Toronto Maple Leafs 2011/12

JonSlid

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Apr 8, 2011
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[h=1]The Leafs have selected WHL defenceman Morgan Rielly with their 5th pick in the 2012 NHL Draft.

Morgan Rielly #1.. Let's keep our draft picks!!
[/h]
"They" are already saying that this Morgan kid is the best Leaf draft pick since Luke Schenn. Stanley Cup, here we come!
. . .
If Rielly pans out him and Jake Gardiner will be a force on the blueline (like Keith and Seabrook on Chicago)....
...
Excuse my ignorance, but where exactly was Morgan Riley in the depth charts of most NHL GM's for 2012 draft? Top 5, or higher, as Burky would claim? or way lower?
 

Manji

The Balance of Opposites
Jan 17, 2004
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Morgan Rielly was definitely Top Ten and in some rankings he was in the top five....
His stock dropped a bit because of a knee injury (needed surgery) but he fully recovered and was able to play in the playoffs....
Also did very well in the NHL combine...

As of June Craig Button had him projected as number 3.
As of June Bob McKenzie had him ranked at number 8 overall.
And Hockey News had him ranked at number 6 overall.


Matt Finn was an interesting pick as well....
Leafs got him in the second round (I think 35th overall) but he was projected to be the twenty first pick...
Craig Button had him ranked 9th...
Bob Mackenzie had him ranked 21st...
And Hockey News had him ranked at 18...
Who knows...if the Leafs are lucky they may have a steal on their hands....

Both picks are Canadian....Matt Finn is actually from Toronto....Raised in Etobicoke near the Mastercard Centre where the Leafs practice...
 

Manji

The Balance of Opposites
Jan 17, 2004
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I am a little surprised that there is not much more talk about Radulov in Leaf land. We are hearing all kinds of discussion about Nash but I think Rads might be a much better fit - and likely would cost the team only some money and maybe a low draft choice.

I do not want to hear about the curfew thing. Mistakes are made and we never heard his side of the story. The guy has 30-35 goal talent and was huge for Nashville in beating Detroit. He is a big body and would very dangerous on the PP with Kessel and Lupul. Heatley killed a teamate and three teams have had him since then.

I like him much better than Nash and it would not cost the Leafs a boat load of prospects.

Unless the Leafs can get him to next to nothing I think the Leafs should pass....

Too much of a risk...
So far he seems like the next Nikolai Zherdev....
Talented but just not driven and for some reason cannot compete at the NHL level...
 

Bargnani_

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Apr 28, 2008
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Leafs just bought out Colby Armstrongs contract he went on waivers today at noon.
Oh that's great .. That means his salary will be on the Cap for the next couple of years ie like Tucker is still on the books . I would have put him on the AHL club next year .
 

Ironhead

Son of the First Nation
Sep 13, 2008
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Ironhead

Son of the First Nation
Sep 13, 2008
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gcostanza

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Jul 24, 2010
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Leafs cut ties with goalie coach François Allaire ...
The way I hear it, François Allaire has cut ties with the Maple Leafs.
 

Bargnani_

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Apr 28, 2008
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The way I hear it, François Allaire has cut ties with the Maple Leafs.
Oh yea , thanks for the correction . Although him and Burke are close friends and he may have let François Allaire have the option of attaching his name to leaving the Leafs other then the Leafs getting rid of him .
 

Ironhead

Son of the First Nation
Sep 13, 2008
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Leafs are team America brah! :D
Should be a capital 'T' on "Team" I think.





Leafs cut ties with goalie coach François Allaire ...
Good.





The way I hear it, François Allaire has cut ties with the Maple Leafs.
Either way as long as he goes.





Oh yea , thanks for the correction . Although him and Burke are close friends and he may have let François Allaire have the option of attaching his name to leaving the Leafs other then the Leafs getting rid of him .
One way or the other he is gone. I see ex-goalies like Sean Burke have success as goalie coaches and are likely less expensive with actual NHL experience.
 

Bargnani_

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Apr 28, 2008
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Should be a capital 'T' on "Team" I think.







Good.







Either way as long as he goes.







One way or the other he is gone. I see ex-goalies like Sean Burke have success as goalie coaches and are likely less expensive with actual NHL experience.
Leafs should give Sean Burke a blank chq ie ask what it would take to come to T.O . Isn't Sean Burke a Toronto native ?
 

