December 14, 2008

Everywhere. Nowhere. Your Tampa Bay Lightning 30 games in

Author: John | (122 views) | Comments (0)
Categories: Media, The Franchise
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Mike Chen can’t look away at the train wreck here in Tampa, and who can blame him? Ooh, blame… Good subject for an article Mike! Have at it!

The real culprit? I can see why people can point fingers at one guy or another (though Stamkos is absolved of everything other than simply being an 18-year-old rookie learning the ways of the NHL) but when it comes down to it, everyone is at fault here from the wacky ownership duo of Len Barrie and Oren Koules to Melrose and his then-assistants to veteran leaders like team captain Vincent Lecavalier.

Yep, you’re all guilty and you should feel bad because the fan base that slowly built up from the early 2000s is now disintegrating as the team becomes one of the biggest sideshows in professional sports.

Mike goes on to break down the X’s and D’oh’s of the Lightning, post-Palace Sports, like an ESPN analyst without a bone to pick with a former employer. Blame lies from the top down, and from the bottom up. As a fan, I’ve focused on the top-down side instead of looking at the players, the lock room and the atmosphere generated by team leaders…

Just to tickle my fancy on the blame heirachy, lemme highlight the one paragraph that stands out for me:

The thing that I don’t get is that even though moviemaking (Koules) and real estate (Barrie) are completely separate businesses than running a pro-sports franchise, the basic tenants of “get good people/have a plan/work hard” are still in place. Here’s how any organization, pro sports or otherwise, should work: leadership at the top has a vision and a plan. They bring in supervisors (coaches) to create strategy for that plan, then the supervisors motivate the workers (players) to properly execute the plan with a good attitude and strong work ethic while providing feedback about what’s working and what’s not. I don’t see any of this here.

Some people really hated Palace Sports ownership… I mean, seriously despised “Dollar” Bill Davidson and outside-the-area ownership. They didn’t care for Rick Dudley or the types of players he brought in at the get-go of Palace Sports tenure of ownership.

But — this is inarguable — Davidson, Tom Wilson, Bill Campbell and the rest of Palace Sports had a plan and a vision of all facets of the operation. On ice, the venue, the administrative organization… They assigned a well-versed individual into a role and let them work.

With OK Hockey? It’s been anarchy without a general MO of the moves, without a definition of the how or why.

Mike goes on to dissect coaching and then throwing some blame the players ways… Not everyone, just the C and A’s of the team. The article is certainly worth a read and a thought or three.

In essence, it comes back to the volatility of the off season as a foreshadowing of the season so far. A new administration does indeed have a right to put who they want in positions of power… But these people need to know what the plan is, spread the plan down the chain of command and get everyone on message and in sync on that.

Right now, we’re still devoid of that vision / message from any level of command.

…which has contributed to the Bolts being run straight into the ground.

December 9, 2008

Back to the land of Ludzik

Author: John | (104 views) | Comments (0)
Categories: The Franchise, The Team
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“This is futile,” the text message from my buddy Bill read. “They get one a minute in and they’re done. It’s like the Ludzik days all over again….Every time I watch, there are a couple of new numbers out there on the ice.”

Bill is no casual fan… He’s been through the times of despair, times of hope and times of glory when it comes to the Lightning. He may not be a season ticket holder but he’s as committed to the team as anyone else out there… And he’s been there since the start.

And this is part of the reason why there is so much distress out there among Lightning fans. No one is going to swoop in and save the team (even if OK Hockey thinks adding more offense is going to change things). The chemistry has turned to mud and the focus on the roster was on numbers and reputation more so than how well pieces of the puzzle fit together.

Bill’s venting brought back memories of the end of the 1990’s as Palace Sports started their ownership tenure with a cast of has-beens, cast-offs, never-were’s, and yet-to-be’s:

(the 1999-2000 TBL roster and stats from HockeyDB)

