Strangelove
New member
Orr should not be playing hockey anymore at any level. If he wasn't necessary against a team like Boston why is he on the team?
Reminds me of Domi's last contract.
Reminds me of Domi's last contract.
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Corn Flake said:One of the biggest Leafs critics, Glenn Healy, mention more than once from his position between the benches how things "quiet down out there when Orr is on the ice".
Champ Kind said:Potvin29 said:He doesn't intimidate anyone. He only fights other plugs who can only fight. He's too slow to keep up with 99% of the players in the league. Has no hands, has no offensive contribution, has no discernible defensive contribution.
But he works hard. Lock him up!
I wouldn't so much call him slow as I would say 'not quick'. There is a difference. He can move pretty well as he gets in on the forecheck. What Orr lacks is directional movement and being able to move quickly in short spaces.
I also think you should ask Rene Bourque whether Colton Orr is intimidating or not.
Potvin29 said:Champ Kind said:Potvin29 said:He doesn't intimidate anyone. He only fights other plugs who can only fight. He's too slow to keep up with 99% of the players in the league. Has no hands, has no offensive contribution, has no discernible defensive contribution.
But he works hard. Lock him up!
I wouldn't so much call him slow as I would say 'not quick'. There is a difference. He can move pretty well as he gets in on the forecheck. What Orr lacks is directional movement and being able to move quickly in short spaces.
I also think you should ask Rene Bourque whether Colton Orr is intimidating or not.
Is turning around and cold clocking a guy intimidating? What did it achieve? The Leafs played worse against Montreal the rest of the season, so it didn't seem to help the team.
L K said:And quite frankly if his presence was so important why were the Leafs able to hang with a physical Boston team with Orr parked on the bench. His intimidation factor is severely overrated.
bustaheims said:L K said:And quite frankly if his presence was so important why were the Leafs able to hang with a physical Boston team with Orr parked on the bench. His intimidation factor is severely overrated.
This. If intimidation has any influence on the game, it's not from having a guy who will drop the gloves out there, it's from having guys that get in on the forecheck quickly, and hit hard and frequently while they're there. The "fear factor" comes from worrying about being pasted into the boards while you're trying to make a play. Orr isn't particularly effective on that front. And, having him dressed doesn't stop guys from taking liberties with other Leafs. Firstly, Orr is rarely on the ice, so the odds of him being out there when a guy like Marchand feels he has an opportunity to take advantage of are slim. Secondly, guys like Marchand aren't going to fight their own battles any way. They're going to get Chara or Thornton or Lucic to do it. Meanwhile, guys like Lucic have no qualms about taking on whoever may feel the need to drop the gloves with them if they make a similar play. There's no "intimidation factor" from Orr.
mr grieves said:The intimidation that wins games, it seems to me, comes from a fast and persistent forecheck that wears down defenders and causes turnovers.
Nik the Trik said:mr grieves said:The intimidation that wins games, it seems to me, comes from a fast and persistent forecheck that wears down defenders and causes turnovers.
Or, at the very least, through scrums/fights that occur legitimately and naturally which really can only happen when the guys who fight are legitimate hockey players. The fear, for instance, that a Milan Lucic or Wendel Clark or someone like that might punch you in the face might make someone give him some space. A guy like Orr, on the other hand, nobody pays much attention to regardless.
Nik the Trik said:mr grieves said:The intimidation that wins games, it seems to me, comes from a fast and persistent forecheck that wears down defenders and causes turnovers.
Or, at the very least, through scrums/fights that occur legitimately and naturally which really can only happen when the guys who fight are legitimate hockey players. The fear, for instance, that a Milan Lucic or Wendel Clark or someone like that might punch you in the face might make someone give him some space. A guy like Orr, on the other hand, nobody pays much attention to regardless.
Champ Kind said:Potvin29 said:Champ Kind said:Potvin29 said:He doesn't intimidate anyone. He only fights other plugs who can only fight. He's too slow to keep up with 99% of the players in the league. Has no hands, has no offensive contribution, has no discernible defensive contribution.
But he works hard. Lock him up!
I wouldn't so much call him slow as I would say 'not quick'. There is a difference. He can move pretty well as he gets in on the forecheck. What Orr lacks is directional movement and being able to move quickly in short spaces.
I also think you should ask Rene Bourque whether Colton Orr is intimidating or not.
Is turning around and cold clocking a guy intimidating? What did it achieve? The Leafs played worse against Montreal the rest of the season, so it didn't seem to help the team.
I think you made two very good points with the rhetorical questions. I do think, however, that Bourque wanted no part of Orr after he got up. The last point (highlighted), however, is a big inference on your part. I could just as easily suggest this was Grabovski's fault. To me, the event(s) we're talking about are irrlevant to the way the Leafs played after that point.
caveman said:I don't agree. Intimidation is a factor with all tough guys, including Colton Orr. The commonly held belief about the downfall of Mike Komisarek's game was that he never got over his beatdown from Milan Lucic. It played on his mind and hurt his confidence.
Orr also had a memorable fight with Lucic a couple of years back. On the video replay you can see the moment Lucic realizes Orr is too tough for him and bails on the fight. That change in mindset affects the players entire game.
Arn said:It's for moments like this he has been re-signed
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajccFH87y0c
On Brodeur, no less
KoHo said:I understand this chart is an oversimplification and there's many more variables to be considered, but this is Toronto's record with and without Orr in the lineup:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AlBZxpXinYkCdGN4cmhrMXR6R0tCMVUzbWsydnR2U0E#gid=1
(HINT: It's worse when Orr's in the lineup, and even worse when Orr fights).
Good observations, except one detail. From Jeffler's article: http://theleafsnation.com/2013/6/14/problems-with-a-punchers-paydaybustaheims said:KoHo said:I understand this chart is an oversimplification and there's many more variables to be considered, but this is Toronto's record with and without Orr in the lineup:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AlBZxpXinYkCdGN4cmhrMXR6R0tCMVUzbWsydnR2U0E#gid=1
(HINT: It's worse when Orr's in the lineup, and even worse when Orr fights).
As much as I believe Orr's presence in the lineup doesn't provide much by way of positives, the problem is that you've mistaken correlation for causation here. Orr playing or not playing had little to no influence in the results in the overwhelming majority of those games. In terms of the Leafs record when he fights, the cause and effect relationship is the other way around - guys like Orr are more likely to get into a fight when their team is losing because of the psychologically conditioned belief that a fight changes momentum or gives a lift to a team. The Leafs record when Orr fights is bad because the Leafs were already losing a lot of those games before Orr got into a fight - though, that does provide some evidence in debunking the myth the fights help teams win.
bustaheims said:The Leafs record when Orr fights is bad because the Leafs were already losing a lot of those games before Orr got into a fight