Joe S. said:
All I know is that since I've been posting here, I've seen 4 coaches come and go; Quinn, Maurice, Wilson and Carlyle.
What was the common criticism from most posters here? 'They don't have a system' or 'They're system doesn't work' and it's always the coach that isn't here who has some magical system that will fix what ails this team.
This team just isn't good enough, this isn't a coaching problem, this is a talent problem.
Maybe we have different definitions of talent, but I think we've had some phenomenal players contribute here in that time period (Sundin, Roberts, Mogilny, Kaberle, Kessel). I define talent as those physical/psychological gifts that can't really be taught.
If we had a true system, talent would be the icing on the cake that puts us over the top. Buying talent was what put our terrible systems play into contention in the Quinn/Sundin years, with nary a thought for actual development. The lockout year pushed our aging best players into decline. Grossly misreading the salary cap and rule changes of 2004 put us in a deeper hole as we continued to try to buy our way to a Cup.
All those post-season press conferences when our coaches and GMs had to answer for failure kept mentioning things like no team identity, not enough compete, losing too many one-on-one battles, which are all signs that the Leafs did not have everyone pulling in the same direction at the same time.
What I believe we need is
1) a management team dedicated to driving cost-effective talent into the development and NHL systems;
2) a development system that focuses on molding players into hard working, disciplined plan executers;
3) an on-ice system that doesn't depend on any one player, that generates opportunities that we can control, and that limits the opportunities against
Gardiner and Kadri both have tremendous talent, and they both see the game well, but they don't seem to
think the game as well as they could. Talent needs a firm, sustainable direction, and a good system serves as a firm foundation for talent to be a creative difference maker. Based on what we heard from certain interviews these last few years, we've wasted our accumulated talent on flawed systems that make our players work even harder than necessary. No wonder they're crashing and burning by the 4th quarter of every season.
I'm excited to see how Shanahan's changes play out because there appears to be a dedication to drafting and developing the best talent, using our resources to analyze and determine the best strategies. This season is all about the growing pains that comes with a direction change, and we're going to see what parts perform and stick around, and what parts don't fit anymore.