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Transcripts. Take Note of Lombardi's Last Answer, Flyer Fans

June 3, 2014, 7:49 PM ET [15 Comments]
Tim Panaccio
Philadelphia Flyers Blogger • RSSArchiveCONTACT
Wish I were in LA for the Cup Final but I'm not ...

Boring summer - and a LONG one - here in Philly. I think Flyer fans would gladly trade hosting the NHL Draft for something tangible - like a Cup Final.

Here's today's media presser with Kings GM Dean Lombardi and coach Darryl Sutter, who still hasn't figured out how to enjoy the moment after all these decades in hockey.

Transcripts courtesy of the NHL:

THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.

Q. Coach, you and your club have gone through so much this
postseason, what are some of the things that you are most proud of as to
the way your club has handled itself to get to this point?
COACH SUTTER: I think everybody's played really well. Hasn't been
based on one or two guys or a star factor.

Q. Dean, can you address the maturing of Drew Doughty, what it is
about him that seems the bigger the game, the better he plays?
DEAN LOMBARDI: Well, I think you're seeing what was always in him,
even in junior hockey, world junior tournaments. He's incredibly
competitive.
The thing I've noticed the last year in particular, I think he's
really learning to channel that competitiveness in the right direction. I
think sometimes it would get the best of him.
I think you're starting to see also, which was always in him, there's
some leadership that's very underestimated in him. So to me he's growing
not only as a player, but as a man. It's pretty neat to watch.

Q. It's taken a while to get the leadership out of him, hasn't it?
DEAN LOMBARDI: That's the way it should be. Being a top draft pick
or being paid a lot of money doesn't all of a sudden anoint you as having
the qualifications to lead. You have to pay your dues. You learn from
older players. Sean O'Donnell, Rob Blake, some of the players he broke in
under. That's a progress. You don't just flick a switch.

Q. Dean, we asked Glen about you earlier today. Would you talk
about Glen, and also yourself in terms of being one of the more senior GMs
on the circuit.
DEAN LOMBARDI: That would just take too long to answer. There's so
much that goes into that. It's pretty scary to look at the GM book and see
myself fifth in seniority.
I will say one thing about this. I worked in Philly for three years.

*

For more hockey, focusing on the Flyers, check out CSNPhilly.com:

cllick your Bic
Part of the qualifications for that job was I had to learn to hate the
Rangers in a hurry.
But you're right, Glen is one of the icons in this business. He's
also been very helpful to me earlier in my career. It's pretty neat.

Q. Dean, coming back to Drew, not really coincidence with his
arrival, your turnaround. Talk about how he's fast-tracked the development
of this franchise maybe.
DEAN LOMBARDI: I don't understand the question.

Q. With Drew, how big is it to have him as a cornerstone?
DEAN LOMBARDI: There's certainly critical players. I think what
Darryl alluded to right at the beginning is very important. These guys are
a team. You have 23 guys that stick together, never point fingers. Quite
frankly, there's no way you're going to get through what they got through
if you didn't have a group that cared about each other and cared about the
right things. No chance.
Now in Drew's case, you look at every great team in history, they've
always had that great defenseman, whether it's Lidstrom, Zubov, Chelios, go
right through the list. We all know how important those guys were. He's
got a ways to go to catch those guys, but that's his goal, to be in that
class someday.

Q. Marian Gaborik, Darryl, can you discuss what he's been like in
the playoffs? Dean, could you take us back to when you traded for Marian,
how you felt about that.
COACH SUTTER: I think Marian has been a really consistent player for
us through 21 games. That's not easy to do over the course of when you're
probably against the other team's top defensemen, top checkers, top
players.
I think that would be the number one thing from a coaching
standpoint, I'd say he's been very consistent.

Q. Dean, about the deal for Marian, if it was an easy one to make,
if you had to ponder making a deal.
DEAN LOMBARDI: That's where your pro scouts come in. This is
something Darryl and I had talked about last summer. We were always a top
defensive team. You want to be able to do both, but you never want to lose
that hallmark of what our success has been in being a good defensive team
that's hard to play against.
It had to be a player that most important fit, that gave us an
element, that was willing hopefully to buy into what it takes to play here.
All the research that Robby and Alyn McCauley did in terms of whether
he would fit in, we felt it was worth taking a shot at it.
But the thing, too, with the timing, it's the fit of the player, what
type of character he has, but also the timing of when you bring in a player
of that caliber. Certain things have to be established for a franchise
before you do something like that.
I think the thing that jumped out at me, the first thing we got him,
the way the players embraced him is critical to, you know, you're not a
rental, you're not a mercenary, we're going to get you in this family, in
this circle in a hurry. Carter taking him to his house instead of making
him stay at a hotel, Mike Richards taking him to breakfast. The way
they've embraced him has made this transition easier for him and got him a
buy-in.

Q. Darryl, on Glen, when you were growing up on the farm as boys,
were all the boys fans of one team, or were you all over the map?
COACH SUTTER: I think when we were growing up, because there were
only six teams, a couple were Chicago, a couple were Toronto, Brian was
Detroit, Glen Sather grew up as a boy in our hometown. We were more
familiar with Glen as a player, meaning he played in Boston, played in New
York. We knew that. Then he went to the Oilers. Obviously being from
Alberta, Glen Sather won five or six Stanley Cups, and he wore all the
hats. A lot of respect for Glen, as Dean said, over the years we've known
him, on the ice, off the ice. He's the whole deal.

Q. Darryl, what is the toughest part for you after another emotional
seven-game series to get these guys ready so quickly for the Cup?
COACH SUTTER: Even though it's the Stanley Cup Final, Game 1
tomorrow, we've been able to do that pretty consistently, not just this
season, but the past couple seasons. I mean, you're doing it a lot on the
road, a lot with travel.
If you look at this year, the time between series was not very much.
You had to get going again. We went into Chicago and played really well in
Game 1.
Sort of the same thing. There wasn't much break to it. Just reset
and away you go again.

Q. Darryl, you've said it's a game to three in the National Hockey
League. Hasn't been that way lately for your hockey club against Chicago.
Do you see the Rangers as a matchup, more defensive orientated?
COACH SUTTER: When you go back to that number, if you give up more
than two goals a game, you're looking for trouble all the time. It's a
tough number to reach. If you look at the regular season, we finished with
the best goals-against in the league, just over two, and that's a mark
that's really hard to hit.
That's always a good goal for your team.
Do I see that as how this series will be? Certainly, if they're
going to score three goals, we're going to have a tough time.

Q. Darryl, you played with Doug Wilson. You've coached some awfully
good defensemen over the years. Where does Doughty rank in the group that
you've seen from guys you've played with or guys you've coached?
COACH SUTTER: I think Chelios was the best all around defenseman
that I had the opportunity to coach. So I'd say that Drew would be
trending more towards that type of player in terms of the all-around part
of it, in terms of the whole package part of it.

Q. Darryl, near the end of practice, Jonathan took a shot up high,
sort of left. Any reason to be concerned about his status at all?
COACH SUTTER: No. Jonathan is a tough guy. He's probably the first
guy out of the room.
THE MODERATOR: Thank you.

FastScripts by ASAP Sports
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