (forward) has he played (Cassidy) and given a legit shot, other than kuhlman.
Sometimes that's all it takes and they take off. Its real hard for anyone to play, knowing if you make one wrong, bang your back in the press box or on your way to providence.
Stud is 22 when do they want him to start 26 ?? This is a epic disaster
I honestly don't understand this propensity to number defencemen #4, #5, #6, etc. I mean, sure, #1 I get – assuming there's a clear-cut stud D-man, such as McAvoy on the current Bruins roster.
But arguing that so-and-so is a "#5/#4 at best" - what does that even mean?
What's the difference between a #3 and a #4? Is one just slightly better than the other?
Seems to me it makes more sense to describe them in terms of being effective 1st/2nd/3rd pairings, and pairing is largely determined by complimentary skillsets, RH/LH (and is sometimes situational: 5-on-5, PK, PP, dying minutes of a game up by a goal, needing a goal, etc).
So in the context of the Bruins D roster, the guy who plays with McAvoy isn't necessarily the "#2" (I guess the #2 would be Carlo?); it's the guy who makes most sense to pair with McAvoy in a given situation. The guy who makes most sense playing with Carlo, label him a #4 or #5 if you want, but he's a 2nd-pairing defenceman, and if they're successful overall as a tandem, then he's a good 2nd pairing D-man.
It's like with forwards. Is your 2nd-line centre the 4th-5th best forward on the team? On some very stacked teams, maybe. But on other very successful teams the 2C is quite likely the "#2" forward. But again, it has to do with skillset and complementary context.
So let's get over this "Gryz/Reilly is a #5 at best." If they help the team win playing in a top 4 role, then they're top 4 D-men on this team. We once had Chara-Seidenberg as our 1st pairing. But on some other team, because of skillsets, LH/RH etc., Seidenberg might be deemed a "#3/#4". It's all rather academic.
I feel like the 2019 team had holes but still looked a lot better than this.
Somehow we've gotten worse (personnel wise) as we've come to the end of this cores last run.
Then what was the point? Should have started making moves for the future.
I would consider Carlo as a great player. Also his impact on McAvoy was very noticeable this season. In the 27 games he played, McAvoy had 5 goals 17 assists for 22 points. In the 29 games Carlo missed, McAvoy had 0 goals and 8 assists. Also 8 of those games were against Buffalo and he had 4 of the assists in those games. He did put up good numbers in the 3 games without Carlo in the playoffs but was a -5.Agreed- why number them except to use it as a whip against players or pairings you don't like. That said, if we take it as a general gauge of a skillset- how many minutes a guy would get in and what situations- then the Bruins D as of now reminds me a bit of a lot of the Bourque era. One clearcut star in McAvoy and then a supporting cast, none of whom are great players in their own right. Can you win with that? I think so, but it would be nice to have one more top quality 22-24 minute all around guy on the left side (in our case). I love Gryz, but there are certain things you don't want him out there for, same with Reilly, and Forbort.