Home Feature OPINION | Habs (Mis)Managing Their Youth

OPINION | Habs (Mis)Managing Their Youth

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OPINION | Habs (Mis)Managing Their Youth
Sven Andrighetto (Photo by Philippe Bouchard/Icon Sportswire)
Sven Andrighetto (Photo by Philippe Bouchard/Icon Sportswire)

 

by Michael Ham-Fan, Managing Editor, All Habs Hockey Magazine

MONTREAL, QC. — The Montreal Canadiens are 5-20-1 in their last 26 games. During that period, they have only managed to score 1.7 goals per game on average. With their star goaltender out, this explains a huge part of their inability to win games.

I have very rarely criticized coaching decisions, but the usage of our offensive talent has been very sub-optimal this season. I think anyone would agree that in a slump where scoring goals is a problem, you have to try to get the players going and try to put your best offensive guys on the ice.

After suffering the 20th loss in 26 games to the Sabres on Wednesday, Michel Therrien pointed out the “bad defensive plays” and the “inability to maintain the lead” as reasons they lost that game.

In my opinion, that’s exactly the mentality that has been plaguing the team this season. They try to maintain leads rather than increase them. Once they get the lead, they get really tense and they lob the pucks out as far as they can. I just get the feeling that the creativity has been totally toned down and when they can’t execute “the system”, they are just going through the motion and waiting to lose.

Many analysts have pointed out the lack of ice-time of skilled forward Alex Galchenyuk and the coach’s stubbornness to not develop him as a centre. I will not argue on that point as it has been thoroughly discussed, but I wanted to point out another example of how the so-called pure offensive talent is not valued on this team.

Screen Shot 2016-02-05 at 12.00.48 AM
(Graphic by stats.hockeyanalysis.com. Stick tap to Nick Lapierre)

GF% shows the percentage of goals scored by the player’s own team versus goals scored by the other team when the player is on the ice. Sven Andrighetto is second among a group that is generally viewed as good offensive players.

Granted, it is a small sample size at 17 games played, but Sven Andrighetto is one of the most creative offensive talent the Canadiens have.

A defender of the coach could say that this may be the result of sheltered minutes, where Andrighetto wouldn’t be placed in defensive assignments, but the fact that the team performs well when he is on the ice makes it hard to understand why he isn’t given a bigger role instead of Brian Flynn. He averages less than a goal against per 60 minutes played!

Meanwhile, Andrighetto has been a healthy scratch very often during the last run, and combine that with his average ice-time at around 12 minutes per game, it is indicative that the coaching staff does not trust him enough. You could clearly see that he was on a run when he was freshly called-up at the beginning of the season, with three points in his first three games. Then, the line shuffling started and his ice-time dropped for no apparent reason after five games.

Screen Shot 2016-02-05 at 12.01.21 AM
(Statistics per NHL.com)

It is obvious that this coaching staff doesn’t believe in giving important roles to young offensive talent.

In a situation where there is remote hope to make the playoffs, I would like to see the Habs give more ice-time and more opportunities for young players to develop. Look at the way they handled Jarred Tinordi, and how they are handling Greg Pateryn right now, and you can see that there is a lack of effort in developing young talent. That is very incompatible with the “building from within” principle that the general manager has been selling since his debut.

They went into the season with the preconceived idea that Tinordi wasn’t going to make it without really giving him a look. Pateryn looked very good last year, looked like he had a rising developmental curve, and after one bad turnover, he has trouble getting back in the line-up since then.

At this point, I am with those that think that there is no point in “going for it” this season anymore. Let the young players develop, get more draft picks and get those already drafted more time to grow. Then, come next year, regroup with Price and do it all over again.

 

 

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Lien vers mes articles en français : http://fr.allhabs.net/author/mhamfan/ -------------------Michael is a Staff Writer for All Habs Magazine. He completed a bachelor's degree in Psychology at the Université de Montréal and is now doing his Masters' degree at the Université de Sherbrooke in Clinical Sciences. Michael has been a hockey fan and a Habs fans pretty much all his life, so for the last two decades and a half. He was born in Montreal to a Chinese mother and a Honduran-Chinese father, so he is fluent in French, English and Cantonese. He understands Spanish and Mandarin but not enough to speak it. His objective in writing is to give information and to give his opinion. At no point will he try to act as an expert on the subject. Michael is humbled to be able to write on hockey and that has always been a dream for him. He attends a lot of hockey games and practices during the year (Habs, Juniors etc.) and when he is not at the game, he is watching them at home, so he will base his opinion a lot on what he has actually seen rather than what he has heard. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Michael est un chroniqueur pour Le Magazine All Habs. Il a complété un baccalauréat spécialisé en Psychologie à l'Université de Montréal et il est maintenant, à sa première année en maîtrise en Sciences Cliniques à l'Université de Sherbrooke. Michael a été un amateur de hockey et un partisan des Canadiens depuis les vingt-cinq dernières années. Il parle quotidiennement en français, en anglais et en cantonais. Il comprend aussi l'espagnol et le mandarin sans être très fluide. Michael a appris que la modestie et le respect étaient deux valeurs nécessaires dans la vie. Son approche pour écrire des articles est de donner son opinion basée sur de l'information concrète. Son but n'est surtout pas de se prendre pour un expert. Il assiste très souvent à des matchs de hockey (Canadiens, Juniors, etc.) et lorsqu'il n'est pas dans les estrades, il les regarde chez lui. Donc, son opinion sera basée sur ce qu'il aura vu, plus que ce qu'il aurait entendu. Donc, ses articles ne seront jamais écrits sous le point de vue d'un expert, mais bien celui d'un amateur qui veut susciter la discussion avec ses pairs.

1 COMMENT

  1. We need a change from the GM down. All management of our Habs should be remove & only people who are the best should be hired.We have had 23 years of GMs & CoachingStaff of speaking or being French. This does not work imn Hockey you must have the best people in those jobs. That has been the problem.

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