Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Too Long for Twitter- October 2nd

  1.  I really enjoyed this interview with Mike Keenan, but one quote really stuck out and it was after he was asked who was the most difficult player he had to coach: “There’s always an interesting thing with Brett Hull. We’re buddies, friends. But he was an interesting player to coach. There are others, and people will know who they are. There’s no reason talking about them, because, for example, Joe Murphy was difficult, but people here wouldn’t even know who Joe Murphy is. Brett Hull had a mind of his own. He was very stubborn. A superstar, an excellent player, but very stubborn. He knew how he wanted to play.” I don’t think people realize how hard it is to co-exist with some of these superstars as a mere hockey coach- getting these guys to backcheck, block shots, sacrifice to make plays, etc. John MacLean and Ilya Kovalchuk with the New Jersey Devils comes to mind. Cory Clouston and Alex Kovalev in Ottawa does as well.
  2. Dustin Penner is a healthy scratch to start the year in Anaheim after all he talked about in preseason was his bond with Getzlaf and Perry, hoping to prove himself, wanting to be marketable next year in free agency and all that. This is why so many people don’t put stock into quotes.
  3. Yes the Flames got a first round pick in the Bouwmeester trade but it looked even worse than it originally did after the Flames waived Mark Cundari and he wasn’t claimed, along with Reto Berra not making the team. There’s no doubt the Flames needed to trade Bouwmeester to help push along their rebuild, but that doesn’t mean you trade a good defenseman for below market value. Bouwmeester had another year left on his contract and the Flames easily could have justified holding him and moving him at the draft or until an acceptable deal came along.
  4. Conversely, the Blues traded Perron for Paajarvi in a bit of a cap move, but with the Morrow signing he might even struggle to get third line ice time. I count Roy, Backes, Steen, Stewart, Berglund, Oshie, and at least one of Schwartz/Tarasenko as top 9 forwards. Hitchcock also said Sobotka would be in the top nine but he said so before the Morrow signing, plus I’ll believe it when I see it due to their depth. The bottom line really is that the Blues traded a legit top six forward for a guy who will struggle to play in their top nine consistently. Imagine the backlash in Toronto or Montreal if the Leafs or Habs did that? Paajarvi was a healthy scratch to open the season.
  5. Another move looking ugly right now? Martin Erat for Filip Forsberg. Erat started the season on a line with young players Tom Wilson and Michael Latta, and played only 9:01. He’s already questioning his role and while I don’t want to make this bigger than it is, the Caps traded a pretty promising player that they drafted 11th overall for Erat so they better figure this out before it snowballs. The short-sightedness of the move is eerily similar to the Cody Eakin for Mike Ribeiro swap.
  6. I have to give John Scott a little credit, at least he has a sense of humour. The day after the brawl he took a moment to say "No one is talking about the sick assist I got last night, the baby sauce pass in the middle." That’s pretty funny.
  7. Varlamov stopped 59 of 62 shots in his two preseason games. This is not only a big year for him, but for new Avs goalie coach Francois Allaire who has been kicked to the curb a little bit the last few years with the fallout from Toronto. You can bet that if Varlamov has a good season it will be a bit of redemption for Allaire. In Colorado's season opener he stopped 36/37 shots.
  8. One of the more honest things I’ve ever seen from John Tortorella came in his TSN interview with James Duthie where he said: “nobody came up to me and said 'you need to relax, you’re kicking the crap out of us.'” I thought that was so interesting and revealing. One- coaches can’t talk at players all the time, there needs to be a give and take. Two- players (presumably) can’t be too scared to go talk to the coach and tell him to tone it down; it’s a long season and it’s a grind, if you aren’t able to have an honest chat with the coach then something very wrong is happening. Three- Torts lost that dressing room and he knows it, so how will he change? Four- this might be the most important point, but it sounds like he is willing to change; I don’t care what he does with the media, it’s his relationship with the team that will push things for better or worse.
