wolfhounds
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: PA Joined: 06.02.2009
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As you say, an already good PowerPlay got better with the addition of Streit, but what about 5 v 5? That's really where we need the help. Hopefully his ability to move and/or carry the puck out of the d-zone will translate into better even-strength performance for the Flyers. That would be sweet. Then all we'd have to do is be sure to play solid team D in front of Mason and [insert player here]. |
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Just get two years out of him, and then take the $1.75 cap hit for four years to buy out the final two seasons (assuming he's not hurt at the time). - bradleyc4
Ill take three or four? As long as Polock needs to develop |
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MJL
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: Candyland, PA Joined: 09.20.2007
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Disagree about the Bruins. If you watch, their defenseman frequently go into the corners and tie up the opposition and gain control of the puck by winning one on one battles and allowing the forwards to swoop in and get the puck. This is markedly different that what, say, Streit will try and do which is retrieve the puck and move it out before the forecheck is upon him. I just don't think that strategy works well anymore, especially in a dump and chase league. - TheGreatNumber8
It's not a dump and chase League. It's a possession League. |
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flyguy12
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: Columbus, OH Joined: 10.22.2006
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Just get two years out of him, and then take the $1.75 cap hit for four years to buy out the final two seasons (assuming he's not hurt at the time). - bradleyc4
Looks a lot less risky (again assuming he's not injured) when you look @ it this way. |
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isaiah520
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: "All train compartments smell vaguely of sh*t. It gets so you don't mind it" Joined: 12.26.2006
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with homer as the GM, i think it's folly to assume that guys like schenn, couts and laughton are necessarily safe. having regained a measure of leverage w/ the streit signing, a more favorable deal for a yandle or edler could come along. the key is that one of our centers could be a unique enuf asset to attract a deal more favorable than previous ones.
just as an example, Gillis has been quoated saying how difficult it is to find centers, PHO has needed a real 2nd line guy for a while and the same in WPG. homer doesn't have to chase anything right now and that may be the hidden benefit to rolling the dice w/ streit. |
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Roytastic
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: Portland, OR Joined: 06.18.2013
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Portland? Awesome! Welcome creeper. - coffee junkie
Thanks! Yea I actually just relocated from the South Jersey area. |
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Those same teams have very strong breakout games. Due to defenseman that make quick accurate passes, and schemes that are well designed. LA was fantastic at this. So I disagree on that. That same strategy is being employed in the current Cup Finals. It's a skating and passing game. - MJL
I am going to continue to respectfully disagree. The Bruins defenseman, much like the Kings and Hawks, are adept at retrieving pucks because they are physican and get good body position and win one on one battles. NOT because they skate fast and can get back, retrieve the puck, and break it out before the forecheck descends upon them. Forwards are very good these days at dumping pucks not only in deep but in a spot where they can go get body contact before the d-man can move the puck up the boards. A good D has to be able to win those one on one battles, which means you need, size, strength, and skill. I question whether Streit can do that consistently.
Streit is definitely the type of player that helps teams. But I think the Flyers as presently constituted could have benefitted more from a stronger player who can be physical. |
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isaiah520
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: "All train compartments smell vaguely of sh*t. It gets so you don't mind it" Joined: 12.26.2006
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Im warming to the idea of Bernier. As long as Read stays and we pay no more then a 2nd and a prospect not named Laughton. |
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Atomic Wedgie
Toronto Maple Leafs |
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Location: Enjoying a bowl of smoking bishop Joined: 07.31.2006
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Perhaps, but look at the teams that have had success in the SC playoffs the past few years. They are all built on big, physical defenses who clog the lanes, block shots, retrieve pucks by winning one on one battles in the corners, and, most importantly, wear down the opposition over the course of a best of 7 series by checking them relentlessly. Now of course there is more than one way to skin a cat, but if you ask me the Flyers defense has struggled to do all of the above (which I think we can all agree is critical for a d corpse to do) since losing Pronger. Streit brings a lot to the table, but none of the above.
I think the days of Scotty Bowman diffusing the Legion of Doom line by deploying puck movers to outlet the puck before they could engage their forecheck are over. That strategy is not what wins Cups anymore. So as good as Streit may be at breakout passes, I still think the Flyers could have allocated that 5 million cap hit better. - TheGreatNumber8
I'd say it's a little different - it's that those defensemen don't get worn down when the opposition forechecks them relentlessly. |
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It's not a dump and chase League. It's a possession League. - MJL
If it's a possession league then your argument about Streit being an asset because he can retrieve pucks and move them out quickly is even less relevant. |
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isaiah520
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: "All train compartments smell vaguely of sh*t. It gets so you don't mind it" Joined: 12.26.2006
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Honestly, I don't think that means anything. Streit has only played 491 NHL games to this point. That's not a lot of mileage. I think the odds of him playing another four years, are pretty high. Now whether he remains effective and continues to play at a high level for all 4 years, is a different discussion. - MJL
so the ~350 other professional gms he played added zero wear-and-tear? good to know. |
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johndewar
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: South Jersey, NJ Joined: 01.16.2009
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Streit is definitely the type of player that helps teams. But I think the Flyers as presently constituted could have benefitted more from a stronger player who can be physical. - TheGreatNumber8
I agree.