1999-2000 Roster

# Player Name   Age Pos. GP G A Pts PIM +/-
4 Vincent Lecavalier   19 C 80 25 42 67 43 -25
33 Fredrik Modin   24 L 80 22 26 48 18 -26
26 Mike Sillinger To Florida 28 C 67 19 25 44 86 -29
77 Chris Gratton To Buffalo 24 C 58 14 27 41 121 -24
  Darcy Tucker To Toronto 24 C 50 14 20 34 108 -15
20 Stan Drulia   31 R 68 11 22 33 24 -18
13 Pavel Kubina   22 D 69 8 18 26 93 -19
23 Petr Svoboda   33 D 70 2 23 25 170 -11
8 Todd Warriner From Toronto 25 L 55 11 13 24 34 -14
10 Mike Johnson From Toronto 24 R 28 10 12 22 4 -2
2 Paul Mara   19 D 54 7 11 18 73 -27
14 Robert Petrovicky   25 C 43 7 10 17 14 2
17 Steve Guolla To Atlanta 26 C 46 6 10 16 11 2
25 Dan Kesa   27 R 50 4 10 14 21 -11
  Stephane Richer To St. Louis 33 L 20 7 5 12 4 2
19 Steve Martins From Ottawa 27 C 57 5 7 12 37 -11
30 Andrei Zyuzin   21 D 34 2 9 11 33 -11
15 Jaroslav Svejkovsky From Washington 22 L 29 5 5 10 28 -7
5 Bruce Gardiner From Ottawa 28 C 41 3 6 9 37 -21
7 Ben Clymer   21 D 60 2 6 8 87 -26
9 Brian Holzinger From Buffalo 26 C 14 3 3 6 21 -7
  Andreas Johansson From Calgary 26 C 12 2 3 5 8 1
22 Wayne Primeau From Buffalo 23 C 17 2 3 5 25 -4
3 Sergei Gusev   24 D 28 2 3 5 6 -9
28 Nils Ekman   23 R 28 2 2 4 36 -8
  Michael Nylander To Chicago 26 C 11 1 2 3 4 -3
  Bill Houlder To Nashville 32 D 14 1 2 3 2 -3
18 Marek Posmyk   20 D 18 1 2 3 20 1
42 Matt Elich   20 R 8 1 1 2 0 -1
22 Chris McAlpine From St. Louis 27 D 10 1 1 2 10 -5
    To Atlanta                
25 Dwayne Hay From Florida 22 L 13 1 1 2 2 0
6 Bryan Muir From Chicago 26 D 30 1 1 2 32 -8
27 Jassen Cullimore   26 D 46 1 1 2 66 -12
11 Shawn Burr   33 L 4 0 2 2 0 2
29 Pavel Torgayev From Calgary 33 C 5 0 2 2 2 1
17 Ryan Johnson From Florida 23 C 14 0 2 2 2 -9
21 Cory Sarich From Buffalo 21 D 17 0 2 2 42 -8
24 Reid Simpson   30 L 26 1 0 1 103 -3
51 Dale Rominski   23 R 3 0 1 1 2 1
49 Kaspars Astashenko   24 D 8 0 1 1 4 -2
1 Zac Bierk   22 G 12 0 1 1 0 0
34 Gordie Dwyer   21 L 24 0 1 1 135 -6
  Vyacheslav Butsayev To Ottawa 29 C 2 0 0 0 0 -2
46 Andrei Skopintsev   27 D 4 0 0 0 6 -4
9 Jeff Shevalier   25 L 5 0 0 0 2 -1
93 Daren Puppa   34 G 5 0 0 0 2 0
  Dieter Kochan   25 G 5 0 0 0 0 0
  Colin Forbes To Ottawa 23 W 8 0 0 0 18 -4
43 Kyle Freadrich   20 L 10 0 0 0 39 -1
31 Rich Parent   26 G 14 0 0 0 2 0
35 Kevin Hodson   27 G 24 0 0 0 2 0
56 Ian Herbers To NY Islanders 32 D 37 0 0 0 45 -12
39 Dan Cloutier   23 G 52 0 0 0 29 0
Totals           204 344 548 1713  

I kept looking at the roster and seeing grim reminders of days past. The former Detroit Viper trifecta of Stan Drulia, Dan Kesa and Ian Herbers for example…

Drulia, Kesa, Herbers…
Drulia, Kesa, Herbers…?
Drulia, Kesa, Herbers… Oh my!
Drulia, Kesa, Herbers… Oh my!
Drulia, Kesa, Herbers, OH MY!

Note, that wasn’t a chant of endearment…

But the grim difference between that roster and this one is that Palace Sports refused to spend much to begin with, with the Lightning, and focused on player development and roster moves. Some panned out over time and some didn’t… But enough panned out that Lord Stanley’s cup was secured in five seasons of play.

You didn’t expect a roster where the one constant was mediocrity… Where the head coach’s experience was the IHL level (and dumping in the puck seemed to be the only attempt at offensive gameplay). To think that the 2008-09 roster is currently made up of a plathora of big names, big contracts and similar production numbers (what production?) seems like a sick joke.

In the 1998-99 offseason, as Rick Dudley took over General Management duties of the Lightning from Jacques Demers, Demers is supposed to have told Dudley the sick truth. “There’s nothing in the system, the cupboard is bare.”

That quote was part of the hopelessness of 1999-2000 and the promise of days ahead. While Dudley has been shit upon by fans for his perchance to acquire soft Euro’s and Russians, he did put together a majority of the roster that would go on to win the Cup. He did (as he so often liked to chirp about) go about collecting assets yet again.

The only focus of the 2008-09 Tampa Bay Lightning franchise is at the top of the pops. The NHL Team… and with a roster of names (if not roles), the team’s performance compares directly to this franchise’s darkest days when it had nothing at all.

The Lightning went on to win 19 games in 1999-2000 (19-54-9-7 54 points). The current pace — 6-13-8 in 27 games, 20 points — is 18.

Barry Melrose, Rick Tocchet… It doesn’t matter right now. Thus Steve Ludzik is on our minds, but the promise and hope that better days are ahead seems absent.

April 6, 2004

Rick Dudley’s Heartbreak and the NHL Entry Draft

Author: John F. | (24 views) | Comments (1)
Categories: Off Ice news
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Rick Dudley must be crying today… If not crying, he is incredibly upset.

For the first time since god-knows-when, he will not have the chance to trade the #1 overall pick in the draft. Dudley, who has traded the pick 3 times (and is on record as the only General Manager in league history to trade the #1 overall pick,) and the Florida Panthers scored the #7 selection in this years entry draft while the Washington Capitals secured the #1 selection.

Of course, Dudley tried drafting Alexander Ovechkin - the likely #1 overall selection this year - last year… So he can claim he had the #1 pick twice last year (ha ha ha :roll:)

The complete draft order is:

1. Washington Capitals
2. Pittsburgh Penguins
3. Chicago Blackhawks
4. Columbus Blue Jackets
5. Phoenix Coyotes
6. NY Rangers
7. Florida Panthers
8. Carolina Hurricanes
9. Mighty Ducks of Anaheim
10. Atlanta Thrashers
11. Los Angeles Kings
12. Minnesota Wild
13. Buffalo Sabres
14. Edmonton Oilers