  9. That said, I got a kick out of the media giving it Tortorella for being vocal about a phone going off during a press conference. Tortorella was right to do that. He, nor any coach, does not conduct these interviews for his livelihood. It’s not like coaches are looking forward to these things as it takes away time they could be using to make their teams better which is all any coach really cares about. In other words, Torts isn’t really doing those morning interviews for himself so the least you could do is show him some respect. Having your phone go off like that is just bush league, but all I heard other media members saying is “same old Torts.” How about “why does that goof not have his phone on silent?”
  10. In the NFL teams rake over the waiver wire and spend arguably as much time watching their own guys, as they do others in preseason. I’m shocked the NHL isn’t the same. Luke Adam, Cory Emmerton, Adam Hall, TJ Brennan, etc. all went unclaimed. You can’t convince me not one team couldn’t afford to pick those guys (among others) up and stash them on their roster be it in the NHL or AHL.
  11. I like hybrid icing and think it’s a great idea. One problem I can see happening is this: two players racing for a puck and the defensive guy begins to pull up around the faceoff dot because he’s expecting a whistle that never comes, and the offensive guy gets the puck making a play to score. Because it’s a judgement call you can see where the grey is in there. That said, utilitarianism rules apply here and it needed to be done.
  12. I would have had Edmonton in the playoffs if it weren’t for these Gagner and RNH injuries to start the year. Even if they can survive them (looks like they won’t), it’s not as if once they return everything is okay either. There will be an adjustment period and those players will need to work themselves back into game shape to be able to bring it night in and night out. It’s a tough bounce for Edmonton and I hope they overcome it because they were –on paper—ready to take the next step this season.
  13. If I’m picking an under the radar team that I think will make the playoffs, I would pick the New Jersey Devils. Last year they were good goaltending and a bit more scoring away from making it, and they addressed that this season with the Schneider acquisition plus forward additions. Their top six wingers –Jagr, Elias, Ryder, Clowe—have combined for the fourth most points as a group of top six wingers over the last two years, and then they added Damien Brunner just in case. I think their depth is underrated (Bernier, Zubrus, Carter, Josefson, etc. are all good players). Jersey led the league in shot differential last season, and while I think that’s a by-product of their system because they simply throw pucks on net from everywhere, I do think they are one of the best neutral zone teams in hockey and they bottle up the opposition with ease. Jersey is in a tough division, but I like them.
  14. Jim Rutherford saying "If you really like fighting you should probably go to a fighting or wrestling match,” is pretty off-base considering he employs Kevin Westgarth who is strictly an enforcer. Look, I don’t really care where you stand on the fighting debate for this point all I’m saying is don’t be a hypocrite because you lose all credibility when you do. At least when Detroit speaks out on this we can all look and say “hey, they don’t employ one-dimensional enforcers.”
  15. My award winning predictions for you all to rip on later:
  • Hart- John Tavares
  • Ross- Evgeni Malkin
  • Norris- Erik Karlsson
  • Vezina- Henrik Lundqvist
  • Calder- Ryan Murray
  • Selke- Patrice Bergeron
  • Adams- Jack Capuano


Friday, September 13, 2013

Too Long for Twitter- September 13th

  1. Paul Ranger has a lot of Leafs fan excited because of his teary-eyed camp interview, but hockey wise he said something extremely interesting and I’m just going to copy and paste the entire quote for you to read: “[People think talent is everything in sports, but] it’s not even close. There’s pieces to the puzzle for every athlete. A big part of it is obviously genetics, that’s a huge part … another big piece of that is fitness. I got that drilled into me when I was younger, in my early 20s, how that could take you to the next level and you could compete with the best players in the world. And the other part, which I think is the biggest part of the game, is the mental side. I think that’s the biggest side of life. Everyone has the power to do whatever they want, and that’s something that I’ve learned along the way. There’s all kinds of aspects to the game, and it’s interesting, because the mental side of the game is something that’s never really been talked about a lot, or trained. Self-esteem, just mental strength, courage … Some guys develop [it] without even knowing it; superstitions, rituals, stuff like that. It’s not talked about a lot. But it’s a skill.” 
  2. I bring up that quote because this week I actually had the privilege of sitting in on a sports psychologist lesson with a Jr. A team and it was very fascinating stuff. As you’d expect, especially at that age (16-21 year olds, I believe), a lot of the players are pretty macho in their approach to it all but there was one part that got my attention. The psychologist was able to get the players to open up about their fears on the ice, and some of them were very honest about being scared to make mistakes because it’s embarrassing to do so in front of their fans, family, teammates, coaches, etc. Sure, Jr. A hockey is nothing to sneeze at, but on a good day teams play in front of a couple 100 people yet there they were being worried about being shown up in front of them. That really got me thinking about NHLers and making mistakes. If you play for the Leafs and screw up, you do so directly in front of 20,000 people, plus what has to be at least a couple 100,000 more on TV and highlight packs while you play for millions of dollars. That’s heavy stuff. That’s pressure every single day because nobody cares if you scored a hat-trick last week if you’re getting scored on regularly this week.
  3.  When Chad Kilger was with the Leafs he was on the FAN590 (I wish I could find the link), and they asked him about being the fourth overall pick yet struggling to ever live up to that. He discussed how after being drafted, he made the Ducks, and when he was there that season the coaching staff really hammered away at him (Ron Wilson was the head coach but I don’t 100% recall whether he said it was Wilson specifically so I don’t want to blame him). Kilger discussed how the video of his game was shown to him after each and every game, about what he was doing wrong, and how he was being judged on such a miniscule scale that it weighed down on him and crushed his confidence. From there he said he only went downhill in his career. Kilger spent the majority of the next two seasons in the AHL (he was part of the Selanne deal at the end of his first year in Anaheim), before finally sticking with Chicago and carving out a career. Kilger was a serviceable NHLer at the end of the day, but if you look at his raw tools, he had it all: 6’4, can skate like the wind, has a bomb of a shot (recorded something like 105mph at the Leafs skills competition one year), and is physical, but it never came together for him. Kilger eventually (and abruptly) quit hockey for undisclosed reasons. He’s a great example of a guy who needed help with the mental side of hockey more than anything, and probably never got it.
  4. Conversely, when Michael Grabner broke out with the Islanders confidence was all he talked about. “Beginning of the year, I kept making mistakes. Coaches explained it to me, showed me video and kept putting me out there. That gives you confidence as a player and you obviously don’t try to make the same mistakes again,” said Grabner. Then he went to the all-star game and won the fastest skater contest and he said that really brought his confidence to a whole new level because it showed him he’s basically the fastest player in the NHL. This is such a mental game and we barely even recognize it.
  5. All the rage in hockey is analytics, but I’ll tell you this right now: Whoever can master how to work the mental side of hockey is really going to be the group that’s far ahead of everyone else. Every player has skill or some form ability because you don’t make the NHL if you don’t (fighters aside). It’s the mental side of things that really separate players apart.
  6. Although this is about football, I really recommend reading this article on the Seattle Seahawks and what they do to manage the mental side of sport. I find this stuff extremely interesting because even at the minor hockey level I see coaches yell at players every single time they make mistakes, and it shouldn’t always be like that. You have to be able to communicate to each player on an individual level and find out what makes them tick.  
  7. It’s very interesting to see Cody Franson and Jared Cowen still unsigned because I think it speaks to how hard it is to put a number on a defenseman. Yeah Derek Stepan is also an RFA, but Sather always plays hardball with his own guys so it’s not even a little surprising. It’s just extremely difficult to quantify a defenseman because it’s so important, there are so few spots for them, and it is a very complicated position. At forward, what it really comes down to is, if you’re a top six forward you’ll get paid according to your tier of production and how you stack up against others. If you’re a grinder you’ll get paid according to your role, how much ice time you can eat up, how effective you are and so on. It’s not exactly easy signing a forward, but it’s a lot easier than signing a defenseman. How much do you value points on the backend? Is he in your top four but not good enough to play against top competition? Does he play against top competition yet not excel there? How do you put a price on those numbers? Franson and Cowen, according to reports, seem very far apart from their team’s in terms of what numbers they should be getting.
  8. I don’t know if this was intentional but as much as people think Nonis is backed into a corner, it’s really Franson that is. The Leafs will more than likely let Franson walk if he gets an offer sheet that would bring the Leafs a first and third round pick, and the only good teams that have the cap space to take that on without making a move right now are Ottawa (no money), and the Islanders (notoriously cheap). The Leafs are basically calling the bluff that no team will offer sheet Franson so that he has to cave because he won’t have any other options. Barring something unforeseen, it should work, and it’s a very smart strategy. As soon as Franson’s agents didn’t file for arbitration Nonis probably sat back and went “we are signing him on our terms now because he has no choice.” In the meantime, the Leafs buy some time for Morgan Rielly to get a long look. I don’t want to blow it out of proportion, and Nonis does have to get Franson locked up soon, but he kind of Walter White’d Kadri and Franson if he gets them both to sign cheap two year deals.
  9. Considering it’s becoming a “thing” now to talk about how heavily involved analytics are in hockey currently, it was extremely interesting to see the Behind the B video of the Bruins deciding to trade Seguin. Seguin is a young star in the making on paper, but the Bruins conversation basically went along the lines of “he doesn’t play our kind of hockey or fit into our system.” They acknowledged he’s probably a 35-40 goal man, but what was important to them was playing “Bruins hockey.” Team culture is pretty well openly mocked on Twitter, yet here was one of the most successful team’s in hockey over the last few years discussing a huge move and the main sticking points seemed to be (and this is according to what they showed us), culture, team play, attitude, effort level, and so on. This isn’t being said to slag down on analytics because I’ve written about how they can play a role. I’m saying this to point out how extremely valuable some of the things that are laughed at and mocked on Twitter and blogs are. And, as outsiders, we only know so much information because we aren’t around the team or in the dressing room. There’s too much assuming that we know it all from behind our computer screens.
  10. The second interesting thing from that video is how the Bruins believed they won the Kessel deal. Look, the Bruins won a Cup after trading Kessel so you can judge the deal narrowly all you want but you can’t say they’ve lost overall. What I question is this: If the Bruins had Kessel the last four years, are we talking about them as the elite team they are now, or a possible dynasty? Do they blow a 3-0 series lead to Philly with Kessel? Do they beat Chicago this year with Kessel? We’ll never be able to say for sure, but I’d rather have had Kessel in my line-up the last few years over Seguin because he’s better right now. So think about the Bruins having an elite player instead of a very good one during the last few seasons, and wonder what heights they might have been able to achieve. Did Boston still win that deal, or did they sell their team a little short on the current window they have right now for championships while Chara is still amazing?
  11. Clarke MacArthur was quietly a very funny guy in Toronto, and so far this week he’s actually had the best line in the NHL. When asked if the Leafs can get over game 7 from last year, he responded “I hope not.” He burst out laughing afterward.
  12. Six years ago the Sabres gave Derek Roy a six year deal worth $24 million hoping that it would become a steal. Buffalo ended up getting some years out of Roy and if he didn’t get so banged up (or had a falling out with Ruff), he might very well still be on the team. As it is, the Sabres ended up dealing him and the deal probably never worked out as great as they hoped it would. It wasn’t really a win or a loss either way; it was really just a decent deal. Six years later that deal must not have bothered Darcy Regier because he basically gave Cody Hodgson the same sort of move. We’ll see how this one goes.
  13. Hockey Central noted that players such as Kronwall, Datsyuk and Zetterberg, along with head coach Mike Babcock, all lobbied Ken Holland for Cleary to be retained because he’s such a valuable guy on and off the ice. To me that is one of the greatest compliments you can receive as a player: the utmost respect from your peers and coaches. Detroit used to, and probably still does, have this motto that you take care of your top players, and your grinders, and if those guys are in place, the players in between will come together. Of course, the Wings used to revolve around the Yzerman’s and Fedorov’s, but they always had the grind line with the Draper’s and Maltby’s too.
  14. It seems like the NHL very quietly shortened the length of goalie pads, as guys like Bernier and Niemi have had to reduce their pads by an inch (I’m sure there are more, but these are the two I know of). Niemi said that it’s all basically the same, except his five-hole is a little more vulnerable. Meanwhile, Bernier said that a few pucks have eluded him. I’ll be interested to see if there’s a noticeable difference in pucks trickling by goalies, especially through the five-hole. Might change the dynamic of the shootout a little bit more than expected. 
  15. Wanted to wish happy retirements from the NHL to two excellent players in Tomas Kaberle and Miikka Kiprusoff. It really ticks me off when players of this ilk, whose play went from excellent to barely being able to keep up, receive a bunch of smart ass comments when they announce they are done by people on all mediums. Kipper might be the best goalie Calgary has ever had, and Kaberle was probably the Leafs best defenseman for a small era in their history regardless of it not being a great time in the franchise’s time. These were all-stars. I don’t want to go on some “show respect” rant, but recognize how great these players truly were. I know as a kid growing up in Toronto and playing defense, I wanted nothing more than to have Kaberle’s poise and passing ability, and I tried to play like him all the time. It was a privilege to watch you play, Kaba; and one of the greatest underdog Cup runs I’ve ever seen was led by you Kipper. Happy retirements, fellas.


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Coach Stats vs. GM Stats

Last week the National Post published a story centered on the Leafs Jay McClement and in it McClement referenced some of the stats that the coaching staffs tracks and utilizes. After pointing it out as an interesting tool I received some replies that said it was basically a useless waste of time. I couldn’t disagree more. As someone who coaches hockey I consider some of the things the Leafs coaching staff tracks to be useful as a teaching mechanism for my players, and if I had access to those stats for my team I would use them all the time to breakdown plays, consistencies, weaknesses, strengths, etc.  The thing is, most of these stats are not great indicators of long-term sustainability with the ability to project the future well. Herein lays the key fact of the matter that there are differences between coaching stats and GM stats and those different stats have different values depending on your position and what you’re trying to achieve.

My goal here isn’t to breakdown all the stats and assign them labels as a “coach stat” or “GM stat;” what I’m really trying to do is discuss how stats have various strengths and weaknesses, and how they can help or hurt our judgement depending on how we are viewing the game.

A good place to start would be discussing the stats in question that the Leafs used. There were only two named and they were tracking turnovers-takeaway ratios, and tracking hitting location, both of which I’d say are fairly peripheral for a GM but can be important for a coach to use.

We already know how the Leafs breakdown turnovers, because they’ve told us. Carlyle records turnovers in three categories: 1- Guy is playing as an individual, 2- Offensive player takes chance 3- 'Brain-dead.’ What that really means when it comes to the Leafs tracking turnovers is that they want to erase “3.” You can show a player his CORSI and it will mean absolutely nothing and have no effect on his game whatsoever, but if you’re breaking down his turnovers with him maybe that leads to a swing of shots on net against, to a few more shots for.

A player such as Lupul, for example, is encouraged to try and create offense so while you of course never want to see him turn the puck over, it will obviously happen. As an offensive player you can live with him taking a chance, it not working, and losing the puck. If you don’t encourage him to try things he isn’t going to produce to his full capabilities. However, a player like Lupul has also been known to turn the puck over in his own zone and that’s the stuff you need to work with him on. If you tell a player he turns the puck over too much that’s not going to do anything, but if you sit with him and breakdown where he is making his mistakes specifically and what the problems are, you can use that to teach and instruct.

Furthermore, that turnover description can also be broken down through player roles. Yes the Leafs let Phil Kessel take chances (and again, I’m just using the Leafs as an example here but this applies to every team really), because he’s in a scoring role and that’s what they ask him to do. However, a player like Jay McClement is in a grinding role so the Leafs aren’t as comfortable with him falling under the “1” category. If McClement loses the puck once or twice a game because he’s tried to beat a defenseman one-on-one, that’s probably not acceptable because that’s not his role. I’d wager a guess that they would ask him to chip and chase, or pass the puck to the trailer, instead of deking.

Showing players the type of turnovers they make and what they can and can’t do is how you preach puck management. You can’t just show a player his possession stats and think that’s going to change anything; you need to look into what’s causing that and how you change that. Specifically breaking down turnovers is one way that can be done.

That takes us to tracking hits. Hits have some, little, or no value at all depending on your beliefs, but knowing where a guy is making his hits can be valuable in maximizing a player’s efficiency. Regardless of where you stand on the value of a hit, the ability to hit a guy, separate him from the puck, and retrieve it for possession is important and valuable for any player to have. If player X and player Y both throw 100 hits, and X has 25 hits that change possession while Y has 35, player Y is obviously more valuable physically and I’d like to see the breakdown of X’s hits to see why he’s being physical yet not able to change possession as much.  Although Dustin Brown is a much better player than Cal Clutterbuck, I would compare their hitting styles (as their hit counts are usually similar) and guess that Brown is much more effective at hitting on the forecheck and getting the puck versus Cal Clutterbuck who more so finishes a lot of his checks. As a coach you can’t just shrug and say “well I have Cal Clutterbuck who hits a lot but isn’t very effective at doing so to turn the puck over,” you actually need to try and find ways to maximize his skillset. That’s what good coaches do.

Basically, if I’m a GM am I taking a player who throws a lot of hits that don’t really do anything and hope he changes? No. But if I’m coaching said player because he’s already on my roster, it might (hopefully) be beneficial to track his hit location and try to coach him on how to better use his physicality. Because the Leafs are the team in question who use this stat, I would look at Nik Kulemin and suggest he’s excellent at hitting to get the puck back. The Leafs just brought David Clarkson in and he is a physical player, but if his hit totals aren’t leading to anything that changes puck possession, Nikolai Kulemin is a player that I would use as a model for him to try and use his physicality as (note: this is an example, not a fact; from what I’ve seen Clarkson is great at dumping the puck in and retrieving it physically).

A more appropriate example would be using hit location to track defensive positioning. If the opponent has the puck in the offensive zone corner, passes it off, and then the defenseman on my team goes out of his way to finish his check, he isn’t helping my team and more often than not he’s just putting himself out of position. It would be more appropriate (at least in my view), for the defenseman to locate where the puck is going and get into proper position rather than taking a few additional strides and seconds to finish that type of minimal hit.

There’s no doubt that this is a little thing, but if a coach get a forward who hits a lot to throw 20 more hits over the course of the year that cause a change in possession and that leads to say, two extra goals, while also showing his defensemen when to finish hits in the D-zone and when not to, and that leads to getting into position better and preventing three goals against that otherwise probably would have happened, then that’s a win. A coach can only use what he has –something that is too often forgotten online—so if he’s getting players to be just a little more effective than usual that’s a win.

A lot of the stats used on the internet now are rather ineffective for a coach to use. Are you going to tell a player he has a high or low PDO? What’s that going to change? If a player isn’t scoring but has a lot of chances, he knows to keep going because they will eventually go in. We hear players say that all the time, they don’t need to know their PDO. But should a GM understand that stat to help decide if a player had a career year? Yes. If you’re telling a player to cross the blueline and throw the puck on net to help his CORSI, that’s probably going to make him even worse and make his shooting percentage a wasteland. Yes these stats are sometimes able to help us predict the future, but in terms of using them to teach a player how to make adjustments and correct these stats in and of themselves, they really do just about nothing.

Even in Moneyball, we see the staff talking to players about things such as “if you take a first pitch strike, your batting average drops ___ for the rest of the at bat” versus telling a player “your OBP is too low, now you know, so change that.” Is OBP useful in baseball? Of course. Is it useful in terms of teaching a player how to self-improve though? Not really.

What it really boils down to is coaches use certain stats to cover the nuances of the game, and the GM uses overarching stats that look at the big picture to ask “what’s all this work really producing?” There are many ways to use analytics to help a hockey team and just because something doesn’t directly incorporate shot-counts or goal counts doesn’t mean it’s useless. Getting more shots and more goals is always the goal of anyone working in hockey, but part of the process is breaking down actual gameplay into singular events and seeing where improvements can be made.

This is why, I believe, many coaches are terrible GMs. Mike Keenan (Luongo trade) and Darryl Sutter (Phaneuf trade) immediately come to mind. Being a GM takes a certain mind frame where you always project the future, work within the parameters of the cap, juggle expiring veteran contracts with the rookies in your organization and so on. The best GMs are ones that can properly analyze and predict the future and when to buy low and sell high.

Whereas coaches look at players and see “I like this size in my line-up” or “I want that guy because he wins a lot of battles.” It’s a completely different thought process.


So next time you see an organization discuss how a stat they use, really take a second to consider how they might be using that stat before you instantly criticize it simply because you don’t agree with it.