Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Official Announcement: Vancouver Canucks Hire Torts.

With the Canucks having officially announced new Canucks Head Coach John Tortorella; the gaze now looks towards firstly the draft, where the Canuck pick 24th. There is still a hue and an outcry from the anti-Torts crowd which was roundly denounced by the informative and genial presser that went on at 1PM this afternoon.

There appears to be a concensus among the anti-Torts crowd that John Tortorella is unable to be flexible, throws his players under the bus and is generally a miserable SOB to be around. The John Tortorella at the press conference couldn't be farther from this portrayal as the Earth is from the Sun. Make no mistake, Torts is a competitor. He will expect 100% from his players. He demands accountability. He will not allow slackers to play. He will bench fan favorites who under-perform and in this market, that will piss off thin-skinned fans like nobody's business. Did he throw his players under the bus during his tenure with the New York Rangers? If they weren't playing up to his high standards, he would call them out. If calling out an underperforming player is what's called "throwing them under the bus" it's no wonder that Torts did not succeed there. Not even Scotty Bowman would have been able to make anything out of that team with that kind of expectation put on them.

With Alain Vigneault's "hands-off" approach, the locker-room had no direction. Player accountability was zero. And when players were confused and looked for direction, the coach was nowhere to be found. Add to that, Coach V was an expert at deflecting the tough questions that really needed to be asked. Most oft-times, his answer was a smug grin and a shrug of the shoulders when he should have answered the question posed. A lot of the Vancouver media is not used to honest opinion nor will they like the fact that Torts is brutally honest. He does not like losing; he even says so "I hate losing. Really, I hate it. If you're a good loser, you're a loser."

The naysayers will spout off, "Well; Alain took us to Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final." My answer is: "Where we lost..." Lost by how much? We didn't even score in that game. So what, Pat Quinn took us to Game 7 and didn't get blown out. It was a 3-2 game. The game was so close it could have gone either way in 1994. If Nathan Lafayette had scored it would have been a tied game going to overtime. He was called on the carpet by thin skinned fans in 1994 for breaking a stick during practice because the players weren't performing up to expectation.

Make no mistake. John Tortorella will give you soundbites galore this season, but that is if Vancouver's renowned media keeps asking him stupid questions. When the questions are intelligent and thought out, Torts will give an intelligent and thought out answer. Today's coaching announcement presser was exactly that.

Coach Torts will expect players to play to a higher level than they've ever played before. The reason being is that he has been at that higher level. He knows what it takes to coach at a Stanley Cup Championship winning game level. He is seeking to provide that experience and the coaching ability to enable our players to play to their very best. And it is best that the media remember that at the back of their minds as we go into the 2013-2014 season and remind themselves that they best do not throw John Tortorella under the bus as they have done to so many other fiery coaches who have taken the rein and tried to bring some of their knowledge to the forefront: Crow being a prime example. It is time for the Canucks to turn the corner and develop into Stanley Cup Champions.

And I do have to say that Torts looks better in that Canucks exercise jacket than he did in Rangers blue. Welcome to Vancouver, Torts. I hope you bring a Stanley Cup to this city. 43 years has been a long time to wait.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Canucks Have Signed Swedish Goaltending Prospect: Joacim Eriksson

The goaltending depth-chart grew a little deeper with the signing of Swedish goaltending prospect: Joacim Eriksson. Originally drafted by the Flyers, he elected to not sign with them and the Flyers lost their rights. Eriksson was signed to a two year entry-level contract at $925,000 for two years and a lesser amount in the minors.

Peoria Rivermen (new Canucks-owned AHL Affiliate) Officially the Utica Comets

The Canucks-owned AHL affiliate the former Peoria Rivermen will officially move to Utica, NY for the 2013-2014 AHL hockey season and be known as the Utica Comets.

For more information on the Utica Comets, http://www.uticacomets.com/. The Utica Comets also have their Facebook page up at https://www.facebook.com/UticaComets and they also have a Twitter Page at https://twitter.com/uticacomets

Looking forward to seeing how the Utica Comets perform.

John Tortorella Could Be Next Canucks Coach

After Alain Vigneault was fired in May, there was a lot of speculation as to who was to be the next coach of the Vancouver Canucks. The pickings were pretty lean then as the Rangers were still battling the Boston Bruins to get out of the Division Finals. When the Bruins defeated the Rangers, the Rangers GM Glen Sather put John Tortorella out to pasture (read that as kind way of saying "FIRED!" Unfortunately, I don't believe that the Rangers who turned around and hired ex-Canucks head coach Alain Vigneault made the right choice in their choice as head coach. With the Canucks having choices between the unseasoned Dallas Eakins (who eventually went to Edmonton - you do not have an unseasoned coach try to lead a group of veteran NHLrs.), the taciturn but rather quiet John Stevens, the Sabres' former coach Lindy Ruff. (was there ever an year that Lindy wasn't coaching the Sabres? Oh yeah, prior to September 1997.) and former Dallas Stars coach Glen Gulutzan. Out of all the coaches, John Tortorella seemed to be the best choice of the coaches available.

I've always believed that the Canucks have had a too relaxed atmosphere in the dressing room with Alain Vigneault's "hands off" approach to coaching. They were never held accountable for their lacklustre play and oftentimes showed it with a "who cares" attitude. Fortunately for fans and unfortunately for the players, this type of approach will cease with Tortorella's arrival as Canucks head coach (to probably be announced on Tuesday, June 25th, 2013. The Canucks will be expected to perform to what expectations they were hired to perform to and it will be a very unpleasant experience for some of them.

The Canucks have needed a wakeup call for a long time now.

The 1994 Rangers-Canucks playoff series was coached by a fiery Irishman: Pat Quinn. The 2011 was coached by sleepy Alain. There is a distinct difference in play. The coach has to know when to start stepping in and "firing up" his players. The 1994 team played all the way to the end of the series. The score reflected it with the final game score of 3-2 favoring the Rangers. The 2011 Canucks rolled over in Games 6 and 7. Frankly, the 2011 Canucks were an embarrassment to be compared to the 1994 Canucks who played their hearts and souls out for the Stanley Cup. The 2011 Canucks expected to be "handed" the Cup and were surprised when the Bruins turned around and stole it from them with their better play.

Too many Canuck fans appear to think that the Tortorella hiring is the second coming of Mike Keenan. Unfortunately too many Canuck fans have been satisfied with the status quo of 2 Presidents Trophys and have lost sight of the main reason why the Canucks are playing in the NHL. It requires "fire in the belly" of everyone on the team from the players all the way through to the coaching staff and AV didn't have that in him.

John Tortorella comes with an impressive coaching resume. Having won at every major coaching level that he has coached at; He has a Stanley Cup ring with the 2004 Tampa Bay Lightning. Which is one more trophy than Alain Vigneault has. Alain Vigneault had his chance with the Canucks but fell short because he wasn't sure of how to get the Canucks past the final hurdle which was not the Stanley Cup but when the Bruins started playing the way that they had to in order to win and succeed against the Canucks. Vigneault fell short because he couldn't find an answer to the Bruins' aggressive play.

John Tortorella has that fire in his belly. I'm sure that his one bite at the Stanley Cup in 2004 wasn't enough. I'm also sure that he wants to win again and will find a way to. My sincerest hope is that he will win with the Canucks. After 43 years of watching this team, it's the least that the Canucks could do.