Coco-puffs said:
I counter your second sentence by saying they are blowing leads because they are taking the foot off the gas with the lead trying to protect it, instead of trying to continue to possess the puck and play in the other teams zone.
Which presupposes that how the play is carried is entirely within the control of the Leafs, that a team like Chicago would be powerless to counter the Leafs offense if the Leafs would only press.
Your argument here is pretty weak being as the whole "We can't sit back on a lead, we have to take it to them" is such a hockey cliche that it's not really believable that it's a fault of design. They're trying to keep up their play but the other team isn't letting them.
Regardless, we could disagree about that all day. That really just underlines that "Leading after 40 minutes" isn't a typically cited proof of a team's abilities for a reason.
Coco-puffs said:
I disagree that teams aren't taking them seriously- this is the NHL and teams take it seriously unless they are playing Arizona.
Ok, we disagree. If you don't think teams have a little more spring in their step for a game against a top team, well, then we just won't see eye to eye.
Coco-puffs said:
I don't see why I'm the person who has to change their wording though.
You don't. That was an olive branch extended because I don't think either of us really wants to get buried in the semantic disagreement of what talent means. You seem bothered by my word choice, I'm not.
Coco-puffs said:
Talent: "natural aptitude or skill."
Is a definition, another could be: a special often athletic, creative, or artistic aptitude. Whether talent is innate or can be learned is not a question solved by dictionary.com. Again, your objection seemed to be a semantic one but quite frankly if it's going to rest on a definitive or singular definition of what "talent" is then you probably shouldn't have bothered.
Coco-puffs said:
Clearly they have an aptitude for generating offense (Top 4 in every offensive category!). Clearly, they lack an aptitude for strong defensive play (Bottom 4 in every defensive category). Which do you think comes more naturally? Which is easier to improve?
Neither. And neither. Also, I'd caution against using 28 games worth of statistics as being especially meaningful here.
Coco-puffs said:
Feel free to change your wording from "talent" to "capability". Here's your original sentence re-worded:
http://www.thesaurus.com/browse/talent?s=t
Second one down. Synonyms, man, they're a trip.