Strangelove
New member
mr grieves said:herman said:mr grieves said:CarltonTheBear said:Strangelove said:Those points actually serve as an indictment of Babcock's inflexibility rather than the other way around.
I'm trying to wrap my head around this one... Babcock putting Martin in the pressbox and drastically cutting Komarov's minutes in the 2nd half of last season is actually proof that he's inflexible with the line-up? Can you show your math on that?
I think the argument isn't the straw man (that Babcock is inflexible) but that he's slow to make changes and adapt -- that he's stubborn. This isn't a controversial view.
Or he values a robust sample size, respects experience, and is willing to ride the veteran longer for the benefit of developing the replacement to succeed?
Maybe?
But on the first, which is the most objectionable and where he is the most stubborn (to the point that we were likely saved from a Rielly-Hainsey shutdown pair this postseason by two major injuries).... the folks who care most about sample size have, generally, been the earliest to get on Babcock about his worst usage habits. For example, they thought a sample size of the previous season showed Marleau in decline, and it continued throughout this season. Awfully big sample, that. And yet, no one was in a position to succeed on the third-line wing? I dunno.
This is it.
To me, it's hard to give Babcock credit for adapting his strategy/process when it takes him months to make changes that should have been obvious to anyone with a half-decent understanding of the underlying stats (particularly possession metrics).
Sometimes he refuses to make changes at all, regardless of performance, until the last game of the season. Frankly it's pretty absurd that it took him until then to scratch Komarov (last year) and play Matthews on the right side of the powerplay (this year).
None of this is to say that Babcock is the reason, or the only reason, that the Leafs underperformed during the regular season and were eliminated in the first round. But it seems clear to me that Babcock's inability to effectively adapt his systems was a significant contributing factor.