They tried to get that player last year, in Shea Weber. That didn't work.
That player isn't out there without ripping apart the existing structure on your team. |
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I'd say it's a little different - it's that those defensemen don't get worn down when the opposition forechecks them relentlessly. - Atomic Wedgie
I think it is a little of both but this is another very good point. As we've seen in the playoffs, guys like Streit become quick targets for the opposing forecheck. The Bruins did this masterfully to Letang and turned a Norris finalist into a liability. Whereas guys like Boychuk or Ference (who is not nearly as good or as skilled as Letang) who can withstand the pounding continue to play their consistent role. |
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wolfhounds
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: PA Joined: 06.02.2009
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Perhaps, but look at the teams that have had success in the SC playoffs the past few years. They are all built on big, physical defenses who clog the lanes, block shots, retrieve pucks by winning one on one battles in the corners, and, most importantly, wear down the opposition over the course of a best of 7 series by checking them relentlessly. Now of course there is more than one way to skin a cat, but if you ask me the Flyers defense has struggled to do all of the above (which I think we can all agree is critical for a d corpse to do) since losing Pronger. Streit brings a lot to the table, but none of the above.
I think the days of Scotty Bowman diffusing the Legion of Doom line by deploying puck movers to outlet the puck before they could engage their forecheck are over. That strategy is not what wins Cups anymore. So as good as Streit may be at breakout passes, I still think the Flyers could have allocated that 5 million cap hit better. - TheGreatNumber8
Get the corpses off the ice! The Undead League isn't until tomorrow! |
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hammarby31
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: it's been 84 years, AZ Joined: 01.02.2007
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Atomic Wedgie
Toronto Maple Leafs |
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Location: Enjoying a bowl of smoking bishop Joined: 07.31.2006
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so the ~350 other professional gms he played added zero wear-and-tear? good to know. - isaiah520
Father Time is a cruel SOB.
Trust me on this one. |
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johndewar
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: South Jersey, NJ Joined: 01.16.2009
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Get the corpses off the ice! The Undead League isn't until tomorrow! - wolfhounds
That's the premise for the next Robert Rodriguez movie. |
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bradleyc4
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: the jewelry is still out Joined: 01.16.2007
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so the ~350 other professional gms he played added zero wear-and-tear? good to know. - isaiah520
Yeah, he's been playing in men's leagues since age 18 or 19. |
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mayorofangrytown
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: Downingtown, PA Joined: 08.16.2006
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Disagree about the Bruins. If you watch, their defenseman frequently go into the corners and tie up the opposition and gain control of the puck by winning one on one battles and allowing the forwards to swoop in and get the puck. This is markedly different that what, say, Streit will try and do which is retrieve the puck and move it out before the forecheck is upon him. I just don't think that strategy works well anymore, especially in a dump and chase league. - TheGreatNumber8
I watch them. The Bruins have a good D. They can do a lot of things right including everything you say but getting the puck to supporting forwards is the key to their transition game and they pass the puck well. |
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jak521
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: Buckle Up. Joined: 02.19.2008
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I am going to continue to respectfully disagree. The Bruins defenseman, much like the Kings and Hawks, are adept at retrieving pucks because they are physican and get good body position and win one on one battles. NOT because they skate fast and can get back, retrieve the puck, and break it out before the forecheck descends upon them. Forwards are very good these days at dumping pucks not only in deep but in a spot where they can go get body contact before the d-man can move the puck up the boards. A good D has to be able to win those one on one battles, which means you need, size, strength, and skill. I question whether Streit can do that consistently.
Streit is definitely the type of player that helps teams. But I think the Flyers as presently constituted could have benefitted more from a stronger player who can be physical. - TheGreatNumber8
The guy I wanted was Rob Scuderi
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Thanks! Yea I actually just relocated from the South Jersey area. - Roytastic
Cool, I like Portland hipsters. Both a poke fun of and their life styles. Good beer, biking and coffee. Puck is seriously lacking though eh? Thank god for the internet. |
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wolfhounds
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: PA Joined: 06.02.2009
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I agree.
They tried to get that player last year, in Shea Weber. That didn't work.
That player isn't out there without ripping apart the existing structure on your team. - johndewar
Yup. Just need to draft him in 12 days. |
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Bill Meltzer: Meltzer's Musings: Streit Talk - bmeltzer
So pick your poison: A long-term over-35 contract or a depth-resource gutting trade. The Flyers chose the former. The more I think about it, the more I prefer the course they took to the other alternative.
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johndewar
Philadelphia Flyers |
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Location: South Jersey, NJ Joined: 01.16.2009
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Father Time is a cruel SOB.
Trust me on this one. - Atomic Wedgie
MJL's point was solid.
How many players in the league at Streit's age have played as few games as Streit has?
Kimmo is 38 and has played 1000 NHL games.
Streit is 35 and hasn't even played half of that. |
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