Wednesday, August 6, 2008

The Dreaded Return of Hockey or Terry Frei, Depending on How You See Things

It's tough to believe that in just seven short weeks, preseason hockey will be attracting 4,000 people with nothing better to do to arenas all across North America. So to get back in the swing of things, let's stop off at Terry Frei's latest article to see what's not funny.

If the New York Islanders get around to hiring Ted Nolan's successor by opening night, nine NHL head-coaching jobs will have turned over since the end of last season.

Haha! You see - because they haven't... they haven't filled the position yet! And they might not before the season starts! That would be awfully silly of them! And perhaps the Islanders can all wear different styles of goofy hats! That would be uproarious!

Barring a long-shot choice on Long Island, such as Providence Bruins coach Scott Gordon, three men will be getting their first chance running an NHL bench: Atlanta's John Anderson, Florida's Peter DeBoer, and San Jose's Todd McLellan.

In the past few days, ESPN.com has offered up Power Rankings -- the Kings and the Thrashers being at the bottom of their conferences helps explain why their next coaches have formidable tasks ahead of them -- and on the mind-games front, the Top 75 Fantasy Players.


Mind you neither of these are linked in his article so that you can see them, you have to go to ESPN.com's NHL Portal your own self. I can top Terry's laziness by just not nitpicking all of his article, which is exactly my plan, but give it a little effort. There's not an awful lot to do during the hot days of the Denver summer - besides Rockpile tickets or Elitch's - and that doesn't embiggen Mr. Frei to give us links.

Here's the third period, so to speak: Coaching rankings.

On the premise that it would be excessively presumptuous to rank them 1 through 30 -- after all, we're not talking about uniforms -- the rankings are done in groups. They are also purely subjective.


Because the Power Rankings aren't purely subjective?

He follows with exactly what he said, a long and boring list of every coach broken into three boring groups. I'll be taking a tasting from each menu.

The Elite ...
... or the men who get the most out of their rosters, regardless of how good (or otherwise) those rosters are.

Barry Trotz, Nashville
The only coach the Dallas Cowb ... er, the Nashville Predators have ever had has done a remarkable job under changing circumstances. He, along with general manager David Poile and associate coach Brent Petersen, is a testament to the positives of stability. Under less-stable leadership and in less-capable hands, this franchise would be a joke on the ice.


Man, if there's something that I hate more than Terry Frei it's the Predators. But I do not understand what joke he's trying to make with the Dallas Cowboys. Other than fans of both teams are glaring idiots. Just how elite are the Nashville Predators under Barry Trotz? In 738 games, 324 wins, 308 losses, 60 ties (remember ties?) and 46 Overtime Losses. A very elite .500 team.

The Proven ...
... or the guys you know can pull it off until their voices get stale, it's time for a change, or the general manager needs to save his job by making someone a scapegoat.

Andy Murray, St. Louis
If you don't believe he's one of the best coaches in the league after his work in Los Angeles and then with the Blues, just ask him.


Andy Murray isn't egotistical. He may not be the best coach in the league, but he never has said anything along those lines. His work in St. Louis has been stellar if you count half of each season as a whole. The NHL does not, and he could be axed if the Blues miss the playoffs... again.

The jury's still out ...
... or the first-time NHL head coaches who still have to show they can be productive in what passes in this sport for the long run.

Bruce Boudreau, Washington
What a story. Finally gets his chance after years of coaching in the minors and wins the Jack Adams Award. But after the newness wears off, can he prove it was indicative of a difference-making touch?


The Jack Adams Award is "Coach of the Year." Lumping him into the same category as Wayne Gretzky's head coaching abilities? Not such a great idea.

The Suspect ...
... or they'll have to prove some people wrong to be considered (back) among the elite.

Mike Keenan, Calgary. We all know the man is a quirky genius on many levels, and he stayed relatively low-profile last season, so he might have learned some lessons. But given his recent track record and volatility, he's still in this category ... for now.


Mike Keenan has proven what a glaring prick he is. Which should lump him into "The Proven" category. It's also a much easier joke. The difference being that I'm on Blogger getting paid nothing and he's sitting on top of a bed made of money with many beautiful women posting on ESPN.com, which doesn't let you use the work "prick." Advantage: Firejay. Prick prick prick.

Barry Melrose, Tampa Bay
This is in no way, shape or form a knock on our former ESPN colleague.


Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmullet.

How the heck can we know yet? ...
... or the first-time NHL head coaches.

Todd McLellan, San Jose
McLellan is in a decent situation; the other two aren't.


To call San Jose a decent situation is to call Fire Jay Mariotti is just a sports blog. Clearly, both are more than just that.

And what sort of audience posts comments on ESPN.com? nhldude11 let's Terry Frei have it with this barb: nhldude11: way to go terry frei... you forgot the islanders and the flames idiot.


In the first 12 words of this article, it is established that the Islanders have no head coach. And I had no problem finding the Flames. To be put in the position to defend Terry Frei is hard, but if you're that stupid to log into your account and leave THAT as a comment... just stop watching the sport, please. Arena football needs you, nhldude11.

7 comments:

larry b said...

Even as a non-hockey fan, I say: more hockey posts! It's a brand of idiocy we don't encounter often enough in our predominantly MLB/NFL world.

Anonymous said...

I think Frei is going for the old "Tom Landry, the only coach the Dallas Cowboys have ever had", which was popular back in the 70s and 80s because he was their only coach in the team's first 25 years. It has only been about 20 years since Landry was let go. It isn't like anybody was born since then who would be interested in sports. This guy is almost as terrible as Burnside. It's great to look forward to getting all the up to date and incisive hockey info from ESPN.

Bengoodfella said...

Why are we talking about hockey? Brett Favre got traded!

I am kidding of course. I actually love hockey posts Jarrett and the reason is that I do not follow hockey that closely so I pay attention to the jokes and don't get as pissed off at the bad analysis. So not only am I being educated about the sport but I am also able to laugh at the same time. Jarrett, you are like that cool male high school teacher that also coached the soccer team and hung out with the senior class but later gets fired for dating a student and ends up working at Sports Authority.

Mas hockey!

Jarrett said...

Jim - I should have thought about that more, I guess. During most of my time in Dallas, Seattle was still in the AFC and the Cowboys were winning Super Bowls with Jimmy "How 'Bout Them Cowboys?" Johnson. My mother would throw a fit if she knew that I missed a Tom Landry reference. Luckily, she only comes into the basement to give me the Bugles and Bawls Energy that I ask for.

Ben - I had a college roommate that was the gym coach at a local high school and made a pass at a student. He got fired and humiliated because she didn't even go out with him. Now he's a unionized painter, making much more than I am. I guess the moral of the story is this - make a pass, but don't so it on the internet, then find a city that still embraces unions like St. Louis does, and make bank.

Tonus said...

If he was really old school, he'd have used "Connie Mack, the only coach the A's have..."




Too soon?

Bengoodfella said...

Jarrett- That is probably the greatest moral to a story ever. My teacher coached the women's soccer team and secretly dated a student or two, then it came kind of public when another student wanted to date the soccer girl. I think he just transferred schools though. To a wealthier area where the money in bagging a wealthy teenager is better.

Anonymous said...

So that still goes on? At my school it was the volleyball coach. They got rid of her quietly. They didn't do anything about the assistant football coach/driver's ed instructor who took the girls back to his house.