Ironhead

Son of the First Nation
Sep 13, 2008
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Some where in south-west Ontario, but close enough.
 

Bargnani_

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Apr 28, 2008
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Picked the right day, at least.

With the Yunel Escobar ridiculousness spinning furiously and the NFL continuing to look worse and worse every week with fans now dressed up as officials, the departure of Francois Allaire from the Maple Leaf organization at a time when there are no NHL games on the horizon just didn’t didn’t have the same bite as it otherwise might have.

That said, Allaire’s parting shots, whether you buy the point of view of a disgruntled ex-employee or not, did portray the Leaf organization as dysfunctional, hardly the thing GM Brian Burke needs these days with new owners arriving to see exactly what it is they have purchased.

Allaire says he quit, the Leafs say they weren’t going to invite him back, and somewhere in there lies the truth. What seems clear, and this should be the important matter to Leaf fans, is that the rift between Allaire and the rest of the coaching staff at least finally supplies one concrete reason behind the team’s curious late-season swoon that cost it a playoff spot.

That’s not to blame Allaire. But here’s what we do know:

**•**In late fall, with the team trying to improve its penalty killing, assistant coach Greg Cronin wanted to have Allaire and the goalies sit in on penalty-killing meetings. Allaire didn’t want that. Cronin said he’d already talked to James Reimer.

Allaire warned Cronin not to speak to his goalies. Cronin responded in a most unfriendly way, and unrest within the staff was born.

**•**Ron Wilson, dismayed with how Jonas Gustavsson and Reimer were playing so passively deep in the crease, asked Allaire in early February to get them to play more aggressively. Allaire said he had no intention of altering the way his goalies were playing.

Wilson, out of sheer frustration, finally went directly to the goalies, bypassing the celebrated goalie guru. Soon, Allaire and the other coaches weren’t even on speaking terms.

**•**Randy Carlyle, who had worked with Allaire in Anaheim, gave the goalie coach a list of three conditions he would have to meet if he wanted to return for the 2012-13 season. The list included: working a maximum 17 days a month, including six with the Marlies, rather than being around the team every day; apologizing to the coaches on staff he had offended; and a commitment to teaching a more aggressive goaltending style.

Allaire refused to agree to any of the three conditions.

How much this internal coaching feud affected the team is hard to measure. Surely the injury to productive winger Joffrey Lupul had an impact, and the Leafs’ leadership group clearly wasn’t strong enough to stop the young team from suffering from a massive case of stage fright in the final weeks of the season.

Allaire says he felt he couldn’t do his job properly, while Burke, in an unprecedented use of the team’s website, blasted Allaire’s methods as “outdated” after learning he had spoken out.

“Was there interference from the staff as he said there was? Yes,” said Burke. “But it was done reluctantly and it was done to change elements of our goaltending that was subpar.”

This wasn’t the way this was supposed to go. Burke and Allaire spoke last week and apparently agreed to make an announcement together sometime this week that would make it look like a mutual parting of the ways, but instead Allaire fired and Burke fired back.

Given how Burke defended Allaire time and time again, the former goalie coach’s disloyalty had to be deeply wounding for the Leaf GM, whose job may very well be on the line this season if the team cannot make post-season play.

It was hard enough for Burke to fire Wilson, a long-time friend, last February, but Wilson didn’t tear a strip off Leaf management after leaving. Allaire, by contrast, has suggested the Leaf coaching staff is effectively getting in its own way, an accusation that won’t be easy to shake.

Rick St. Croix is expected to be hired to replace Allaire, and St. Croix will have to deal with the only hockey environment in North America that clamours for the head of the goalie coach if the netminders struggle.

Even worse, Burke defended both Wilson (who he didn’t hire) and Allaire (who he did) so passionately before ultimately cutting ties with both that it will be more difficult for the public to accept similar words in defence of his players or coaches this season.

For example, if the team doesn’t do well this season and captain Dion Phaneuf comes under fire, it will be hard for Burke to back his captain without producing suggestions that he’s again trying to mask over internal problems.

Given the state of Leaf goaltending in recent seasons with Allaire as consultant, change is probably a good thing, although Reimer and Ben Scrivens, in particular, were devoted disciples of Allaire.

But change accompanied by bitterness and accusations of interference is a very different thing, The best the Leafs can hope for now is that the season is delayed long enough by labour woes to make fans and media forget L’Affaire Allaire.
 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
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Nicely written and informative post, Bargnani. Maybe you should be a reporter.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts