Sunday, January 19, 2014

For the love of all that is holy people...Think before you speak

Now then, before I go into my little rant and before I get a bunch of responses about freedom of speech and entitlement to one’s opinion, let me state that everyone is entitled to their opinion.  All I am imploring is some thought into the formation of said opinion.   Think about the situation unbiasedly for two seconds before spewing forth the vitriol that comes forth from sport’s fans mouths and fingers.

I have come to the realization that the vast majority of sports fans are lazy.  No, not physically, though that is often the case as well.  I mean mentally.  They look for the easiest target for their woe and unleash their hate upon that person or persons.  While this is true of sports fans across the board, it seems especially true in the St. Louis area, which I call home.  Sam Bradford is a good example.

The Rams quarterback is not and may never be a top 5 QB.  However he is talented and capable of winning a game on his talents alone.  Yet according to the vocal antagonists, he has no talent, can’t hit receivers, can’t scramble, can’t win games etc. and so on.  Very few want to look at the intangibles that lead to those situations.  Bradford went through a different Offensive Coordinator each of his first few seasons.  If you include his college years, he had to learn four different offensive systems and plays.  I challenge anyone to learn the complexity of NFL offensive schemes and terminology that many times.

However, now to the heart of my argument (and I apologize to my journalism teachers for burying the lead).  The goaltending situation for the St. Louis Blues has to bring the biggest section of fools out of the woodwork and has for years, if not decades.  Not since the days of Curtis Joseph and then Grant Fuhr have the Blues had what many fans would consider a “franchise” goaltender and there are probably some that would even argue against those two. 

Having been a goaltender in hockey and goalkeeper in soccer, I have always known that the position inherently brings blame with it.  It is the laziness of sports fans to simply blame the one person who let the goal in, regardless of the situation that led to the shot being taken in the first place.  Now don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of times that the netminder could have done something different or let in a softy.  It comes with the territory.  It is difficult to maintain the mental focus to be in the exact right position at the exact time needed to make a save every time.  However, sports fans (Blues fans in particular) are quick to heap fault on the goalies.

Jaroslav Halak has borne the brunt of this.  After almost singlehandedly leading the Montreal Canadiens to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2010, he came to St. Louis with high hopes and lofty expectations that following summer.  Once the team failed to make the playoffs that season, the laziness went into overdrive and many have failed to recover.  Even during the season where he and Brian Elliot won the Jennings Trophy as the goaltender tandem that allowed the fewest goals during the season, Halak never enjoyed much comfort from the vocal mass.  Even then there were calls for Elliot to be given the reigns.  Halak was the starter in the playoffs that season, and though I don’t know if goaltending would’ve made any difference the way the L.A. Kings took out the Blues, it would have been nice to see Halak not get taken out by his own defenseman in the previous series.

The next season, which was half a season due to the greed of both players and owners, the fools were given more ammunition due to a series of injuries for Halak.  Despite the fact that all goalies get hurt throughout a year and Halak hasn’t had all that many during his career, the vocal mass turned it into the idea that he is always hurt and not durable enough to lead the team.  Elliot’s stellar play that season did not help Halak’s cause.  Halak was still injured come the playoffs, but many say he was no longer the choice of coach Ken Hitchcock because he was on the bench and in their minds fit to play.  There is a difference between fit to start and fit to play if absolutely needed.  The Blues only had Halak on the bench because they were more comfortable in the playoffs using him if absolutely necessary than using an unproven Jake Allen, if Elliot went down to injury.

Even the media is prone to this lazy thinking and bias in regard to goaltending.  In the last two games, the Blues have lost to the Kings and Anaheim.  Both Halak and Elliot gave up goals that they should not have.  However after Halak’s loss, the announcers all but blamed him for the goals.  After Elliot’s loss, the post-game broadcaster said that despite the soft goal, he made several great saves to keep his team in the contest.  This was true of Halak only two nights before, yet the same consideration was not given.

I am, unashamedly, a supporter of Halak and that is most likely very clear in my positioning in this article.  I take nothing away from Brian Elliot and his great play since arriving in St. Louis.  He is a solid goaltender which to fall back on.  However, I feel he has proven that when he is given the reigns by himself with no challenger, he has faltered.  It was the case in Ottawa and Colorado and was the case in St. Louis when Halak was injured and the team did not know the talent level of Allen.  Halak has proven, in the playoffs, he can carry a team.  The Canadiens that year were not as talented as the Blues of the last two.  Yet, Halak (with the help of Carey Price) led his team past some of the giants of the East in Washington and Pittsburgh and within a game of defeating Philadelphia.  He has not been afforded the same opportunity in St. Louis, due to poor team play in 10-11 and injuries the following two years.

On the same token, if you take my own bias out of the situation, Blues fans’ ideas of a franchise goaltender are quite warped in most cases.  Their definition of a franchise netminder is essentially someone like Martin Brodeur.  Someone who will play 65-75 games out of 82.  Those days are gone my friends.  Starting goaltenders today play about 55% of the time.  A bit more if there is not a suitable backup.  Lazily, people blame the goaltending (Halak in particular, but also Elliot on rare occasion) for their playoff woe.  Really, in the Blues' case, there is only one instance when this is absolutely true and that is way back in the early 2000’s when Roman Turek was a main reason that talented squad did not go past the first round.  One could also make the case for Jon Casey being at fault in 97, but that is neither here nor there.

This vocal portion of Blues fans, much the same as Bradford haters, have unrealistic expectations.  Martin Brodeurs don’t just grow on trees.  Also, “franchise” goaltenders don’t always mean Stanley Cups.  Ryan Miller has no Cups.  Roberto Luongo has no Cups and has only been to one final.  No Cups and no finals for Henrik Lundquist.  Ed Belfour could not win with all those talented Blackhawk teams and only won late in his career with a different team.  Look at the Stanley Cup winners from the last decade and it’s about 50/50 whether the winner was a “franchise” goaltender.

2003 NJ Devils – Martin Brodeur:  Of course a franchise netminder.  Possibly one of the best ever.                                              
2004 Tampa Bay Lightning – Nikolai Khabibulin:  Quality goalie, but has bounced around three times since then.
2006 Carolina Hurricanes – Cam Ward:  Again quality.  Great when hot, but not “franchise” in Blues fans eyes I'd bet.
2007 Anaheim Ducks – JS Giguere:  Hot goaltender, was the reason they won.  All but disappeared in the league now.
2008 Detroit Redwings – Chris Osgood:  Yes Hasek was on the team, but Osgood won and Blues fans know all too well about Osgood.  Seemingly only capable of winning in Detroit.
2009 Pittsburgh Penguins – Marc-Andre Fleury:  Franchise goalie, yes, but also faces similar problems to Halak as fans are often clamoring for someone else to take over.
2010 Chicago Blackhawks – Anti Niemi:  Possible franchise, but not with the Hawks.  In San Jose now.
2011 Boston Bruins – Tim Thomas:  One can make the case either way.  I would lean toward him being a franchise goalie until his awkward “retirement”.
2012 LA Kings – Jonathan Quick:  Franchise.  Pure and simple.
2013 Blackhawks – Corey Crawford:  Possibly a franchise goalie, BUT one could argue he isn’t top 5 or top 10 in goalies you would pick if the league was blown up and everyone put in a draft.

What does all this mean?  It means that there is no science to winning a Cup and whether you need a goalie that will be there for years.  Again, if someone does not like one goalie or the other, that is not my business.  I will argue for my favorite and others may do the same.  I ask for fairness and to stop the lazy thinking behind some beliefs.  To blindly blame goaltending as the end all reason why the Blues have not won a Cup or even a game during a season, is ludicrous.  To say Halak gets all the blame but give Elliot credit when the situations game to game are so similar is just dumb.

Please, just think before you open your mouth the next time at the game.  Think before you write your post on Facebook.  Again, both Halak and Elliot have given their detractors plenty to hold on to for reasons they don’t believe in them.  But be fair about it when you sit and calm down and think about the situations clearly.  I still hold out hope for the day when Halak is given his time to shine for the Blues in the playoffs the way he did in Montreal.  Perhaps I will never see that day.  Perhaps Elliot will stay and Halak will go.  Perhaps both will go and Allen will be the man next year.  All these are possibilities that as fans, we thankfully, have no control over.  It will be as it will be.  But stop the laziness.  Quarterbacks that take you to the playoffs right out of the draft are rare.  Goalies that lead mediocre to decent teams all the way to championships are even rarer.  Bring expectations closer to reality.  Think.  See the game beyond the borders of your TV screen and realize that more happens than the singular instance you want to place your blame.  And as always realize that this is just my opinion and it may be different from yours…but I’m right.

Now, if you’ve managed to stick around through that rat’s nest of a thought process, here’s a few quick hits.

-         - The Tampa Bay Lightning’s radio announcer is a joke.  He makes Ken Wilson sound like he needed anti-depressants.  Ridiculous that he’s employed and I am not.
-          - Along the lines of my rant, Blues fans need to give up on Ryan Miller.  The Sabers would ask too much and his contract is too rich.  Ah, but these things don’t exist in those fans’ fantasy world.
-          - 1-7 will not suffice against California hockey teams.  The Blues have to find ways to summon the will to win right from the get go.
-          - I hate the Patriots.  That is why they will win…sigh
-          - I love the show ESPN FC, but their anti-MLS slant on everything is irritating.  If the football/soccer is so terrible then go back to England and cover the sport for them.
-          - I like that Michael Bradley has come back to MLS and the idea that his skills will deteriorate to dust because of the league is beyond stupid.
-          - The more I see of Andrew Wiggins and all the other great freshman in college basketball, the more I am convinced that both college basketball and the NBA would benefit from a rule change that allowed high schoolers to come out right away if they wish, but a player has to stay 2-3 years if they go to college.  There is so much development both physically and mentally that would occur during those years and the on-court product would be all the better for it.
- The more I get back into soccer, the more I’m ok with hockey going back to a system that allows ties.  Nobody likes them, but shootouts are kind of a joke.  Oh well.  Isn’t going to change.

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